Former good article nomineeLa Martinière College, Lucknow was a Social sciences and society good articles nominee, but did not meet the good article criteria at the time. There may be suggestions below for improving the article. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
Did You Know Article milestones
DateProcessResult
September 4, 2013Peer reviewNot reviewed
December 8, 2013Good article nomineeNot listed
May 7, 2015Peer reviewNot reviewed
Did You Know A fact from this article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "Did you know?" column on June 28, 2007.
The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that La Martiniere Boys' College in Lucknow, India is the only school in the world to be awarded a battle honour?
Current status: Former good article nominee

Lists and trivia edit

If we want to get La Martiniere to good article status we need to avoid having too many lists. I've therefore had a go at re-doing the infrastructure section and changing it to a prose format. I was a bit confused about which facilites are in Constantia and which facilites are in new buildings and I will probably have made some errors so please check what I've done carefully. Trivia sections are usually frowned upon in Wikipedia articles, and it is normally suggested that the material should be incorporated in the main text. I will have a go at doing this in the next few days if no one else gets there first. The little village, Martin Parwa, sounds really interesting, and probably ought to have an article in its own right. I'm a bit concerned about some of the teachers in the "Notable teachers" section. Some of them are no doubt well loved by everyone connected with the school, but they don't appear to be particularly noteworthy in their own right. To be notable they must be published authors, poets, media personalities, sports starts, etc. Also, unless the information on the teachers can be supported by references, then it constitutes original research which is not permitted. There might well be scope for someone to write a personal essay on the former teachers instead if we have to deleted some of these entries. Dahliarose 12:45, 12 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Agree, I had a look at Martin Parva, but there are only two (easy to find) sources. One is the school commenting on the villages encroachment and the other is the golf story... and the prime golfer claims elsewhere that he is from Fiji. Maybe if we have had a picture? I think it might be unfait to write an article on someones home village without some local experience. Maybe a minimal stub, but ... Victuallers 19:34, 12 July 2007 (UTC)Reply
I decided to go ahead and start a stub on Martin Purwa. The present actually has more content than most of the other Indian villages in Uttar Pradesh! There does seem to be a consensus that all places are notable and should have an article. Perhaps someone who lives locally can help to expand the article and add a few pictures. The village must have entries in some of the Indian gazetteers which could be used as a reference. I'm not too sure about the situation with regards to the golfers but I'm hoping someone can clarify. Dahliarose 09:52, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Martin Purwa is indeed an interesting village. It is part of the estate of La Martiniere.Most of the inhabitants are descended from the original servants and retainers of Claude Martin.It has traditionally supplied the class IV staff to the college. The hereditary daroga ( superintendent ) of the La Martiniere estate also has a house in the village. The caddies turned pro golfers are not unique to Luckno. Some other Indian cities have also seen this happen.moon 13:44, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

I've added the daroga to the article. I've also been able to find a few more sources to help with the expansion of the article. Further expansion would be most welcome, as would a few pictures. On another matter altogether, do you think you could provide a few explanations for the curriculum section? I'm somewhat baffled by 10+2, and I also don't understand the system of class numbering. Could you possibly let us know the ages of the children in the different classes? There is in fact an article on Educational stages. A section on the system in India would be much appreciated. Dahliarose 14:30, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Review edit

Not sure, if anything will come of it, but I asked "Twenty Years" an experienced GA prime editor to have a look at this article Victuallers 19:34, 12 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Local? edit

Advice please. C. Paul Chater is mentioned in the school song and in the Calcutta site as being a saviour of "the school" ... does that include these two schools? /in which case he should be mentioned more prominently here Victuallers 09:13, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Paul Chater as alumni of Cal Mart and he rescued the Cal School from bankruptcy and possible closure.

Regards

moon 13:36, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Quality of the Article edit

Of course we should try for the La Martiniere Lucknow article to be upgraded. But in our anxiety in doing so let it not be too straitjacketed. The school is unique and the article should reflect its uniqueness.

Creating a new and innovative format perhaps should be our long term goal.

I think Wikipedia is all about creating and sharing of mutual creative evolutionary energy of all of us.

I think the three of us have done our best to make the article look good.Yes I think we need to reduce the Lists. Removing the incomplete list of principals could be a good beginning.

The History of the Boy's and Girl's Schools also need to reduced and merged.

The Murder should be part of the history section and be put in its correct historical and not hysterical perspective.

The horse buses carrying the choir is trivia and it needs to be removed.Also the info on the boys qualifying for the Roorkee Engineering college.

William Dalrymples hurried opinions/misreadings need to be replaced by facts. Although it is romantic to believe that Constantia was named after Martin's childhood sweet heart it is perhaps just that- a romantic thought .

