Régiment de Royal-Allemand cavalerie
The Régiment de Royal-Allemand cavalry was a regiment in the French Royal army, mainly composed of German-speakers from the frontier districts of Alsace and Lorraine. In 1791 it became the "15e régiment de cavalerie" (15th Cavalry Regiment), and in 1792 it was disbanded.
Raising and renamings
- 10 August 1671 : Raised as Régiment de Kœnigsmark cavalerie
- 15 November 1688 : renamed: Régiment Royal-Allemand cavalerie
- 1 December 1761 : Incorporation of the Régiment de Wirtemberg cavalerie
- 1 January 1791 : renamed: 15e régiment de cavalerie
- 1792 : disbanded
Commanders and/or Colonels as owners
- 10 August 1671 : Otto Wilhelm Graf von Königsmarck, Brigadier at 15 April 1672, Maréchal de camp at 13 February 1674, Lieutenant général at 25 June 1676, † 1688
- 15 November 1688 : de Bolhen (or Bohlen)
- 29 August 1693 : Ludwig Kraft Graf von von Nassau-Saarbrücken, Brigadier at 17 April 1692, Maréchal de camp at 30 March 1693, Lieutenant général at 23 December 1695, † 13 February 1713
- 21 February 1713 : Guillaume Henri de Quadt de Landscron, Brigadier at 10 February 1704, Maréchal de camp at 20 March 1709, Lieutenant général des armées du roi at 1. October 1718, † 31 March 1756
- 19 July 1737 : Wilhelm Heinrich Fürst von Nassau-Saarbrücken, Brigadier at 1 May 1742, Maréchal de camp at 29 June 1744, Lieutenant général at 1 January 1748
- 18 January 1742 : Ludwig IX. Landgraf von Hessen Darmstadt]
- 12 March 1746 : Karl Ludwig, Herzog von Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Plön, Brigadier at 10 February 1759, Maréchal de camp at 1 May 1762
- 24 March 1772 : Karl Heinrich, Prinz von Nassau-Siegen
- 8 April 1779 : Karl Konstantin von Hessen-Rheinfels-Rotenburg
- 3 March 1785 : Karl Eugen Prinz von Lothringen, Prince of Lambesc
- 23 November 1791 : Colonel de Mandell
Role in French Revolution
In June 1789 the Royal-Allemand was one of the regiments of the Royal Army summoned to Paris to suppress the growing disturbances in the city, that preceded the outbreak of the French Revolution. About half of this force was made up of Swiss and German mercenaries who were considered more dependable in a time of civil unrest than the rank and file of the French regular regiments. While the Royal-Allemand was recruited within the borders of France, its German speaking troopers proved willing to act against the Paris population when ordered. On 12 July 1789, the regiment under the command of Charles Eugene charged a crowd of demonstrators in the Tuileries Garden killing one and injuring others. A detachment of the French Guards, who formed the permanent garrison of Paris and had strong local ties, then fired on the cavalrymen of the Royal-Allemand. The regiment was subsequently withdrawn from Paris and returned to its frontier garrison.
After the overthrow of Louis XVI in August 1792, the bulk of the regiment, led by its officers, defected and took service with the army of royalist emigres being raised by the Prince de Condé at Coblenz. The remnants of the Royal-Allemand fought in the Battle of Aldenhoven beside the Austrian Army, before being finally disbanded.
General Jabłonowski served as Lieutenant in the regiment before losing his commission after failing to return from leave.[1]
Uniforms
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Régiment Royal-Allemand cavalerie 1740 - 1757 -
Régiment Royal-Allemand cavalerie 1757 - 1762 -
Régiment Royal-Allemand cavalerie 1762 - 1767 -
Régiment Royal-Allemand cavalerie 1767 - 1776 -
Régiment Royal-Allemand cavalerie 1776 - 1779 -
Régiment Royal-Allemand cavalerie 1779 - 1786 -
Régiment Royal-Allemand cavalerie 1786 - 1791 -
15e régiment de cavalerie 1791 - 1792
External links
- Charge of Prince de Lambesc at the head of the Régiment de Royal-Allemand, 12 July 1789, painted by Jean-Baptiste Lallemand
- Uniform of a trooper of the Royal-Allemand
- Uniform of a colonel of the Royal-Allemand
References
- ↑ Pachonski Jan, Jan & Wilson, Reuel K. (1986), Poland's Caribbean Tragedy: A Study of Polish Legions in the Haitian War of Independence 1802-1803, New York: East European Monographs, p. 60-61