Garde Royale
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Royal Guard (French - ''garde royale'') was set up after the second Bourbon Restoration in France, Bourbon Restoration of 1815. The theoretical role of the unit and of the Maison militaire du roi de France, Maison militaire was to ensure the personal protection of the restored King of France, though it also served as a combat unit. It served Louis XVIII and Charles X of France, Charles X before being abolished by Louis-Philippe I, Louis-Philippe. It was considered as an elite corps made up of veterans, designed to form part of the royal army's reserve force.


History


First restoration

On returning to France in 1814 Louis XVIII intended to restore the reputation of his royal household and created Secretary of State of the Maison du Roi, a government ministry to do it, under Pierre Louis Jean Casimir de Blacas d'Aulps, Pierre de Blacas. With Pierre Denniée as his deputy, de Blacas aimed to re-constitute the king's military household as it had existed under the Ancien Régime. An ordinance of 25 May 1814 endorsed the creation of several units, several of which had disappeared before the French Revolution. This military household had 4629 cavalrymen and around 371 infantrymen organised into: * Garde du corps du roi, gardes du corps du roi (5 companies) ; * Cent-Suisses (1 company) ; * Garde de la porte, gardes de la porte (1 company) ; * garde de la prévôté de l'Hôtel, gardes de la prévôté (1 company) ; * Compagnie des Mousquetaires du Roi, mousquetaires du roi (two companies) ; * Gendarme de la Garde, gendarmes de la garde (1 company) ; * Chevau-léger de la Garde, chevau-légers de la garde (1 company). It also included the six regiments of the royal corps, made up of 2758 infantrymen and 2574 cavalrymen. Louis used his military household to boost his prestige. For example, at the ceremony to translate Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette's remains on 21 January 1815, the household's musketeers were deployed and came to much public attention for their presence and the beauty of their uniforms.


Second Restoration

After the Hundred Days the military household was reorganised and reduced. An ordinance on 1 September 1815 dissolved several of its units, including the Garde de la porte, gardes de la porte, the Compagnie des Mousquetaires du Roi, musketeers, the Gendarme de la Garde, gendarmes and the Chevau-léger de la Garde, light cavalry. The garde de la prévôté de l'Hôtel, gardes de la prévôté were demobbed on 1 May 1817. {{cite book, access-date=16 January 2019 , author-link1=Jean-Baptiste Duvergier , date=1837 , first1=Jean-Baptiste , language=fr , last1=Duvergier , location=Paris , page=149 , publisher=Guyot et Scribe , title=Collection complète des lois, décrets et ordonnance, Volume XXI , url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TD4UAAAAYAAJ&dq=garde+de+la+prévoté+1830&pg=PA149. In parallel, Louis decided to create a royal guard from the six regiments of the royal corps, in theory to combine with the military household as his personal protection but in reality soon becoming a combat unit like Napoleon's Imperial Guard (First French Empire), Imperial Guard. Its strength was fixed at 25,000 men, consisting of eight infantry regiments (including two Swiss ones) with three battalions each, eight cavalry regiments with six squadrons each and eight artillery batteries with 48 guns each. In theory the guard's commander was the king himself as its ''colonel général'', with four marshal of the Empire, marshals under him, each entitled a ''major général'' - the Nicolas Charles Oudinot, duc de Reggio, the Claude-Victor Perrin, duc de Bellune, the Étienne Macdonald, duc de Tarente and the Auguste Frédéric Viesse de Marmont, duc de Raguse. The guard was an army in miniature and took part in the 1823 Hundred Thousand Sons of Saint Louis, Spanish expedition, most notably the capture of Fort Louis at the entrance to the Trocadéro canal. Seven years later the sections of the Guard stationed in Paris fought to defend the Bourbon monarchy during the July Revolution, before being abolished on 11 August 1830.


Formation and recruitment

Being admitted to the Guard was considered one of the highest rewards in the French army. Louis had no confidence in the rest of the army and mainly relied on recruiting former émigrés, especially for the Guard and military household, both of whose officers were personally chosen by the king. Its uniform was more elaborate than line infantry and cavalry, they were better paid, and given higher rank and greater privileges - a Guard private was equivalent to a line corporal, a Guard corporal to a line sergeant, and so on up to the highest ranks. That rank arrangement was abolished in 1826 but after four years in their rank commissioned Guard officers were still given a higher rank and when they later gained a role at this other rank they took the rank they had held on the day those four years ran out.


Composition


Maison du roi (6 companies)

* 1st company of Garde du corps du roi, gardes du corps du roi, commanded by the Joseph-Anne-Maximilien de Croÿ d'Havré, duc d'Havré. * 2nd company of gardes du corps du roi, commanded by the comte des Escotais. * 3rd company of gardes du corps du roi, commanded by the Antoine-Louis-Marie de Gramont, duc de Gramont. * 4th company of gardes du corps du roi, commanded by the Pierre Louis François Paultre de Lamotte, vicomte Paultre de Lamotte. * 5th company of gardes du corps du roi, commanded by the Charles François Riffardeau de Rivière, duc de Rivière. * Cent-Suisses Company, commanded by the Casimir-Louis-Victurnien de Rochechouart de Mortemart, duc de Mortemart.


Infantry (8 regiments)

* 1st to 6th regiments of guard infantry * 7th and 8th Swiss regiments of guard infantry


Cavalry (8 regiments)

* 1st and 2nd guard grenadier regiments * 1st and 2nd guard cuirassier regiments * Regiment of guard dragoons * Regiment of guard Chasseur à cheval, chasseurs * Regiment of guard hussars * Regiment of guard lancers


Artillery (1 regiment)

* Régiment d'artillerie de la Garde royale, demobbed 11 August 1830. Gardes du corps du Roi - capitaine, 1820.jpg, Captain in the gardes du corps du roi. Lami, Eugène Louis, Grenadier of the Royal Guard, ca. 1817 (cropped).jpg, Guard grenadier (Eugène Lami). Cavalerie de la Garde royale.jpg, Guard cavalrymen. Artillerie de la Garde Royale sous la Restauration.jpg, Guard artillerymen


References

Guards regiments Military history of France French Army 19th century in France Disbanded units and formations of France 1815 establishments in France 1830 disestablishments in France