Also the theory that Martin wanted to get himself buried in Constantia because he wanted to prevent the nawab from acquiring it is not strong enough. Chandan Mitra in his book says that the Constantia was originally planned by Martin as a grand mausoleum for himself. He also mentions that the Nawab Asaf-ud -dawlah had died three years before Martin.So this is also just that-pure gossip by the detractors of Martin to prove his craftiness.

I feel that we should keep adding to the article on Claude Martin and write on his multifaceted persona. For instance Martin was an Aviation enthusiast who introduced hot air baloons in India.He was also a self taught architect as he designed more than a dozen buildings during the construction boom years in Lucknow from 1775 to1797.Lucknow owes much to Claude Martin.

La Martiniere has been constantly reinventing itself and it is unfair to say that it is cut off from the world around it. The La Martiniere Lucknow has infact been an interesting meeting and melting pot for the various social groups in the multi cultural milieu of Awadh to study together and understand each other. This in fact can be a study in itself for some sociologist.

Having said that ,the article is evolving very well and let us continue doing it.

I think both of you Victuallers and Dahliarose were Martinians in a previous lifetime ( Just kidding )

Labore-et-Constantia.

Regards

moon 14:36, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

---

Hi moon Some comments 1. Thanks for the views and our promotion to born again martinians (appreciated) 2. Sure we can experiment, but don't believe Wikipedia is a hippy democracy - there is ultimately a boss here. We can argue and debate only 3. Lists - good! - agreed - can we demote some alumni too? 4. Merge historys - not sure, don't mind 5. Murder is just history - agreed.... but it cannot be lost 6. Horse buses .... strange to me ... maybe not to you? 7. Dalrymple - sure lets quote him with a fact that shows its untrue. 8. "Constance" I agree ... sounds like pure fancy... maybe we should quote it as being pure legend 9. His death place... yes I have heard other versions ... ie its for his mistress/wife ..might be useful to debate these opposing and unsubstantiated ideas as exactly that. 10 Claude Martin ballonist - amazing! This would make two GAs! Is there some sources for this? I read the stuff about CM making his own wedgewood and statues and thought that is a very clever guy. Others would try it and they'd create rubbish. 11. Unfair? So lets quote the stuff that shows its unfair. We have to show all the views. 12. Apologise for the list? Any news on photos? I see you loaded two old ones ... I have moved one to "Commons" so it can be used for all languages .... Do either of you speak any languages? It would be good to have some stubs in relevant languages.Victuallers 15:38, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

---

Just a few comments about the points you raise. We do have to work within the Wikipedia guidelines which have been developed by a consensus of the community over a number of years. We're not necessarily working within a straitjacket but we do have to follow the rules if we want to avoid having the page being decorated with ugly boxes disputing the neutrality of the article, complaining about trivia sections, etc. A new and innovative format is therefore not really possible within these constraints. We need to present all the different points of view based on existing sources not our own opinions. One source I found did suggest that Constantia was named after a French girl. If you can find another source which quotes an opposite view then we need to quote that too. The same applies with the view that Martin wanted to be buried in Constantia. This is mentioned in a number of sources. If Chandran Mitra presents an alternative view then we need to include this too. Can you perhaps amend the article accordingly or put a quote from the relevant section on the talk page so that we can adapt it as necessary? As someone with no connection to the school I find that William Dalrymple's views are important. If other historians don't agree with his views then we also need to present their opinions. Again if you have access to any sources which present other views then we need to include them. We have to be balanced and present all viewpoints. I thought our account of the murder was fairly neutral and not at all hysterical, but it definitely needs to be retained. Victuallers and I did discuss before the possibility of having separate articles for the boys' and girls' schools. Now that you've contributed so much more material about the girls' school I wonder if that might now be the best thing to do. Claude Martin is an intriguing personality and his article really could do with a lot of work. Anything you can add to the piece would be most welcome. The La Martiniere article has certainly come a long way in the last month or so. I think it might now be a suitable time for us to get a peer review to get the opinions of a few other independent editors. Dahliarose 16:13, 13 July 2007 (UTC) (Honorary Martinian!)Reply


Vive La Martiniere edit

Hi born again Martinians !

Thanks for joining in. Welcome to the Club !

