The Nepalese Army is the furnished military Land fighting power of Nepal accessible universally and a noteworthy segment of the Military of Nepal. Administration is willful and the base age for enlistment is 18 years. The armed force was known as The Royal Nepalese Army (RNA) amid the government framework in Nepal. It was renamed into Nepalese Army since 28 May 2008 with the annulling of 238-year-old government.
Nepal unification battle was a defining moment in the historical backdrop of the Nepalese armed force. Since unification was impractical without a solid armed force, the administration of the military must be uncommon. Aside from the standard Malla period sanctuaries in Kathmandu, armed force being composed in Gorkhas, professionals and specialists must be gotten from abroad to make war materials. After the Gorkhali troops caught Nuwakot, the neighboring realm of Kathmandu (Kantipur) in the year 1744, the Gorkhali military came to be known as the Royal Nepalese Army.
Their chivalry, earnestness and straightforwardness awed even their foe so much that the British East-India Company began enrolling Nepalese into their powers. Since the British had battled against then RNA, which was till that time, still conversationally known as "Armed force of Gorkha" or "Gorkhali" armed force, the British called their new troopers "Gurkhas". The Indian armed force, in the wake of picking up their freedom from the British, began calling them "Gorkha". In 1946, the Royal Nepalese Army troops were driven by Commanding General Sir Baber Shamsher Jang Bahadur Rana at the Victory Parade in London.
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