Regiment de Preissac Cavalerie

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Regiment de Preissac Cavalerie

Preissac cavalerie.png

Regimental standard
active 1654 to 1761
Country Grand Royal Coat of Arms of France & Navarre.svg France
Armed forces Royal Standard of the King of France, svg French armed forces
Branch of service cavalry
Type Heavy cavalry regiment
Strength 4 escadrons
Location Toul
Patron saint Maurice d'Agaune
motto Nec terrent, nec morantur
commander
commander Last: Comte de Preissac de Cadillac

The Régiment de Preissac cavalerie was a regiment of heavy cavalry in the Kingdom of France . Erected in 1654 during the Franco-Spanish War , it was disbanded as the French participation in the Seven Years War gradually waned .

Lineup and name changes

  • January 1689: Formation as Régiment de Furstemberg cavalerie
  • 1704: Renamed the Régiment de Courcillon cavalerie
  • September 26, 1719: Renamed: Régiment de Béthune cavalerie
  • 1735: Renamed the Régiment de Pons cavalerie
  • 1745: Renamed the Régiment d'Harcourt cavalerie
  • 1759: Renamed the Régiment de Preissac cavalerie
  • December 1, 1761: The regiment was dismissed in the wake of the reduction in French participation in the Seven Years War, the remaining personnel were integrated into the Régiment Royal-Champagne cavalerie .

Furnishing

Standard

The regiment carried four standards of brown-yellow silk ("Soye isabelle"). The royal sun was depicted on the front, framed with ornaments, both in gold embroidery. Above it is the tape with King Louis XIV's motto : NEC PLURIBUS IMPAR.

The appearance of the back is unknown, but, as is common practice, it is likely to have been the same as the front.

Uniforms

Mestres de camp

Mestre de camp was from 1569 to 1790 the rank designation for the regiment holder and / or the actual commander of a cavalry regiment. Should the mestre de camp be a person of the high nobility who had no interest in leading the regiment (such as the king or queen), the command was given to the "mestre de camp-lieutenant" ( or “Mestre de camp en second”).

  • 1689: Wilhelm Egon von Fürstenberg-Heiligenberg
  • 1704: Philippe Egon de Courcillon, Brigadier des armées du roi
  • September 26, 1719: Louis Marie Victoire de Béthune-Selle, comte de Béthune
  • February 20, 1734: Comte, then marquis de Béthune-Chabris, son of the previous one
  • 1735: Viscount de Pons
  • March 23, 1742: Charles Philippe de Pons Saint-Maurice, marquis de Pons
  • 1745: Louis François, marquis d'Harcourt
  • March 19, 1748: Anne François d'Harcourt, chevalier d'Harcourt, then marquis de Beuvron
  • 1759: Comte de Preissac de Cadillac

Home Garrison

Wars in which the regiment participated

May 11, 1745: Battle of Fontenoy

literature

  • Pierre Lemau de la Jaisse: Cinquième abrégé de la carte générale du militaire de France, sur terre et sur mer. Depuis Novembre 1737 jusqu'en Décembre 1738. Gandouin et al., Paris 1739, OCLC 458013263 .
  • M. Pinard: Chronologie historique-militaire. Volume 4 ( digitized on Gallica ), 5 ( digitized ) and 7 ( digitized ). Claude Hérissant, Paris 1761, 1762 and 1764.
  • François-Edme de Montandre-Longchamps, Chevalier de Montandre, Jacques de Roussel: État militaire de France pour l'année 1762. Volume 1. 3rd edition. Guillyn, Paris 1762, p. 352 ( full text in the Google book search, see Etats militaires de France in www.1789-1815.com ).

Footnotes

  1. Pierre Lemau de la Jaisse: Cinquième abrégé de la carte générale du militaire de France, sur terre et sur mer. Depuis Novembre 1737 jusqu'en Décembre 1738. Gandouin et al., Paris 1739, OCLC 458013263 .

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