4 e groupe d'escadrons de hussards

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Régiment Colonel-Général hussards
4 e groupe d'escadrons de hussards

Insigne du 4e Régiment de Hussards.jpg

Internal association badge
Lineup 1779
Country Blason France modern.svg France
Armed forces Flag of France.svg French armed forces
Armed forces Flag of France.svg Armée française de terre
Branch of service cavalry
Type Leadership support regiment
Insinuation Regional staff north-east
Location Metz ( Colin district )
Patron saint St. George of Lydda
motto Saxe-conflans, bannière au vent! (Saxe-Conflans with the banner in the wind)
Awards Croix de guerre 1914–1918 with a silver star
Croix de guerre 1939–1945 with a palm branch

The 4 e groupe d'escadrons de hussards (4 e GEH) was set up in 1779 as the Régiment Colonel-Général hussards . The unit is active and regardless of its name, a command support regiment of the French land forces.

List and naming in chronological order

  • 1779: The régiment hussards Colonel-général was set up by the Duke of Chartres in his capacity as "Colonel général des hussards" from a squadron of the hussar regiments de Bercheny , de Chamborant , de Conflans and d'Esterhazy .
  • May 30, 1788: Reinforced by contingents from the cavalry regiment "de Quercy", the infantry regiments "de Septimanie", "de Nassau", "de La Marck," "de Franche-Comté" and "des Evêchés".
  • January 1, 1791: All regiments lost the names they had held during the Ancien Régime , the "Régiment hussards Colonel-général" became the 5 e régiment de hussards .
  • May 4, 1792: After the General Charles-François Dumouriez and with him the entire "4 e régiment de hussards", the former "Régiment Saxe-Hussards" had defected to the Armée des émigrés , the 5th regiment took over its number 4.
  • 1814: After the first restoration of the kingship, the name was changed to "Régiment des hussards de Monsieur"
  • 1815: renamed 4 e régiment de hussards ( Rule of the Hundred Days ) After Napoleon's final abdication , it was initially dissolved.
  • 1816: Reorganization as Régiment des hussards du Nord
  • 1825: Renamed the 4 e régiment de hussards again
  • July 2, 1940: dissolution
  • February 15, 1945: Reorganization of the 4 e régiment de hussards
  • October 30, 1945: dissolved and incorporated into the "2 e régiment de hussards".
  • July 15, 1956: reorganization
  • January 15, 1958: dissolution
  • April 1, 1959: Reconstruction from parts of the "31 e régiment de dragons" (31st Dragoon Regiment)
  • 1964: Dissolution and reorganization - the regiment was incorporated into the "8 e régiment de dragons" and immediately afterwards from the "1 e régiment de chasseurs d'Afrique" (1st regiment of African hunters) and the training tribe of the "6 e régiment de dragons ”again.
  • 1984: Disbanded in Laon , the standard was handed over to the GMR / des 6-4 e RH.
  • 1991: Re-establishment of the 4 e régiment de hussards as a support unit of the RMD-NE / CMD in Metz.
  • 2000: Renaming to 4 e groupe d'escadrons de hussards (4e GEH)
  • 2011: Assigned to the Metz Defense Section Support Command.

Mestres de camp / Colonels / Chefs de brigade

Mestre de camp was the rank designation for the regimental owner and / or the actual commander. Should the Mestre de camp be a person of the high nobility who had no interest in leading the regiment (e.g. the king or queen), the command was given to the Mestre de camp lieutenant (or Mestre de camp en second). The name Colonel was used from 1791 to 1793 and from 1803, from 1793 to 1803 the name Chef de brigade was used . From 1791 there were no more regimental owners.