Some thoughts :

  • Yes i think both the Martinieres in Lucknow deserve separate articles. Lets do it otherwise we'll unwittingly be guilty of gender bias.
  • William Dalrymple with all regards to him is not a historian but a historical novelist and naturally is inclined to fictional aspects.
  • Comments by journos and 'an old boy' are personal opinion not history.
  • Yes , Lets go slow on Notable Faculty.
  • Notable Alumni list should not be reduced. All the ones mentioned are notable enough.In any case no they are not on the main page.
  • Yes Claude Martin needs to be rediscovered and presented as an ingenious man that he was , someone who was born ahead of his times. His journey in social mobility is unique . I hope some day a film will be made on this amazing human being who has been misunderstood and misrepresented in history. I really think he and his legacy "still lives in us today'
  • La Martiniere Trivia should be restored and perhaps be progressively integrated in the main sections. One can call it by some other name if the word 'trivia' is a problem.
  • History of La Martiniere should be done more carefully. Allow me to do it. I'll try to be as objective as possible.

Vive La Martiniere

Love and Regards

moon 17:26, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply


William Dalrymple - Senior History Scholar - Trinity, Oxford Victuallers 17:52, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

A few comments.
  • Yes, I'm happy to go ahead with the two separate articles.
  • The interpretation of history is personal opinion. The views of journalists and old boys are all valid. Everyone will have their spin on the school's history. However, we can only rely on published sources. If people haven't published their alternative views then those views won't be represented.
  • Yes, the notable alumni list could do with some trimming. People without sources who look unlikely to be notable enough to warrant their own Wikipedia article should probably be deleted.
  • I've now incorporated all the 'trivia' into the main article. There were some bits which related to the Lyon and Calcutta schools which I've moved to the alumni section of the La Martiniere College article as they don't belong here. It is better to incorporate these little nuggets into the main article. Trivia sections, whatever title they go under, are usually frowned upon.
  • There's very little in the history section on the period after the siege and it would be great if you could expand this part, and also incorporate Chandan Mitra's views in the earlier part. Make sure you include references, especially for any contentious views. Dahliarose 20:09, 13 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

School song edit

I've put the school song back in a box but made it a little narrower so that it doesn't take up quite so much space. Putting a school song in the main text of the article is a guaranteed way to put people off reading to the end of the article, which is the last thing we want to do. The words of the song are really only of interest to people who went to the school, and very boring for everyone else! I think Victuallers also mentioned somewhere that boxes are the recommended format for such content in would-be good articles. Dahliarose 22:14, 16 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Ok. I agree

122.161.33.58 03:06, 17 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Martin's burial edit

I'm still somewhat confused about Martin's burial. Surely if he planned his own burial beneath the house from the very beginning he was intending to preserve the Christian heritage and to stop the house getting into Muslim hands, thought not necessarily those of the nawab. I've clarified the point about the Christian burial desecrating the building in Muslim eyes. This is an important point and something I hadn't realised. Does Chandan Mitra have anything further to say on the subject? Dahliarose 14:22, 17 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Titles of split articles edit

If we have separate articles for the boys' and girls' schools what should they be called. La Martinière College, Lucknow for the boys and La Martinière Girls' College, Lucknow for the girls? Do you agree that the grave accent should be included in the titles? Dahliarose 14:59, 17 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Yes I agree

moon 03:40, 18 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Hi Dahliarose edit

In his book Chandan Mitra only refutes the 'afterthought' theory. My own thoughts are as follows:

- Martin built the Constantia both as a memorial to his "Constance" and his "Constancy". As such he was very possessive of the building as it represented his past ( Constance}, his present ( Constancy ) and the future institution ( Labore-et-Constantia)

- A precise and meticulous planner he must have planned his final resting place in his magnum opus-Constantia. Ofcourse he must be harbouring occasional thoughts of going back to Lyon "in a carriage" but as a realist he must have realized that his destiny was Lucknow.

Chandan Mitra quotes Martin :" I have always refused to give up the French nationality, but of which France do I belong? That of Lois XV , where I have only known misery before embarking on the L'Orient ? That of philosophers , of terror bathing in blood, or that of Bonapartewhose eastern dream has just been dissipated, after leaving Tipu Sahib alone against the English? I have collaborated for his defeat and then after he lost I have been rewarded by some gold sprinkling on my uniform-a vain plaything for my vanity.By my persevarance and hard work I have accumulated a fortune from this country which is my second motherland.I have not cheated the people who have passively succumbed to the yoke of corrupt men. I have read a lot , pen in hand, often under difficult conditions, and I know the value of the first rudiments inculcated by the paarson of St.Saturnin.That is why I divide my fortune in two.I want to thank all those who have been around me by making their life easier after my death. I also want to give the children of both Lyon and India, the instruction which I received with so much difficulty. I want to make it easy for young people to get access to knowledge , specially the sciences."

