Monghyr Mutiny Medal

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Awarded forCampaign service
Presented by the East India Company (EIC)
EligibilityNative EIC forces
Monghyr Mutiny Medal
Obverse and reverse of the Minerva medal, identified by some sources as the Monghyr Mutiny Medal
TypeCampaign medal
Awarded forCampaign service
Presented by the East India Company (EIC)
EligibilityNative EIC forces
Campaign(s)Monghyr Mutiny
ClaspsNone
StatusUnclear if ever awarded
Established1766
Suspension cord for other early EIC medals

The Monghyr Mutiny Medal is a possible early campaign medal of the British East India Company. Robert Clive is known to have decorated a number of sepoys for their service in the Monghyr Mutiny. A campaign medal is listed in some sources as having been awarded, and both the National Army and Victoria and Albert Museums hold a medal depicting Minerva, which they attribute to this action. Other sources dispute this and identify the Minerva medal as being awarded by a Freemasons lodge in Leipzig. If awarded, the medal would have been the earliest of those issued by the company in India.

The Monghyr Mutiny, which took place in 1766, was a mass resignation of white officers of the East India Company's Bengal Army, over the withdrawal of the batta allowance. The mutiny was quelled without bloodshed by Robert Clive, who was then Governor of Bengal, with a few loyal officers and a number of Indian sepoy troops. He is known to have commended the sepoys for their good behaviour and to have decorated a number of their officers and non-commissioned officers. The entire force also received two-months double pay.[1]

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