I. II. III.
  • 1779 Comte de Montréal
  • 1783 Marquis du Chastelier-Dumesnil
  • 1791: Colonel Drouot de la Marche
  • 1792: Colonel Miezskowski
  • 1793: Chef de brigade barber
  • 1794: Chef de brigade Boyé
  • 1794: Chef de brigade Flosse
  • 1796: Chef de brigade Merlin
  • 1797: Chef de brigade Pajol
  • 1804: Colonel André Burthe d'Annelet
  • 1811: Colonel Christophe
  • 1815: Colonel Blot
  • 1816: Colonel Oudinot
  • 1822: Colonel de Merssemann
  • 1829: Colonel de Louvencourt
  • 1830: Colonel Richard
  • 1832: Colonel Antoine Fortuné de Brack
  • 1838: Colonel de Lesparda
  • 1841: Colonel Dormoy
  • 1850: Colonel Gallais
  • 1855: Colonel Simon de la Mortière
  • 1864: Colonel Choury de la Vigerie
  • 1871: Colonel Cousin de Montauban
  • 1875: Colonel Bauvieux
  • 1880: Colonel de Poul
  • 1886: Colonel Colinet de Labeau
  • 1888: Colonel Gaudin
  • 1895: Colonel Le Moine de Margon
  • 1900: Colonel du Cor de Duprat
  • 1908: Colonel Renaud
  • 1911: Colonel Joubert
  • 1915: Colonel Dollfus
  • 1916: Colonel Parrot
  • 1925: Colonel Bonnet
  • 1929: Colonel Langlois
  • 1931: Colonel du Bessey de Contenson
  • 1934: Colonel Saint Poulof
  • 1934: Colonel Rupied
  • 1938: Colonel Chiappini
  • 1945: Colonel Reboul
  • 1945: Colonel Finaz
  • 1956: Colonel Duboster
  • 1957: Colonel Giraud
  • 1959: Colonel Oddo
  • 1960: Colonel Noe
  • 1962: Colonel Heraud
  • 1964: Colonel Burin des Roziers
  • 1964: Colonel de Barry
  • 1966: Colonel Février
  • 1968: Colonel Gonneville
  • 1970: Colonel de Lassus
  • 1972: Colonel Gérin-Roze
  • 1974: Colonel de Zélicourt
  • 1976: Colonel Chevallereau
  • 1978: Colonel Jacquot
  • 1980: Colonel Voinot
  • 1982: Colonel Rocolle
  • 1988: Colonel Boulery
  • 1991: Colonel L'homme
  • 1993: Lieutenant-colonel Valet nul
  • 1995: Lieutenant-colonel Enguilabert
  • 1997: Colonel de Colombel
  • 1999: Colonel Joannes
  • 2001: Colonel Pillet
  • 2003: Colonel Martin
  • 2005: Lieutenant-Colonel Salsedo
  • 2007: Lieutenant-Colonel Maurin
  • 2009: Lieutenant-Colonel Rocolle

Battle calendar

Revolutionary Wars and the First Empire

The 5th then 4th Hussar Regiment was assigned to the Central Army.

Assigned to the Armée du Nord in 1793 and 1794 1794.
On May 11, 1794, a member of the regiment, the Sous-lieutenant and later Marshal of France Étienne Maurice Gérard , managed to take away an enemy convoy and a howitzer with a detachment .

From 1794 to 1797 the regiment was assigned to the Armée de Sambre-et-Meuse .

  • June 26, 1794: Battle of Fleurus (1794)
  • Battle near Langenheim
  • 1795: During the siege of Mainz
  • 1797: Crossing the Rhine near Neuwied ; Lieutenant Devaillant captured an Austrian battalion here with only 30 hussars.

In 1798 the regiment was assigned to the Armée de Mayence and switched to the Armée du Danube (Danube Army) the following year .

In 1800 the regiment was assigned to the Armée du Rhin (Rhine Army).

In 1804 the regiment received four imperial eagles and standards of the Challiot model. In 1805 the unit consisted of 637 men in the Brigade of Général Picard, Division Kellerman , "1er corps d'armée" of Maréchal Bernadotte in the Grande Armée .

Attack of the 4th Hussar Regiment in the Battle of Friedland on June 14, 1807
  • 1806 to 1807  :
  • Campaign in Prussia and Poland
Battle near Saalfeld
Battle of Jena
Battle of Lübeck
Battle at Liebstadt
Battle at Mohrungen
Battle of Friedland .
Hussar of the 1809 regiment

On September 27, 1808, the regiment was awarded two gold crowns by the city of Paris for its services, then it was sent to the army in Spain. It fought there until 1813:

  • 1809
Battle of Alcañiz
Battle of Belchite
  • 1811
Battle of Stella
Battle at Chiclana
The Battle of Sagonte (Sagunto)
Battle of Sagunto
Battle at Tecla
At the Col d'Ordal

In 1812 there was still one eagle with the troops, the others had been sent back home on March 19. The standard was of the model 1812 with the inscriptions: Austerlitz / Iéna / Friedland .

