It was on the 1st of June 1734 that the 9th Swiss Regiment for service in the Bourbon French Army was raised in the Swiss canton of Grisons under the command of Baron Travers. In 1740 the regiment was renamed Regiment de Salis-Soglio, then in 1744 Regiment de Salis Mayenfeld and listed as the 99e Regiment of Infantry, changing its title again in 1762 the the Regiment de Salis-Marchlins.
In 1791 the regiment moved up in the lists and was retitled 95e Regiment d'Infanterie only to be disbanded the following year in Corsica.
In 1794 the regiment was re-raised as the 95e demi-brigade de bataille under Colonel Gudin and was composed of the following elements:
1er bataillon, 48e Regiment d'Infanterie
2e batallion, Volontaires de la Creuse
8e batallion, Volontaires de la Haute-Saone
In 1798 the regiment was reorganised under Colonel Jean Veinnet and was composed of the following units:
Detachments of the 22e, 29e, 51e and 94e demi-brigades d'Infanterie de Ligne
Shako Plate 1810 - Rousselot |
In 1803 and the rise of Napoleon the regiment was retitled the 95e Regiment d'Infanterie de Ligne under Colonel Marc-Nicolas-Louis Pechaux who would command it at Talavera.
Marc-Nicolas-Louis Pecheux
In 1805 it was present at Austerlitz and would go on to gain the honours of Jena in 1806 and Freidland in 1807
The 95e Ligne is the one regiment I have the least information about and thus have relied very much on the Otto Manuscript illustrations for a guide to the look of the regiment in 1809.
As you can see there is nothing illustrating the fusilier or voltigeur company men or the musicians and I have thus gone with a classic look for these companies without any other sources to go on.
Points to note are the white chords worn by the grenadier and the pale light blue of the facings on the sapper which I have chosen to replicate on the musicians for my regimental look.
Rousselot's interpretation of the Otto illustration above |
With this first battalion of the 95e Ligne done, it just leaves two more battalions to complete the regiment and the twenty-four line battalions that composed Victor's I Corps d'Armee. In the next post featuring the second battalion we will look at the regiments involvement in the Peninsular War prior to Talavera.
Napoleon's Line Infantry, Haythornthwaite and Fosten - Osprey Men at Arms
French Napoleonic Line Infantry - Emir Bukhari
Napoleon's Soldiers, The Grande Armee of 1807 (The Otto Manuscript) - Guy C Dempsey Jr.
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/95e_r%C3%A9giment_d%27infanterie
http://www.napoleon-series.org/military/organization/c_frenchinf10.html
http://www.wikiwand.com/de/Infanterie_%C3%A9trang%C3%A8re_de_ligne#/Schweizer_Regimenter
Next up JJ's Wargames Artillery Correspondent, Mr Steve will have yet more information for you big gun fanciers with the next post covering his look at the Royal Artillery collection at Fort Nelson, Portsmouth.
Very nice post JJ - love the Rousellot plates.
ReplyDeleteNice looking figures and great information, as always, Jonathan. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteGreat to see you have defeated the "Tedium Demon" & got back to some painting. Another fine line battalion & another interesting regimental history to read.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes,
Jeremy
Stirling work! The end is well within sight! Well done
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments chaps. I never thought I would look forward to painting Spanish as I am at the moment, probably starting with the cavalry to have a break from infantry battalions.
ReplyDelete