- It is quite certain that Martin was building his own 'mausoleum' in the tradition of Oriental rulers and he must have already disclosed this to his friend the Nawab Asafud daulah.The Nawab any way died in 1798 and was buried in his magnum opus-Bara Imambara in Lucknow.

Regards moon 03:39, 18 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

I like your theory about the name. Does this idea actually appear in any published sources so that we can use it? Thank you for the fascinating extract from Chandan Mitra's book. I'm not quite sure where this leaves us with regards to the present article. Are you happy with the section of the text on Martin's burial as it now stands? If Martin was such a meticulous planner then when he conceived the idea of the house/mausoleum he wouldn't have known that he would outlive the nawab so that theory is still valid. He did specify in his will, as we state in the article, that the boys should learn about the Christian religion if they wanted so presumably Martin's burial in the house did indeed ensure that his wishes could be fulfilled. If the school was taken over by the nawab or any of his descendants (is the position of nawab hereditary or elected?) then Constantia would presumably be turned into a Muslim school without the religious freedom which Martin so desired. Dahliarose 09:48, 18 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Separation edit

Brief note: Moon mentioned about boys attending the girls school as part of junior school. Does that in fact give us three schools ... even if there are two buildings. Where would you deal with this Junior school... under girls ... or the "main one" (I say "main" not out of sexism but because it doesnt have boys in the title.

Also - Before you separate then I think you should both appreciate the templates shown above. We will have two ... and probably in time seven articles that will all need a) a bit about Claude c) a bit about history of the school as a group d) a bit about the logo etc. If you separate the articles first then you will have a hell of a job keeping these up to date. Suggest strongly that we develop the templates first. Then when we want to make a change about whether the motto was named after his lost love or not then it can be done in one edit. Victuallers 07:22, 18 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

How do we go about creating these templates? Can we actually have a real template for each duplicated section so that in future rather than editing all seven articles we just edit the template to make the changes to every article? I agree that we should get this article sorted first and only make the split when its stable. Dahliarose 09:32, 18 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

The Templates edit

I agree with Victuallers that the templates should be created first.

Clarification:

There are basically two Martinieres in Lucknow with their own junior schools. For some time till the late seventies a few boys attended La Martiniere Girls' school till standard IV. No this has stopped.

moon 08:45, 18 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

templates a guide edit

Templates are only just articles. If you read the media wiki stuff about why they think the software we use is so clever then one of their selling points is this idea of merely typing SCHOOL in double curly brackets .. embeds a copy of one page inside another. I think this is clever cos I'm an "IT" person. Is it easy? ... well yes. If you go and look at the template above called "Education in Lucknow" and you click the "e" then you are editting a template just like it is any other article. The clever thing is that when you save the template it updates every instance where that template occurs. So give a silly example .... in the top left hand corner of this page is the Wikipedia logo.... if we could find the template that contains it then every page on Wikipedia tomorrow could say "Coca Cola" instead. I'm going to move the "Education in Lucknow" template and put it in a few places. I really need Moonwiki to check it out as I may have a Hindi school in the Catholics or vice versa. Victuallers 22:05, 18 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Many thanks for the explanation. Does it mean that if, for instance, we have a Claude Martin history template and a Martiniere traditions template, they would have to go in a box rather than be incorporated into the main article? With Martin's history I think we probably need to develop a shorter section for the other schools. Lucknow is inevitably going to be longer as he's buried there and Constantia was his house. Dahliarose 08:12, 19 July 2007 (UTC)Reply
Dahlia ... your right. I'm going to try and find some "core" Claud Martin stuff that can be used on all schools but we can expand where there is much more interest. e.g. Lucknow boys would be interested in Lucknow but Lyon would be more interested in the first 17 years and why he did not return. Please comment (either way) on what you see happening Victuallers 16:44, 21 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

School Prayer in La Martiniere edit

The school prayer that has been uploaded is the wrong one. This prayer is specific to La Martiniere Calcutta as it mentions "Paul Chater". The school prayer that I recall both at the girls and boys school used to be the one that said" Our father who art in heaven".

Victuallers , all that techno stuff is Greek to me. Tell me exactly hat you want me to check out on " Education in Lucknow"moon 05:01, 19 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Education in Lucknow edit

OK no techie stuff. Look at it. Is it correct? Does it have the right categories of schools and the right schools in it? Should we add the Lucknow university colleges? Thx

PS - I'll remove the prayer template. But I wnt to experiment with one or two templates Victuallers 07:57, 19 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

The School Prayer of La Martiniere College Lucknow begins "O Almighty God and most merciful Father, who has taught us to praise Thee, for the dead as well as for the living....." LMCLko69 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.70.231.235 (talk) 14:33, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

Houses edit

That was a nice addition. But instead of pictures it would be better if their respective coat of arms are displayed in the centre. Each house has its Crest.

