An early example of the usage of a derivative of the
Arabic being used to refer to Britain is after diplomat
I'tisam-ud-Din returned from Britain back to the Mughal Empire. The locals nicknamed him
Bilayet Munshi due to him being the first
South Asian (c. 1765) to travel to what was known as the Bilayet.
Blighty, a humorous weekly magazine, was issued free to British troops during the First World War. It contained short stories, poems, cartoons, paintings, and drawings, with contributions from men on active service. It was distributed by the
War Office, the
Admiralty and the Red Cross, and subsidised through donations and sales to the general public. The magazine was revived in 1939 and continued until 1958. In his First World War autobiography
Good-Bye to All That (1929), the writer
Robert Graves attributes the term
Blitey to the
Hindustani word for "home." He writes: "The men are pessimistic but cheerful. They all talk about getting a '
cushy' one to send them back to 'Blitey'." The
music hall artiste
Vesta Tilley had a hit in 1916 with the song "I'm Glad I've Got a Bit of a Blighty One" (1916), in which she played a soldier delighted to have been wounded and in hospital. "When I think about my dugout," she sang, "where I dare not stick my mug out. ... I'm glad I've got a bit of a blighty one". Another music hall hit was "
Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty" (1917). The song is sung by
Cicely Courtneidge in the 1962 film
The L-Shaped Room. The term was also referenced in the song "All American Alien Boy" by
Ian Hunter ("I'm just a whitey from Blighty"), from the 1976
album of the same name. Folksinger
Ian Robb's album
Rose and Crown features a topical parody of the traditional song "
Maggie May", about the
Falklands War. The song contains the lines: "When I get back to Blighty, I'll give thanks to The Almighty / Whether Maggie's little war is lost or won". "
Little Blighty on the Down" was a satirical radio comedy series broadcast on
BBC Radio 4 between 1988 and 1992. It was a parody of contemporary life in Britain (specifically during the premiership of
Margaret Thatcher), as reflected in the fictional small village of "Little Blighty".
UKTV operated a digital
television channel called
Blighty that opened in February 2009 and closed on 5 July 2013. The subscription channel, which concentrated on British-made programming, was replaced by a
Freeview channel called
Drama. ==References==