During the fighting in Germany in 1813, the regiment was assigned to the "3e corps de cavalerie" (3rd Cavalry Corps) of the Grande Armée. It fought in the:

Battle of Großbeeren
Battle of the Nations near Leipzig

In 1814 the unit was part of the "6 e corps de cavalerie" (6th Cavalry Corps) in Lyon under the command of Augereau . The first skirmishes between French and Austrian troops took place north of Bourg on January 10, and a French attack the following day. The Austrians were able to repel the attack and began their turn with a counterattack against Challes. The French forces, resisting violently, succeeded in bringing six cannons to Meximieux to safety. The regiment fought during this time at Lons-le-Saunier , Châlons and on March 17th at Mâcon , where it was under the command of Général Pannetier and earned merit in attacking four enemy battalions and four cavalry squadrons.

  • March 20, 1814: Battle of Limonest thereafter the regiment was abdicated (dismissed).

After the restoration of the kingship , a large number of the horsemen preferred to go home. The rest stayed with the flag and entered the service of the king.

Reign of the Hundred Days

After Napoleon's return from the island of Elba , the regiment was stationed in Vienne (Isère) and entrusted with a number of tasks in the departments on the Rhone and in the Alps . In Vienne, the unit was again given an imperial eagle and a standard model 1815, which were blessed in the square in front of the Vienne church after the royal regiment's white standard had been burned at the news of Napoleon's return.

The regiment then fought:

The regimental commander, Colonel Barbier, died on April 23, 1794 during the fighting off Charleroi .

1815-1848

After the end of the Empire, the unit was concentrated in Orléans , the imperial eagles and the standards were destroyed in Bourges .

In 1832 the garrison was in Poitiers .

Officer of the 4e Hussards (1840).

Second republic

Second empire

On August 1, 1870, the regiment joined the “Armée du Rhin” (Rhine Army). With the "4 e régiment de lanciers" (4th Uhlan Regiment) under Colonel Féline and the "8 e régiment de lanciers" under Colonel de Dampierre, it formed the 1 e brigade de cavalerie (1st Cavalry Brigade) under the command of Général Cambriel. The 1st and 2nd Cavalry Brigade (Général Jolif) formed the Cavalry Division Ameil, commanded by the Division General Baron Ameil, in turn, the 7 e Corps d'Armé of General of Division was assigned to Felix Douay.

  • Marching movements
4th August 1870: In Belfort for the formation of the 7th Corps
August 6th: Relocation to Mulhouse
August 8th: Back in Belfort
August 16: Rail loading in Montbéliard
August 22nd: Arrival in Reims
23-26 August: march east
August 31 - Battle of Sedan

First World War

In 1914 the unit belonged to the "4 e brigade de cavalerie légère" (4th Light Cavalry Brigade). The depot and administration were in Reims, the regiment itself was stationed in Verdun .

On the night of July 30th to 31st, 1914, the regiment left the garrison and moved in the direction of the Rhine. Until November 1914 it was entrusted with reconnaissance tasks and then used in part infantry. It struggled:

Second World War

When the regiment was mobilized , it was composed as follows:

  • Budget major (staff)
Groupe commandement
Escadron hors rang (Extraordinary Squadron)
  • 1 e groupe d'escadrons de cavalerie (1st cavalry squadron group)
Budget major (staff)
1e escadron de cavalerie (1st cavalry squadron)
Peloton commandement
4 pelotons fusiliers (4 rifle trains)
2e escadron de cavalerie (2nd cavalry squadron)
Peloton commandement
4 pelotons fusiliers (4 rifle trains)
  • 2 e groupe d'escadrons de cavalerie (2nd cavalry squadron group)
Budget major (staff)
3e escadron de cavalerie (3rd cavalry squadron)
Peloton commandement
4 pelotons fusiliers (4 rifle trains)
4e escadron de cavalerie (4th cavalry squadron)
Peloton commandement
4 pelotons fusiliers (4 rifle trains)
5 e escadron de mitrailleuses et d'engins (5th machine gun squadron)
2 pelotons de mitrailleuses et d'engins (2 machine gun platoons)
2 groupes de cannonns antichars de 25 (2 anti-tank groups with anti-tank guns 25 mm)
1 peloton mortier (1 mortar pull)
  • Workforce:
41 officers
79 NCOs
963 teams
  • Furnishing:
805 riding horses
104 draft and carrying horses
12 carts (hippomobiles)
43 camionettes
6 passenger cars
20 motorcycles with sidecars