Regards

moon 05:01, 21 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Glad you like it. Crests would be good, but we need to find some and prove we have permission to use them (not easy). I have a wish to get some more modern photos in of the school. Martin Palwa, the lue room etc and to check the template first. I'm going to add a picture of Hodson. There appears to be only one. Hodson seems 50% hero and 50% ruthless amoral soldier Victuallers 16:39, 21 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

TfD edit

I have nominated Template:La Martiniere Song (appears on this page) for deletion, you can see the debate here. Thanks. Twenty Years 14:41, 29 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

Re-assessment edit

Following discussion at WT:SCH I am giving this article a re-assessment for WikiProject Schools. I am going to endorse the assessment of B / Top. This article meets a B rating with it good referencing, its coverage of a variety of topics, good illustrations and reasonable well organised layout. With a bit more work, I would now consider this article a future GA candidate.

I am giving it Top importance for several reasons. The school has a large amount of notable alumni and the boys school was the only in the world to be given a battle honour. The schools history is also very extensive such as the schools involvement in the Indian rebellion of 1867. Finally, it is beneficial to have more non-US and UK school articles be given top importance to give more balance to the assessment system. Camaron1 | Chris 18:25, 30 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

A solution edit

Now that the dust has settled and I can think straight again I've had an idea which I think might be an ideal solution for the school song. There is already an existing article for F. J. Rowe, the author of the school song. I've now had a go at expanding the article. There are numerous sources on Google Books (including a snippet of the Chandan Mitra book) but unfortunately none of the books needed to expand the article further have yet been digitised or, if they have, they are not freely available. How about reproducing the song on the F J Rowe page and then simply including links labelled 'Vive La Martiniere, the school song', on all the La Martiniere school pages? The link could either be to the Rowe article or to the relevant section within the article. Interestingly I did find the words of the song reproduced on someone's blog and he said that he'd checked the words on Wikipedia! What does everyone think? Dahliarose 23:55, 7 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

The school song should not be reproduced on wikipedia, if it is, there are grounds to delete it per the TfD, and i will stop at nothing to delete it. By adding it back to the article, you could be seen as being disruptive to the wikipedia project, and blocked from editing for a period of time. I think that a simple solution to your problem is to find the page that says the school song out in full, and provide an external link to it at the bottom of the school pages that it is relevant to in the section entitled "External Links", anything more will be deleted. Twenty Years 12:13, 11 September 2007 (UTC)Reply
I think you've misunderstood. The TFD did not say that the song shouldn't be reproduced, only that it shouldn't appear across multiple articles. One suggestion was even to do an article on the song, which seems unnecessary. Dahliarose 12:17, 11 September 2007 (UTC)Reply
An article on the song would no doubt be absolutely killed in an AfD. I had some discussions about the inclusion of the school song on Aquinas College, Perth (before we worked out it was a copyvio), and we came to the conclusion that, although the song could be backed up by an independant source, it was not notable, and has no reason to be included in the article. Twenty Years 12:36, 11 September 2007 (UTC)Reply
I've now had a better idea and have taken up one of the earlier suggestions and put the song on Wikisource. I hadn't realised that it was still possible to use the same Wiki formatting on Wikisource but it seems to have worked out quite well. Perhaps this should be a model for other school songs. Eton College might perhaps like to do the same with their two songs. Dahliarose 13:46, 11 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Fair use rationale for Image:Martstamp.jpg edit

 

Image:Martstamp.jpg is being used on this article. I notice the image page specifies that the image is being used under fair use but there is no explanation or rationale as to why its use in this Wikipedia article constitutes fair use. In addition to the boilerplate fair use template, you must also write out on the image description page a specific explanation or rationale for why using this image in each article is consistent with fair use.

Please go to the image description page and edit it to include a fair use rationale. Using one of the templates at Wikipedia:Fair use rationale guideline is an easy way to insure that your image is in compliance with Wikipedia policy, but remember that you must complete the template. Do not simply insert a blank template on an image page.

If there is other fair use media, consider checking that you have specified the fair use rationale on the other images used on this page. Note that any fair use images uploaded after 4 May, 2006, and lacking such an explanation will be deleted one week after they have been uploaded, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. If you have any questions please ask them at the Media copyright questions page. Thank you.

