Wingate, Orde Charles

Wingate, Orde Charles

▪ British military officer
born Feb. 26, 1903, Naini Tāl, India
died March 24, 1944, Burma [now Myanmar]

      British soldier, an outstanding “irregular” commander and unconventional personage in the tradition of General Charles George Gordon and Colonel T.E. Lawrence (“Lawrence of Arabia”). His “Chindits,” or “Wingate's Raiders,” a brigade of British, Gurkha, and Burmese guerrillas, harassed much stronger Japanese forces in the jungles of northern Burma (now Myanmar) during World War II.

      Educated at Charterhouse and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Wingate was commissioned in the Royal Artillery in 1923, serving in the Sudan and making some exploration of the Libyan desert (1928–33). In 1936–39, while serving as an intelligence officer in Palestine, Wingate organized night patrols to repel Arab raids on Jewish communities along the Mosul-Haifa oil pipeline, successfully testing his “penetration” method of light infantry operations against the enemy's rear. From January to May 1941 he led an Ethiopian-Sudanese force that took Addis Ababa from the Italians. Sent to India, he organized the “Chindits” and helped to train a similar U.S. force, “Merrill's Marauders,” commanded by Frank Dow Merrill. During February–May 1943, the “Chindits” entered Japanese-held Burma from the west, crossed the Chindwin River, and, receiving supplies from the air, conducted effective guerrilla operations against the Japanese until they reached the Irrawaddy River. On crossing that river in an attempt to cut Japanese communications with the Salween River front to the east, they found the terrain unfavourable and were forced to return circuitously to India.

      Given command (as acting major general) of airborne troops invading central Burma in March 1944, Wingate severed the important Mandalay-Myitkyinā railway, but soon afterward he was killed in an airplane crash.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Wingate, Orde Charles — (1903 44)    Orde Wingate was a British major general who, during his brief term of service in mandatory Palestine, had a major impact on the development of the yishuv s defensive capabilities and the Hagana s military strategy and methods. Born… …   Historical Dictionary of Israel

  • Wingate, Orde Charles — ► (1904 45) Militar británico. En 1942 43 organizó en Myanmar grupos francos que lograron desarticular las comunicaciones niponas …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • WINGATE, ORDE° — (Charles; 1903–1944), British Army officer who served in Palestine during the 1936–39 riots. Win gate was born in India into a nonconformist family; his grandfather had helped conduct a Church of Scotland mission in Budapest for poor Jews and his …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Orde Charles Wingate — Naissance 26 février 1903 Naini Tal, Uttarakhand, Inde Décès 24 mars 1944 (à 41 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Wingate — Wingate, Orde Charles …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Orde Wingate — Orde Charles Wingate Orde Charles Wingate Born 26 February 1903(1903 02 26) …   Wikipedia

  • Charles Orde Wingate — Orde Charles Wingate Orde Charles Wingate Orde Charles Wingate (26 février 1903 – 24 mars 1944, DSO and 2 Bars 1938, 1941, 1943) est un général de l armée britannique. Wingate est issu d’une famille militaire …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Orde Wingate — Orde Charles Wingate Orde Charles Wingate Orde Charles Wingate (26 février 1903 – 24 mars 1944, DSO and 2 Bars 1938, 1941, 1943) est un général de l armée britannique. Wingate est issu d’une famille militaire …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Orde Wingate — Chindits während der …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • WINGATE (O. C.) — WINGATE ORDE CHARLES (1903 1944) Le moins conventionnel des généraux britanniques de la Seconde Guerre mondiale: «Je ne pourrai jamais faire carrière dans l’armée dans des circonstances normales», avouait il. Son supérieur, le général Wavell,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”