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Articles about the stud farm at Pusa
They appear to be persons who went around inspecting weapons in places which held them, such as police stations and prisons. ‪ <ref>Peter et al. [http://www.victorianwars.com/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=8582&p=39708 Role of a Civil Chief Master Armourer (India)‬] Victorian Wars Forum 12 September 2013 et al. Retrieved 10 November 2014 </ref>
==Articles about Stud farms=====Pusa===Pusa is located in Bihar, previously part of the stud farm at PusaBengal Presidency, and is now an Agricultural Research Institute.<ref> [http://www.iari.res.in/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=456&Itemid=1247 IARI Regional Station, Pusa (Bihar)] iari.res.in</ref><br>Articles
*"The Origin of "the Pusa Experiment" : The East India Company and Horse-Breeding in Bengal, 1793-1808" by Garry John Adler. ''Bengal Past & Present'', 98 (1979), 10-32. Publisher: Calcutta Historical Society.
*"A government stud farm [1798-1811] in the days of the company bahadur" by R A Addington ''Cavalry Journal'' Issue No 18, 1928.
===Other studs===
In 1835 there was a stud at Buxar, now Bihar, then part of the Bengal Presidency.<ref> [https://archive.org/stream/fiveyearsinindiavol1/Five_Years_in_India_Vol_1#page/n69/mode/2up Page 41] ''Five Years in India: Comprising a Narrative of Travels in the Presidency of Bengal, a Visit to the Court of Runjeet Sing, Residence in the Himalayah Mountains, an Account of the Late Expedition to Cabul and Affghanistan, Voyage Down the Indus, and Journey Overland to England, Volume I'' by Henry Edward Fane 1842 Archive.org</ref>
==External links==
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