commitment

  • April 12, 1940: Alerting the regiment. According to the deployment plan, the unit should be used as part of the 5 e brigade de cavalerie (5th Cavalry Brigade) for the defense of Luxembourg. On the left side the “6 e régiment de dragons” (6th Dragons Regiment) and on the right side the “22 e groupe de reconnaissance de corps d'armée” (22nd Army Corps Reconnaissance Group) was provided.
  • May 10, 1940: at 5.30 a.m. the order to march to the Luxembourg border was given. The regiment's task was to destroy tracks, bridges and tunnels. Arrived in Dudelange at 6 p.m. , the order was lifted by the brigade.
  • May 11, 1940: at 12 noon the order to withdraw was given. The regiment was then in Zoufftgen overnight , with the exception of the 1st squadron, which was in Volmerange .
  • May 12, 1940: at 2 p.m. German troops attacked, forcing parts of the regiment to retreat. With the help of the 1st Squadron, however, the situation was initially cleared up.
  • May 13, 1940: apart from occasional artillery fire, the situation was calm. At the beginning of darkness the regiment withdrew behind the Maginot Line .
  • May 15, 1940: in the evening the entire brigade was withdrawn from Lorraine and transferred to the Somme in the Aumale region . The distance of 550 kilometers was covered in 14 stages.
  • The defense of the Andelle section
  • May 30, 1940: The first parts of the regiment arrived in Longpré-les-Corps-Saints (a municipality in the Somme department) and were ordered to reinforce the "2 e régiment de dragons parachutistes" (2nd Dragoons Parachute Regiment). These held a key position here.
  • May 31, 1940: After the arrival of the "Groupement de Beaumont" to take over the positions in Longprè, the hussars left the region to regroup and marched in the direction of Warlus .
  • June 1, 1940: The unit, still with two anti-tank guns "canons de 25", moved north without a plan.
  • June 6, 1940: The "5 e brigade de cavalerie" consisted only of the 4th hussar regiment and formed a reserve east of Aumale, where all the horses were located. The appearance of German armored spearheads led to a further evasion of the remaining forces.
  • June 7, 1940: The exhausted remains of the 6th Dragoon Regiment joined the 4th Hussar Regiment. There were still 22 officers in total, seven of them from the hussars. A third of the machine gun stock and two thirds of the anti-tank guns were destroyed.
  • June 8, 1940: The brigade moved south and covered the retreat of the "17 e division d'infanterie" (17th infantry division) to Rouen . 16 hours later the association was released from this mission and received the order to cross the Seine and the lower reaches of the Andelys to recover there.
  • June 9, 1940: After a march of 70 kilometers, the Acquigny region was reached. The brigade commander took over the command of all French and British troops present in order to prevent the enemy from crossing the Seine and entering the villages of Gaillon and Heudebouville (commune in the Seine-Eure department). In the evening, the brigade formed a defensive barrier on the Gaillon-Venable voie ferrée-Heudebouville line. Attempts were made in vain to catch up with their own troops in the south of Gaillon, the right flank remained uncovered. From that evening and through the whole night, the enemy felt repeatedly against the French lines, while the artillery shot at the crossings over the river, Bac de Muids and the island of Roule-Tosny.
  • June 10, 1940: Enemy forces broke through the front with air support. The hussars were completely exhausted and had to be shaken awake by their officers when they attacked. When Heudebouville was surrounded, the British units showed a dangerous apathy and were difficult to induce to fight. Another attack at 10:00 a.m. could be repulsed. From noon the section of the hussars was under heavy artillery fire, which was followed by an infantry attack. The situation became increasingly difficult. At 15:00 the enemy attacked the flank south of Gaillon. Thereupon the brigade commander submitted all forces at his disposal to the commander of the 4th Hussar Regiment. The front withdrew slowly to the south, covered by some British tanks and the 4th Hussars, which made the enemy slow to advance.

On the night that reached 5 e brigade de cavalerie finally the Eure and established himself in the forest and the villages on the left of the river one. By this time, another 8 soldiers had died and 13 were still missing.