BetacommandBot (talk) 20:00, 5 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

New unreferenced section edit

Could the person who added the new unreferenced and unwikified section please set up an account so that we can discuss the additions. I've removed the new unreferenced section for the moment. Apart from the lack of references it duplicates much of the existing article. I'm also concerned that the material might have been copied and pasted from copyright material. Could you please tell us where the material came from. I've copied and pasted the material below so that it is not lost. Dahliarose (talk) 12:13, 20 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

On the eve of the event, known variously as the Revolt of 1857, the First war of independence or the Indian Mutiny of 1857, Lucknow, the capital of the kingdom of Avadh was one of the largest and most prosperous pre-colonial cities in India. Under the Nawabs, Lucknow experienced a virtual Renaissance. Much of the surviving architecture of the city reflects a unique moment of Indo-European intermingling.

One landmark of architectural achievements of this period is the grand building of La Martiniere. Major General Claude Martin, who arrived in India from France in 1751, as a common soldier, built it at the end of 18th century. However, his fortunes multiplied by the time he came to Awadh. La Martiniere was originally named ‘Constantia,’ after the motto Claude Martin adopted, “Labore et Constantia,” which means ‘work and fidelity’.

Claude Martin who died in 1800 was, according to his will, buried at Constantia. Thus, it became his palace-mausoleum. As per William Dalrymple it was “the East India Company’s answer to the Taj Mahal”. Martin also willed that his palace tomb should become a school for boys (he left money to open schools in Calcutta and Lyon, his hometown in France, as well.) La Martiniere, as he desired the school to be named, was started in 1845.

La Martiniere was a miniature fortress, with ditches, stockades, secret passages and cannons. It had Georgian colonnades with the loopholes and turrets of a medieval castle; Palladian arcades rise to Mughal copulas. Many of the statues which adorn the turrets and ramparts, depict classical figures of the Gods and Goddesses of the heathen mythology. Inside of the building was decorated with brightly coloured Nawabi plasterwork, especially in the college Chapel. It also has stain glass windows, one depicting “Jesus in the carpenter’s shop at Nazareth subject to his parents,” and in other “Jesus in the temple in the midst of the doctors, hearing them and asking them questions.”

In the lake, facing Constantia, is the ‘Lat’. It is said to be the grave of Claude martin’s horse, or perhaps a lighthouse.

Impressed by its beauty Rosie Llewellyn Jones describes it in following words: “It is both the finest, and largest, example of European Funerary monument in the subcontinent… a wedding cake in brick, a gothic castle.”

La Martiniere was only 12 years old and still struggling to find its feet when the first spark was struck at Meerut on 10th May 1857 and as far as La Martiniere was concerned 1857 was perceived of and responded to the challenge as the mutiny.

Troops were stationed in many houses at Awadh, including La Martiniere, as per the orders of the Chief Commissioner Henry Lawrence. College principal George Schilling showed similar percipience and immediately after receiving the news about Meerut, he moved the establishment into the main building of Constantia, which was suitable for defence. The older boys were armed and assigned sentry duty on top of the building during the day while night duty was assigned to the masters.

By now, Lucknow was openly mutinous. People commenced moving to the Residency for protection in the third week of May but schilling remained in Constantia with his boys. Steps were taken to prepare the main building for defence. Classes continued but the boys were warned to make for Constantia, which had been barricaded with sandbags, bricks etc. An immense iron door guarded the stairway and artillery, composed of a few swivel muskets, was mounted on the bastions. The numerous doors in front of the building were barricaded while those behind were built up with mud and brick walls five feet high and five feet thick. All the staircases were built up and all doors leading to the central staircase excepting one filled up with bricks. To do all this only a few coolies could be obtained, but the masters and boys worked hard and the whole exercise was accomplished in 3 or 4 days.

On 17th June the Chief Commissioner issued orders for everyone to move to the Residency and all preparations for the defence of the building were stopped at once. On 18th June the college proceeded to the Residency in procession, the smaller boys on elephants and the senior boys armed with muskets, forming the rear-guard. The house of a banker was made over to the college and Posterity knows it as ‘the Martiniere Post’. It was a hot, closed house, located in an extremely exposed and vulnerable position on the southern perimeter of the Residency defences.

The gates of the Residency were shut on 30th June 1857, locking out both the Martiniere’s flock of sheep and the washer man, who had a large stock of the boys’ clothing. Consequently, the clothes became an even greater problem than food as the siege went on and on. The hard military, domestic and hospital duty that the boys had to do soon wore out what they were dressed in.

The siege of Lucknow began on 30th June and continued till 19th November. This period of one hundred and forty-two days bestowed on the boys of La Martiniere College an education no other school children had ever received. Between the ages of six and sixteen according to their capabilities, the boys stood to arms, served as hospital attendants, carried messages, ground wheat and corn until reduced rations weakened them and made this difficult task impossible. Quite apart from this, the boys showed remarkable ingenuity in erecting a semaphore on the Residency Tower, from instructions contained in a number of the Penny encyclopedia. This proved to be of immense value for it enabled contact to be established with the besieged and Colonel Campbell’s relieving force.

