5 e régiment de chevau-légers lanciers
5 e régiment de chevau-légers lanciers |
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Colonel and chief d'escadron of the 5th regiment in parade uniform |
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active | July 18, 1811 to 1815 |
Country | France |
Armed forces | Grande Armée |
Armed forces | army |
Branch of service | Light cavalry |
Strength | 4 escadrons |
The 5 e régiment de chevau-légers lanciers - or just 5 e régiment de chevau-légers or 5 e régiment de lanciers (German: 5th Light Lancer Regiment ) - was set up in the First Empire in 1811 as a regiment of light cavalry . It was dissolved after the rule of the Hundred Days .
- July 18, 1811 : By imperial decree, nine Chevau-léger regiments were set up on this date . For the first six dragoon regiments were converted, the 7th and 8th emerged from the two lancers regiments of the Légion de la Vistule , and the 9th was formed from the 30 e régiment de chasseurs à cheval (30th regiment of hunters on horseback). The “5 e régiment de chevau-légers lanciers” emerged from the 10 e régiment de dragons .
- May 12, 1814 : With the first abdication of Napoleon and the return of the king, the unit was renamed Régiment de lanciers d'Angoulême (n ° 5) .
- March 1, 1815 : During the reign of the Hundred Days , it was renamed 5 e régiment de chevau-légers lanciers .
- July 16, 1815 : After the end of the German Empire, the regiment was disbanded.
uniform
Different badge colors were used to differentiate between the individual regiments. The 5th regiment used light blue as the badge color.
The Chevau-légers wore the helmet of the Dragoons "à la Minerve", but instead of the black horse tail with a black (trumpeter white) wool caterpillar on the crest. The helmet bowl and crest were made of copper, the peak of black leather and edged with a copper rail. It was equipped with a copper scale chain. A brown ribbon (leopard skin for officers) was placed around the helmet bell. On the left side of the helmet, officers carried a feather trumpet, white above and red below.
A dark green vest skirt with pocket flaps "à la Soubise" was worn. The skirt was equipped with a plastron in the same color as the badge, the cuffs on the sleeves and the edge of the epaulettes and pocket flaps were also in this color. The lap covers also showed the color of the weapon, on top of which was a green Napoleonic eagle. The elite companies wore red epaulettes .
As trousers for normal duty and for the parade, green boot trousers were worn in a Hungarian cut, which were decorated with gold-colored lampasses over the side seams . For the field uniform, a pair of side-buttoned overpants with leather trim was put on, which reached over the boots to the foot. The buttonhole row was on a lampasse in the badge color. On the front of the thighs was a gold-colored decoration that vaguely resembled a Vitéz Kötés of the hussars .
The shape and cut of the black leather boots matched those of the hussars. They were decorated with a border around the upper edge and a tassel (both ceased to exist in 1812). The waist belt was made of white leather with a brass belt buckle with a copper eagle.
A white leather bandolier with a black cartridge was carried over the left shoulder . Above it was a leather strap, also white, with a hook on which the carabiner was hung. 18 cartridges could be stored in the cartridge. On the lid of the cartridge there was a crowned "N" made of brass, the elite company carried a grenade instead.
A white sheepskin (black for trumpeters) was placed over the saddle and was lined with a zigzag border in the color of the badge. The coat bag behind the saddle was decorated with a border, the color of this border being indicated differently depending on the source - white or in the color of the badge, with and without regimental number. Instead of sheepskin, officers used a green woolen blanket with a silver border. The ceiling was edged with a gold-colored advance.
The buttons were embossed with the regimental number.
Officers
Officer's uniforms stood out because of their rich braid ornamentation, while the bandolier, belt, saddlecloth and coat sack were decorated with gold braids. The ornamentation of the trousers was also significantly richer.
For the little service there was
- City uniform (tenue de ville) with
the regular skirt with a plastron, white knee breeches , white or black stockings, black buckled shoes and a black bicorn .
- Society uniform (tenue de société) with
the regular skirt without a plastron, white knee breeches, white stockings, black buckled shoes and a black bicorn.
trumpeter
The regiment's trumpeters wore dark green skirts without a plastron. Gold-colored strands were attached across the chest and on the sleeves, which in this form strongly reminded of the musicians of the former royal army. The caterpillar on the crest of the helmet was made of white wool, and a red feather collar was attached to the left of the helmet bell. The trousers were decorated with a Vitéz Kötés on the front of the thigh.
Armament
The Chevau-légers were armed with a 2.76 meter long and 1.96 kilogram lance , the light cavalry saber , a carbine and a pistol . (So overloaded with a bulky load, it was important to the riders to "lose" the lance or carbine as soon as possible in order to create more freedom of movement.)
Regimental commanders
- 1811: Colonel François Félicité Chabert
Officer losses from 1811 to 1815
- fallen: 4
- died of her wounds: 0
- wounded: 39
Mission history
The 5 e régiment de chevau-légers lanciers took part in the Russian campaign in 1812 , where it belonged to the Observation Corps on the Elbe and the 1st Reserve Cavalry Corps. It fought in the Battle of Borodino and the Battle of Tarutino .
During the campaign in Germany the regiment was subordinate to the 1st Cavalry Corps and fought in the battle near Wachau and in the battle near Hanau . In the campaign in France that followed in 1814, it was again used with the 1st Cavalry Corps in the Battle of Montmirail and the Battle of Vauchamps .
After his return from the island of Elba on March 1, 1815, Napoleon's army was reorganized. By decree of April 20, 1815, the former cavalry regiments were given back their numbering, which they had lost during the first restoration . The unit was therefore again called 5 e régiment de chevau-légers lanciers and was involved in the campaign in Belgium during the rule of the Hundred Days , in which it took part in the Battle of Ligny and the Battle of Waterloo .
On July 18, 1815, the entire Napoleonic army was released as part of the final abdication of Napoleon and the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy. The regiment was not set up again afterwards.
Standards
The regiment was equipped with three different standards: the model from 1804, from 1812 and from 1815. The unit carried on the Aigle de drapeau des "10 e régiment des dragons", as were the honorable mentions that the previous regiment had earned, listed as inscriptions on the back of the standard (model from 1812 and from 1815).
literature
- Adrien Pascal: Histoire de l'armée et de tous les regiments depuis les premiers temps de la monarchie française jusqu'à nos jours. 4th volume. A. Barbier, Paris 1850 ( full text in the Google book search; new edition Dutertre, Paris 1864, digitized on Gallica ).
- François-Joseph-Michel Noël , LJM Carpentier: Nouveau dictionnaire des origines, inventions et découvertes. 4th volume. Paris 1827 ( full text in google book search).
- Jean-Baptiste Duvergier: Collection des lois, décrets, ordonnances, règlemens et avis du conseil-d'État. Volume 19. A. Guyot et Scribe / Charles-Béchet, Paris 1827 ( full text in the Google book search).
- Pierre-François Tissot: Les fastes de la gloire, ou Les braves recommandés à la postérité. Volume 1. Raymond / Ladvocat, Paris 1818 ( full text in the Google book search).
- Liliane and Fred Funcken: L'Uniforme et les Armes des soldats de la guerre en dentelle. Casterman, Tournai 1989, ISBN 3-572-07442-8 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Funcken, 1989, pp. 210-212