Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 14, 2026

Daffadar

Daffadar is the equivalent rank to sergeant in the Indian and Pakistani cavalry, as it was formerly in the British Indian Army. The rank below is lance daffadar. The equivalent in infantry and other units is havildar. Like a British sergeant, a daffadar wears three rank chevrons.

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Portrait of a 14th Murray's Jat Lancers daffadar source ↗

Daffadar (Hindustani: दफ़ादार (Devanagari); دفعدار (Nastaliq)) is the equivalent rank to sergeant in the Indian and Pakistani cavalry, as it was formerly in the British Indian Army.12 The rank below is lance daffadar. The equivalent in infantry and other units is havildar.3 Like a British sergeant, a daffadar wears three rank chevrons.4

The etymology of the word is unclear. The -dar suffix, found in havildar and other words, means "holder". Thus the word means "holder of dafa' ". The intended meaning of dafa' is, however, unclear. In Arabic it means "pay" or "push", while in Persian, the more obvious source of the word, it means repulsion. It is unclear what role, if any, the word daffadar indicated in the Mughal Empire before it was used as a British Raj rank.

References

References

  1. Abler, Thomas S. (1999). "Glossary". Hinterland warriors and military dress: European empires and exotic uniforms. Oxford; New York: Berg. p. 160. ISBN 978-1-85973-201-4.
  2. "A Guide to Indian Army Ranks". Retrieved 21 April 2025.
  3. "Indian Army Ranks". Retrieved 21 April 2025.
  4. "Subadar-Major c1901". Retrieved 21 April 2025.