  • Defending the Eure Line
  • June 11, 1940: At 1:00 a.m., an order was issued that the Eure line must be held with all strength. The 6th Dragoons were ordered to Heudreville, the 4th Hussars came to Cailly, La Croix Saint-Leufroy, Crevecoeur and Autheuil with the task of covering the right flank. Carrying out this task was fraught with difficulties, it was night and the troops were in a completely exhausted state. The German infantry meanwhile reached the top of the forest east of the river and advanced further through the valley. The section of the front held by the hussars was covered with concentrated artillery fire, while German troops began to advance against the right wing of the section. After the situation had become untenable, the order of the "3 e division cavalerie légère" (3rd Light Cavalry Division) was issued at 12 noon to break away from the front and to reorganize the units in Amfreville .

The regiment again suffered losses, three officers, 10 non-commissioned officers and 25 horsemen were dead or wounded. Two ensigns, the adjutant Simard and the lieutenant de Beauregard, were killed in action. On the evening of the same day the brigade was gradually able to assemble in the west of the river Iton near Amfreville.

  • June 12, 1940: After a march over 60 kilometers, the remnants of the brigade reached the region de Mare.
  • June 14, 1940: The brigade was ordered to Alençon and arrived here after heavy fighting with the German vanguard. The regiment then received marching orders to the Bois de Noirloup, west of Mayenne , where the division was to be restructured .
  • June 17, 1940: The brigade was in the Forêt du Pertre near Mayenne when the message from the Pétain government was broadcast on the radio:
    << L'heure est venue de cesser le combat ……………… la France demande un armistice> > (The hour has come to stop fighting ... France has asked for a ceasefire.)
  • June 18, 1940: Collecting in Saint Germain le Guillaume ( Mayenne department ). The brigade had covered 100 kilometers in 17 hours.
  • June 19, 1940: The brigade moves to the Forêt de la Guerche de Bretagne. From May 10th to June 19th a distance of 1,100 kilometers was covered. The 4th hussars consisted only of the remains of three squadrons, the losses up to then had been more than 60%.
  • June 22, 1940: The radio announces that the armistice will be signed on June 25th.
  • July 1, 1940: The brigade commander informed the German command in Rennes about the condition of his unit.
  • July 2, 1940: The regiment was disbanded in the Forêt de la Gerche.
  • July 6, 1940: The German military authorities announce that the "5 e brigade de cavalerie" will be taken prisoner of war under the terms of the armistice. The officers were brought to the Châteaubriant castle , the NCOs and men were taken to the Saverny camp.
  • Realignment
  • February 15, 1945: The 4 e régiment de hussards was reorganized in the Center d'organisation de l'arme blindée 422 in Rambouillet from members of the Forces françaises de l'intérieur and staff of the EOABC 405 and moved to Doué-la- Fontaine relocated. Colonel Reboul became the commander. The regiment was assigned to the 1 e armée (1st Army) at the end of March 1945 and deployed in Alsace. On May 8, 1945, the day of the armistice, it was on the Austrian border. Under its command, Colonel Finaz, it returned to France and took up garrison in Orléans . After only six months of existence, it was closed on October 30, 1945, the standard was rolled up and handed over to the "2 e régiment de hussards" for safekeeping .

After 1945

On July 15, 1956, the regiment was reorganized as part of the "251 e brigade d'infanterie" and disembarked in Bône for Algeria. The task of the association was the deployment in the Algerian war and especially the protection of European farms. After it became more important to secure the electricity grid, the regiment was given this mission.

  • Composition of the regiment:
Four squadrons plus a staff squadron, as well as a squadron of the "1 e régiment de hussards parachutistes" as reinforcement . The unit was equipped with some half-track M3 vehicles and jeeps .

A not inconsiderable area had been allocated to the squadrons. It extended to the east of Constantine over the cities and towns of Mondovi, Barral, Boudaroua, Penthièvre, St Josèphe, Oued Frarah, Randon, Duvivier, Sidi Djémil, Kef Drari and Gouléa.

On February 1, 1959, the regiment was disbanded and incorporated into the "31 e régiment de dragons" (31st Dragoon Regiment ).

Two months later, on April 1, 1959, it was detached from the 31st Dragoon Regiment and restored. The commanding officer was Lieutenant-Colonel Oddo, until then the commanding officer of the 31st Dragoons. The new tasks were now in the direction of Gambetta, Souq Ahras and Dréa. The task was to guard the electrical transmission lines.

