Waterloo and the D-Day landings have lost the title of Britain's greatest battle to a vital - but lesser known - clash against the Japanese in World War Two.
The Battle of Imphal and the simultaneous Battle of Kohima saw British Empire troops fight Japanese forces in horrendous jungle conditions in northeast India in 1944.
Imphal/Kohima was picked over the more celebrated land battles in a contest organised by the National Army Museum in London.
Rorke's Drift in the 1879 Zulu War and the Battle of Aliwal in the Anglo-Sikh War in Punjab in 1846 brought up the rear.
"Great things were at stake in a war with the toughest enemy any British army has had to fight," historian Robert Lyman said of Imphal/Kohima.
Gurkhas supported by an M3 Grant tank advance along the Imphal/Kohima roadIf Lieutenant General William Slim's army of British, Indian, Gurkha and African troops had lost, the consequences for the Allies would have been catastrophic, he said.
The criteria of the contest included the battles' political and historical impact, the challenges the troops faced, and the strategy and tactics employed.
Waterloo had topped an online poll which produced a list of 20 land battles fought since the English Civil War. The top five were then debated at the museum before going to an audience vote.
The winner was something of a surprise given the enduring prominence of Waterloo and D-Day/Normandy in Britain.
The troops who fought in India and Burma in World War Two called themselves The Forgotten Army.
Rorke's Drift saw just over 150 troops fight off up to 4,000 Zulu warriorsThe Battle of Imphal/Kohima took place in 1944 in Nagaland when Japanese troops poured over the Burmese border to strike at India.
Fought over a vast area of jungle and mountain, it was marked by vicious hand-to-hand fighting.
The successful British defence meant they were then able to push into Burma and roll back the Japanese from mainland Asia.
"The victory was of a profound significance because it demonstrated categorically to the Japanese that they were not invincible," said Mr Lyman.
"This was to be very important in preparing the entire Japanese nation to accept defeat."
Saving Private Ryan depicted the US view of the Normandy landingsHe ranked it with Midway, El Alamein and Stalingrad as the main turning point battles of World War Two.
His adversary in the debate, former Parachute Regiment Colonel Stuart Tootal, argued a strong case for the D-Day landings and subsequent Battle for Normandy against Nazi Germany in 1944.
Although movies such as Saving Private Ryan have highlighted the US role in the campaign, the operation was under the command of Britain's Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery.
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