For the first time in her long history Britain had called upon her school boys to fight for her and the Martiniere boys responded magnificently. As an inevitable consequence, the Martiniere is unique among the schools of the world in having engaged, as a school in serious warfare when staff and students defended the Martiniere Post.

Schilling, the school principal, led a party of 6 masters, the estate Superintendent and 67 boys into the Residency. All but two came out alive, in spite of the extremely exposed position of their temporary quarters, constantly subject to danger from bullets, cannon balls, mines and assaults. Schilling was accorded the singular honour of commanding the Post even after regular troops were stationed alongside the boys.

Fourteen “Senior” boys, ages between 9 and a half to 15 years, along with most of the masters, bore arms in defence of the Post. The close proximity of the houses full of rebels, especially Johannis’ house (barely 20 feet away from the Post) meant constant threat from assaults and even more ominously, mines. [The worst nearly happened on 10th August when during the general assault a mine entirely carried away the outer room of the Post, blew open the doors of the inner room and destroyed a fifty foot stretch of palisades while the boys were away at prayers. However before the dust cleared the doors were barricaded with school tables. The boys also helped in digging a mine from an inner room, a marble tablet still marks the spot in the Post from where the mine, which blew up Johannis’ house, was started. The threatening assaults of the rebels were most harassing as they made the duty of guarding the Post an extremely one, especially at night when most of the attacks, both real and feigned, took place. For over a month this duty was left entirely to the college.

Military duty was only a part of the sterling work done by the boys right through the siege. Since all servants had absconded, the boys were required to carry out domestic work and for the first time, regular schoolwork was stopped. Some boys were deputed upon to attend upon the sick and wounded, some to sweep the compounds every morning and some to draw water, some to grind corn and some to cook. Keeping watch until the Masters came on duty at night and digging pits for the filth of the establishment was the duty of the senior boys. Washing their own clothes was a daily duty for all but the smallest. At Brigadier Inglis’ request, thirty-six boys, in twelve-hour shifts of twelve boys at a time, were assigned to pull fans over the sick and the wounded, but it became impossible to keep up this number especially in September when the health of the boys generally declined.

Right at the commencement of the siege, Henry Lawrence was mortally wounded on 2nd July. Three Martiniere boys attended him.

In such an extraordinary state of affairs, the boys did remarkably well. It is incredible that only two boys died, both due to dysentery. Two boys were wounded, one when stooping to fire at the rebels and other while carrying messages.

During the entire period in the Residency, the usual discipline of the college was maintained and, with very few exceptions, regularity observed in meals, prayers and daily inspection of the boys to see that personal cleanliness was being maintained to the extent circumstances permitted.

On 17th November, immediately after Colonel Campbell’s arrival at the Residency, the decision was taken to abandon the Residency; which was largely completed by 19th November. But on the next day those boys who had defended the Post went back to the Residency at dusk to continue the defence until the Residency was finally abandoned on 22nd November. A large number of rebels were killed before the Martiniere Post in the grand assault on the Residency on the 22nd when the boys were compelled to withdraw to the basement just before the portico collapsed under the heavy cannonade. (After the assault 24 cannon balls were recovered from the Post.)

After leaving the Residency, everyone was shifted to Allahabad. Shortly after Christmas all connected to the college left for Benares. On 15th January 1858, the college was temporarily shifted in two large bungalows at Benares, and continued to be there till March 1859. It was shifted back to Lucknow, once Constantia became habitable.

At Constantia, after the mutiny, nothing remained but the bare bullet and shot ridden walls. Doors and windows had vanished, marble pavements dug up, the library destroyed, the ornamented ceilings and interiors riddled with musket ball, the ironwork removed. The Founder’s tomb had been broken open and his bones scattered, apparently in the mistaken belief of finding a treasure.

Staff and boys of the college who served during the Mutiny received the Mutiny medal. The awards were notified to the principal on 5th February 1861 by a letter from the chief commissioner of Oudh. In April 1933, the Viceroy gave permission to La Martiniere to carry a “Flag” distinct from “colours” on ceremonial occasion. The flag was first ceremonially paraded on the Eighty-First Anniversary of Colonel Campbell’s relief of the Lucknow Residency. Whether it is a battle Honour, as generations of Martinians think it to be, or a flag as the then Viceroy decided it was, it is still unique.

Ever since the Mutiny of 1857, La Martiniere always had a volunteer unit. Its students also participated in the two World Wars and wars of Independent India.

