
Garde du corps 4th company in
1786
The
Garde du Corps ( or ) was the senior formation
of the
King of France's
Household Cavalry within the
Maison du
Roi.
History
The oldest company in the Garde du Corps was the Company of
Scottish Archers, later just the 1st Scottish Company or
Garde Écossaise,
formed in
1419 from
Scots that fought for the French during
Hundred Years' War.
In the
Battle of Fornovo during
the
Italian Wars the Garde du Corps
saved king
Charles VIII from
being captured by enemy forces. Later in the Italian Wars they
failed to save
Francis I from
being captured in the
Battle of
Pavia.
The last time the Garde du Corps campaigned was during the
War of the Austrian
Succession because it only went on campaign when the king was
present. The last battle in which the Garde du Corps was present
was
Lauffeld on
1 July,
1747.
Revolution and Restoration
The Garde du Corps featured conspicuously in several incidents in
the opening stages of the
French
Revolution. On 1 October 1789 the officers of the Garde hosted
a banquet to welcome their colleagues of a line infantry regiment
of the Royal Army which had been brought to Versailles to replace
the disbanded Gardes Francais.
The latter regiment had joined in the attack
on the Bastille
six weeks
before. The banquet was reported in Paris as a royalist
provocation and an angry crowd marched on Versailles. During the
night of 5 October about 500 members of the crowd broke into the
Palace killing several of the Gardes du Corps on duty. Other Gardes
du Corps held the doors to the royal apartments until grenadiers of
the National Guard - mostly former Gardes Francais - restored
order. The Garde du Corps narrowly escaped massacre and, disarmed,
was obliged to accompany the Royal Family to Paris. Most of this
aristocratic regiment then dispersed to their estates or into
exile.
The Garde du Corps was formally dissolved in
1791 along with all of the Maison du Roi except for the
ill fated
Swiss Guard. After the
abdication of
Napoleon I in
April
1814 and the
Bourbon Restoration Louis XVIII recreated the Garde du
Corps with the rest of the Maison du Roi. These units disappeared
during Napoleon's return during the
Hundred
Days.
After
Waterloo
and the return of the Bourbons the Garde du Corps was recreated
again, almost the only unit of the old Maison du Roi to be given a
further chance after the disappointing performance of these
expensive and militarily obsolete regiments in 1815. The
Garde du Corps served the returned Bourbons loyally until being
finally abolished, along with all Guard units, by
Louis-Philippe in
1830 after the
July
Revolution.
Motto
The original motto of the Garde du Corps was
Erit haec quoque
cognita monstris (They will be recognized, them also, with
their brilliant deeds), but during the reign of
Louis XIV it changed to
Nec pluribus
impar (No unequal match for many (suns)), which also was Louis
XIV's personal motto.
The
swords of the guardsmen was inscribed with
Vive le Roi (Long live the king).
Composition
- 1st Scottish Company - formed in 1440 by Charles
VII. Despite the name, by the 16th century the company has
ceased to be purely Scottish. Little by little the Scottish Company
became only Scottish in name.
- 1st French Company - formed in 1475 by Louis
XI.
- 2nd French Company - formed in 1479 by Louis
XI.
- 3rd French Company - formed in 1516 by Francis
I.
Gardes de la Manche
The
Gardes de la Manche ( ) was an elite squad
formed as the king's personal guard by
Charles VII with men from the Company
of Scottish Archers they were the 24 oldest men of the 1st Scottish
Company. Their name came from the fact that they stood so close to
the king as to be brushed by his sleeves. In 1775 the squad was
reduced to 18 men. The captain of the Garde de La Marche was called
the First
Man-at-arms of France.
A later, less successful bodyguard was the
The Forty-Five, recruited by
the
Duke of
Épernon to provide
Henry III of
France with protection in the midst of the
War of the Three Henrys. They served
Henry III and
Henry IV of France,
but were unable to prevent both being assassinated.
References
- Chartrand, René. Louis XIV's Army. London: Osprey
Publishing, 1988. ISBN 0-85045-850-1
- Chartrand, René. Louis XV's Army (1) Cavalry &
Dragoons. London: Osprey Publishing, 1996. ISBN
1-85532-602-7
- Philip Mansel. Pillars of Monarchy. London: Quartet
Books 1984. ISBN 0-7043-2424-5