Grenadier Guards
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Grenadier Guards | |
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![]() Cap Badge of the Grenadier Guards |
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Active | 1656-present |
Country | United Kingdom |
Branch | Army |
Type | Foot Guards |
Role | Light Role (one battalion) Public Duties (one company) |
Size | One battalion One company |
Part of | Guards Division |
Garrison/HQ | RHQ - London 1st Battalion - Aldershot Nijmegen Company - London |
Nickname | The Bill Browns |
Motto | Honi soit qui mal y pense (Shame to he who thinks evil of it) (French) |
March | Quick: The British Grenadiers Slow: Scipio |
Battles/wars | Waterloo |
Commanders | |
Colonel in Chief | HM The Queen |
Colonel of the Regiment |
HRH The Duke of Edinburgh |
Insignia | |
Tactical Recognition Flash |
The Grenadier Guards is the most senior regiment of the Guards Division of the British Army, and, as such, is the most senior regiment of infantry. It is not, however, the most senior regiment of the Army, this position being attributed to the Life Guards. The Coldstream Guards were organized before the Grenadier Guards, but their regiment is reckoned after the Grenadiers in seniority.
The grouping of buttons on the tunic is a common way to distinguish between the regiments of Foot Guards. Grenadier Guards' buttons are equally spaced and embossed with the Royal Cypher. Modern Grenadier Guardsmen wear a cap badge of a "grenade fired proper".
Contents |
[edit] History
The Grenadier Guards celebrated its 350th anniversary in 2006.
In 1656, Lord Wentworth's Regiment was formed in the Spanish Netherlands, forming a portion of exiled King Charles II's bodyguard. A few years later, a similar regiment known as John Russell's Regiment of Guards was formed. In 1665, these two regiments were combined to form the 1st Regiment of Foot Guards. As a result of their heroic actions in fighting off the French grenadiers at Waterloo, the 1st Guards were renamed by Royal Proclamation as the 1st or Grenadier Regiment of Foot Guards, thus becoming the only regiment in the British Army to be named for one of its battle honours.
[edit] Role
The Grenadier Guards serves as a light infantry battalion - following the reforms of 2004, this will be fixed. The regiment will alternate with the Welsh Guards in the public duties role. The 1st Battalion is currently deployed as part of Operation TELIC in Iraq, and will deploy to Afghanistan in 2007.
[edit] Battle honours
The 1st Foot Guards have received 79 battle honours, including:
- various actions near the Strait of Gibraltar
- the War of the Spanish Succession, including Oudenarde
- the War of the Austrian Succession
- the Peninsular War
- the Napoleonic Wars, including Waterloo
- the Crimean War
- the Urabi Revolt
- the Opium Wars
- the Sudan Campaign
- the Boer Wars
- World War I and World War II (North Africa, Italy, Northwest Europe)
- the Persian Gulf War
In 1994, under the Options for Change reforms, the Grenadier Guards was reduced to a single battalion. The 2nd Battalion was put into 'suspended animation', and its colours passed for safekeeping to a newly formed independent Company, which was named "The Nijmegen Company".(The Inkerman Company represents the 3rd Battalion that went into 'suspended animation' back in 1962).
[edit] Training
Recruits to the Grenadier Guards go through a 26-week training course at the Infantry Training Centre. This is 2 weeks more than the training for regular line regiments of the British Army; the extra training, carried out throughout the course, is devoted to drill and ceremonies.
Following graduation from the ITC, guardsmen are assigned to Nijmegen Company for additional training and orientation before being posted to a rifle company.
[edit] Colonels-in-Chief
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The Grenadier Guards' various colonels-in-chief have generally been the British monarchs, including Edward VII, George V, Edward VIII, George VI, and Elizabeth II.
Many prestigious military officers have been colonels of this regiment, including:
- the Duke of Marlborough
- the Duke of Cumberland
- the Lord Ligonier
- the Duke of Wellington
- the Prince Consort
- the Duke of Cambridge
- the Duke of Edinburgh
The Colonel-in-Chief is always the reigning Sovereign. This applies to all Regiments of the Household Division.
[edit] Marches
The Regimental Slow March is the march Scipio, from the opera of the same name by George Frideric Handel, inspired by the exploits of the Roman General Scipio Africanus. The first performance of Scipio was in 1726. Handel actually composed the eponymous slow march for the First Guards, presenting it to the regiment before he added it to the score of the opera.[1] The Quick March is The British Grenadiers.
[edit] Order of Precedence
Preceded by: First in Order of Precedence of the infantry |
Infantry Order of Precedence | Succeeded by: Coldstream Guards |
[edit] Alliances
Canada - The Canadian Grenadier Guards
Australia - 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment
Royal Navy - HMS Illustrious
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Hanning, Henry (2006). The British Grenadiers: Three Hundred & Fifty Years of the First Regiment of Foot Guards 1656-2006. page 80: Pen and Sword Books Ltd, London. ISBN 1-84415-385-1.
[edit] References
- Hanning, Henry (2006). The British Grenadiers: Three Hundred & Fifty Years of the First Regiment of Foot Guards 1656-2006. Pen and Sword Books Ltd, London. ISBN 1-84415-385-1.
[edit] See also
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[edit] External links
- The Guards MuseumContaining the history of the five regiments of Foot Guards, Wellingon Barracks, London.
- British Army: Grenadier Guards
- The Grenadier Guards
- Grenadier Guards Association (East Kent Branch)
- Grenadier Guards Association Forums
- Grenadier Guards Association (Nottinghamshire Branch)
- Melody and words of "The British Grenadiers" (the Regimental Quick March)
- The official site of the Grenadier Guards Band.