FOOTNOTES:
| 1st Battalion King's Own, Scottish Borderers | 500 | rifles |
| No. 7 Mountain Battery | 84 | " |
| No. 6 Company Queen's Own, Sappers and Miners | 151 | " |
| 2nd Battalion 4th Gurkhas | 410 | " |
| 2nd Madras Infantry | 630 | " |
| Burma Company Queen's Own, Sappers and Miners | 94 | " |
| ————— | ||
| Total | 1,869 | rifles |
| 1st Battalion Cheshire Regiment | 300 | rifles |
| 42nd Gurkha Light Infantry | 477 | " |
| No. 5 Company Queen's Own, Sappers and Miners | 95 | " |
| 10th Bengal Infantry | 460 | " |
| 28th Bengal Infantry | 290 | " |
| ————— | ||
| Total | 1,622 | rifles |
[58] Now Major-General Sir Vincent William Tregear, K.C.B., Indian Army, retired.
[59] It was understood at this time that the Siyins were quite subordinate to the Tashons, whose control, however, proved to be limited.
[60] Brigadier-General Symons's Despatch, dated the 1st of May, 1890, from Haka.
[61] "The Chin Hills," vol. i., p. 89. Government Press, Rangoon, 1896.
[62] Brigadier-General Tregear's Despatch, May 31, 1890.