Today years after the Mutiny, La Martiniere is a monument still alive. It is a flourishing educational institution, which is proud of its glorious past.

Battle honours revisited edit

We seem to have a misunderstanding about the uniqueness of the battle honours. I have again reverted the edits which claim that McGill University is a school. We have previously discussed this issue (see the Battle Honours heading above). The claim that La Martiniere is the only school in the world to receive the honour is backed up by the Rosie Llewellyn Jones reference. She is the official school historian. In British English a school is not an institute of further education. I wonder perhaps if the term school has a wider meaning in American English which has led to the misunderstanding. As far as I can establish McGill University is an institute of higher education and therefore not a school. Dahliarose (talk) 21:37, 10 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

My apologies, the differing usages of "school" seem to be the confusion. In American English the word school refers to any educational institution: nursery schools, kindergartens, elementary schools, middle schools, high schools, junior/community colleges, vocational-technical (vo-tec) schools, barber/beauty colleges, clown college, universities, graduate and post-graduate schools are all schools. Here in the States we have at least 2 schools that have been awarded battle honors by the United States Army; Florida State University and The Citadel, both for service during the American Civil War. Also in the States, we have both colleges (institution of higher learning) and universities (institution of higher learning that perform research in addition to educating students). Given that this is not the 1st time that the wording of the article has caused confusion, as you point out above, and as Lucknow is not the only educational institution to be awarded a battle honor, the wording really should be changed. Cheers. L0b0t (talk) 00:44, 11 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
What wording do you suggest? We could perhaps link to the UK section of theschool article which gives the differing usages. The alternative might be to use the words "secondary school", though that rather implies that there might be a primary school which has such an honour. Dahliarose (talk) 10:00, 11 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
I would suggest something like: "La Martiniere is one of only two educational institutions in the British Empire to be awarded battle honors by the Ministry of Defense; the other being Canada's McGill University." We should not be trying to emphasize the "uniqueness" of the honor as it is in no way unique, just mention both schools institutions have the award, Lucknow for the mutiny and McGill for World War One. Cheers. L0b0t (talk) 11:40, 11 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
The honour is however unique for a school (in the English sense of the word) and I think this is an important point to be made in the article. La Martiniere featured as a did you know on the front page and the La Martiniere DYK is now one of the revolving DYKs featured at Portal:Schools. There are not that many school DYKs in the Portal so it would be a pity to lose it. When the school was on the front page no one at the time queried the meaning of the word school in this context and Wikipedia:WikiProject Schools makes it quite clear that universities are not included. I think it’s more of a question of modifying the wording somehow so that American readers are not confused. The article does however make clear in the introduction that the school only caters for children up to the age of 18, and the article is written in British English. Would most Americans really find the use of the word school in this context that confusing? As far as I understand it the award is made by the Queen, and has nothing to do with the Ministry of Defence. Dahliarose (talk) 11:33, 12 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Bagpipe band in boys' school: began around 1968 edit

The Article states that the bagpipe band began in 2006. Actually the bagpipe band in the boys' school started around 1968. I was one of three bagpipe players that played for the first time ever in the band when it was first formed. Actually I think we had four bagpipe players, but the fourth person dropped out. The first time that the band tried to play for one of the annual occasions, the bagpipers were so bad that we were banned from the official ceremony, so they had a band with only drums. But we practised very hard and got quite good and subsequently played for several official occasions. Maybe they phased out the band at some point and restarted it in 2006. Rahul (talk) 08:00, 13 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

Rahul is quite right. It was either 1967 or 1968. In fact one of the bagpipers was called Pipe Major Jafarson MacHusain, in jest. Their forte was the tune "Cock of the North" LMCLko69 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.70.231.235 (talk) 14:40, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

Nice new image edit

Thanks - looks very good Victuallers (talk) 10:05, 26 February 2013 (UTC)Reply

Edited Infobox edit

Infobox added - Houses, College colours, publication and former pupils. Faizking321 02:49, 4 September 2013 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Faizking321 (talkcontribs)

Assessment comment edit

The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:La Martinière College, Lucknow/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.

This is not a stub ... its at least a start and with minor work a B.

Should be mid or high importance Victuallers 08:59, 22 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

Promoted to BKnowledgeHegemony 06:16, 10 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Last edited at 06:16, 10 July 2007 (UTC). Substituted at 21:30, 29 April 2016 (UTC)

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External links modified edit

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What is the procedure for admission in grade 3? edit

What is the fee structure? Ranisha Chaudhary (talk) 17:34, 11 February 2020 (UTC)Reply

A Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for speedy deletion edit

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