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thumb| painting of a Madras Army sowar
via Wikipedia infobox
thumb| painting of a Madras Army sowar
Sowar (, also sawar or siwar meaning "the one who rides" or "rider", from Persian , from the Sasanid Persian Aswār, from the Achaemenid Persian Asabāra) was originally a rank during the Mughal Empire. Later, during the British Raj, it was the name in Anglo-Indian usage for a horse-soldier belonging to the cavalry troops of the native armies of British India and the feudal states. It is also used more specifically of a mounted orderly, escort or guard. It was also the rank held by ordinary cavalry troopers, equivalent to sepoy in the infantry — this rank has been inherited by the modern armies of India and Pakistan. The rank higher is Acting Lance Daffadar.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).