The regiment was initially equipped with the M24 tank and then with the AMX-13 tank destroyer . For this purpose, a 5th support squadron was set up.

In October 1962 the regiment was transferred back to France and moved into garrison at Camp de Zimming in the canton of Boulay-Moselle .

In 1976 the regiment was stationed in Besançon .

Until 2014 it was located in the Quartier Lizé in Montigny-lès-Metz and then moved to the Quartier Colin , where it is currently located.

Equipment of the regiment

Honors

The regiment's standard bears the following inscriptions in gold letters:

300ppx
  • Valmy 1792
  • London 1800
  • Austerlitz 1805
  • Friedland 1807
  • Kanghil 1855
  • Guise 1914
  • L'Escaut 1918
  • AFN 1952-1962
  • The flag ribbon is decorated with the
Croix de guerre (1914-1918) and a silver star for an honorable mention in the report of the 4th Cavalry Division of September 14, 1914, issued on the orders of Général Abo (ordre numéro 6 du 14 septembre 1914).
Croix de guerre (1939–1945) with a palm branch for an honorable mention in the army report, signed by Général Weygand (ordre numéro 211C du 2 septembre 1940).

Known members of the regiment

  • Henri Jacques Guillaume Clarke (1765–1818): Maréchal de France , captain in the “Régiment Colonel-Général hussards” in 1784
  • Charles-Marie-Augustin, comte de Goyon (1803-1870): (Général de division), 1832 captain in the regiment.
  • Charles de Foucauld : at Pont-à-Mousson in 1880
  • Charles-Joseph Boye: April 25, 1794 Chef de brigade 4e Hussards, General de brigade, Commander of the Legion of Honor
  • Christophe-Antoine Merlin: regimental commander 1796, General de brigade 1805, General de division 1814.
  • Andre Burthe: regimental commander 1805, general de brigade 1810, baron 1808.
  • Michel Ney , Duke of Elchingen, Prince of the Moscow River

Current

Order and inventory

  • The "4 e groupe d'escadrons de hussards" is a leadership support regiment for:
the staff of the Northeast Army Region
the staff of the brigade de renseignement
the Groupement de recueil de l'information (GRI) (information collection point)
the Army Medical Training Center (CISAT)
the staff of the Defense Zone East (EMIAZD)
the recruiting office of the Army Region Northeast (GRS-RNTE) in Metz
for 11 military properties in Metz and another 17 in the Moselle department

The workforce is more than 500 military personnel in the order-bound squadrons

There is also an "Escadron d'instruction" (training squadron) and the "Escadron de commandement et de quartier général" (staff squadron)

address

4th groupe d'escadrons de hussards
Quartier Colin - Rue Du Général Franiatte - BP 03
57950 Montigny-lès-Metz

literature

  • André Pierre Staub: Histoire de tous les régiments de hussards. Robuchon 1867. (digitized version)
  • Arturo Pérez-Reverte, François Maspero: Le Hussard. Novel. Le Point, Paris 2006, ISBN 2-02-086481-9 .
  • CR Andolenko: Recueil d'historiquen de l'arme blindée et de la cavalerie. Eurimprim, Paris 1968, OCLC 499800642 .
  • Historique des corps de troupe de l'armée française. Ministère de la Guerre, Paris 1900.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Adoption of the tradition of the Saxe-Conflans hussar regiment, hence the name “Saxe-Conflans” in the motto
  2. ^ André Pierre Staub: Histoire de tous les régiments de hussards. Robuchon 1867, p. 11 ( [1] ).
  3. a b a so-called German, i.e. a foreign regiment
  4. Monsieur was the official name for the king's brother
  5. When two units were merged in France, a combination of both unit numbers was often created for the designation.
  6. Challes-la-Montagne, commune in the Ain department
  7. The meaning of this abbreviation could not be found out
  8. Décision n ° 12350 / SGA / DPMA / SHD / DAT du 14 September 2007 relative aux inscriptions de noms de batailles sur les drapeaux et étendards des corps de troupe de l'armée de terre, du service de santé des armées et du service des essences des armées, Bulletin officiel des armées, n ° 27, November 9, 2007.
  9. Arrêté relatif à l'attribution de l'inscription AFN 1952–1962 on the drapeaux et étendards des formations des armées et services, on November 19, 2004 (A) NORDEF0452926A Michèle Alliot-Marie