Marines (from the English adjective
marine, meaning
of the sea, from
Latin marinus ("maritime"), via
French marin(e),
of the
sea) are military forces similar to the army. Historically the
marine forces or marine corps are
infantry
forces that are part of the country's
navy.
However, in some countries the marine force or marine corps is
under independent command.
Tasks undertaken by marines have included providing security in a
warship whilst at sea, reflecting the
pressed nature of the ships' company and
the risk of
mutiny. Other tasks would include
boarding of vessels during combat or capture of
prize ships and providing manpower for
raiding ashore in support of the naval
objectives. Marine elements would also contribute to the
campaign ashore, in support of the
military objective.
The
Spanish Naval Infantry , is
the oldest Marine Corps in the world, formed in 1537.
With the industrialization of warfare in the 20th Century the scale
of landing operations increased, and brought with it an increased
likelihood of opposition, and a need for co-ordination of various
military elements. Marine forces evolved to specialize in the
skills and capabilities required for
amphibious warfare.
Etymology
The word
Marine was originally used for the forces of
England
and United
States
, and the exact term marine does not exist
in many other languages. Typically, foreign equivalents are
called
naval infantry or
navy infantry (e.g., as
in Spain, Germany, and Russia) or
coastal infantry. In
French-speaking countries, two terms
exist which could be translated as
marine:
troupes de
marine and
fusiliers-marins; similar
pseudo-translations exist elsewhere, e.g.,
Fuzileiros
Navais in
Portuguese. The
word
marine means Navy in many European languages such as
Spanish, French, Italian, German, Dutch, Swedish and
Norwegian.
Roles
The principal role of marine troops is military operations in the
littoral zone, operating from ships
they are trained to land on and secure key points to around 50
miles inland.
Marine units primarily deploy from warships using
helicopters,
landing
craft,
hovercraft or
amphibious vehicles with some force
elements capable of parachute insertion.
In addition to their primary role, marine troops are also used in a
variety of other naval roles such as boarding operations, ship and
port security or
riverine operations.
Argentina
The
Naval Infantry of the Armada
of Argentina
(Infantería de Marina de la Armada de la
República Argentina, IMARA) is a part of the Argentine Navy. Argentine Marines have
the same rank insignia and titles as the rest of the Navy. It is
composed of a Fleet Marine Force (one Marine Battalion, plus
artillery, air defence, communications, logistics, engineer and
vehicle units), a Southern Marine Force (2 Marine Battalions), a
River Operations Battalion, a
Special
Forces Unit (the
Amphibious Commandos Group) and
several Security Battalions and Companies. The 5th Battalion of the
Infanteria de Marina fought and lost against three British
battalions in the
Falklands War (
).
Bolivia
The
Bolivian Naval Force
includes about 2,000 naval infantry personnel and marines
Brazil
The
Corps of Naval
Fusiliers (
Corpo de Fuzileiros Navais), is subordinate
to the
Brazilian Navy. The Marine
Corps is composed of an Operational Brigade and some Guard and
Ceremonial Duty Battalions. The main unit is the brigade-sized
Divisão Anfíbia (Amphibious Division).
Cambodia
The
Royal Cambodian Navy
created a force of 2,000 marines in 2007.
Chile
The
Chilean Corps of Naval
Infantry is a branch of the
Chilean
Navy. They specialise in performing amphibious assaults, and
belong to the Chilean Special Forces Unit, along with the Combat
Divers. The Corps is composed of four units, organized along the
Chilean territory. Each one with their own anti-aircraft guns,
artillery and landing craft.
China
Colombia
The 24000-member
Colombian Marine
Corps is organized into a single division with three brigades
(one amphibious assault brigade and two riverine brigade), each
with several battalions plus numerous small security units. It is a
part of the
Colombian Navy.
Croatia
The
Croatian Navy maintains a 200 man
(naval infantry corps) headquartered in Split
.
The group
consists in three companies divided between Pula
, Sibenik
, Ploce
and the 4th
Guards Brigade (based at Split) which was transferred to the
Croatian Navy as a naval infantry unit in January
2002.
Cuba
The
Cuban Revolutionary Navy (Marina de
Guerra Revolucionaria, or MGR) maintains a small marine battalion
called the
Desembarco de
Granma.
Ecuador
The 5000 man Ecuadorian Navy maintains a 1700 man
Naval Infantry Corps (Cuerpo de
Infanteria de Marina) headquartered in Guayaquil. It was formed on
12 November 1962. It is organised into two security battalions, one
east in the Amazon River area and the other on the coast. There is
also a commando battalion based in the Galápagos Islands.
El Salvador
The El Salvador Navy included two 600-man Marine Infantry
Battalions (Batallon de Infanteria de Marina—BIM), and a 300 man
Naval Commando Force.
The BIMs were located at La
Unión
and Usulatan
.
Egypt
The 111th Independent Mechanized Brigade (formerly the 130th Marine
Amphibious Brigade) of the
Egyptian
Army can conduct amphibious assault operations. There is also
the 153d Commando Group with three Marine Commandos Battalions
(515th, 616th, 818th) controlling 12 Marine Commandos
Companies.
Estonia
The
Meredessantpataljon, was a
short lived
marine infantry battalion of the
Estonian
Navy.
The battalion was created in 1919 from the
crews of the Estonian surface warships and was based in Tallinn
. The
unit was mainly used on the
Southern Front during the
Estonian War of
Independence. The unit was operational from March to June in
1919. Today there are no marine infantry units among the
Estonian Defence Forces.
Finland

Finnish coastal jaegers in a landfall
exercise
The Finnish
Uusimaa Brigade ( ) in
Ekenäs is part of the
Finnish Navy and trains the Finnish
coastal jaegers. The detachment is
the only Swedish-speaking unit in the Finnish Defence Forces.
France
In the
French armed forces both
the
French Army and the
French Navy possesses troops called
marines:
French Army
The
Troupes de
marine (Navy Troops) are, despite the name, a
branch of the
French Army. The arm is
dedicated to service overseas, particularly in Africa. The
troupes de marine include infantry (
Infanterie de
Marine), including paratroopers and light cavalry, artillery
(
Artillerie de Marine). Due to their former name of
Troupes Coloniales, Marine Forces are commonly referred as
La Colo.
The
troupes de marine were founded in 1622 (officially
titled
compagnies ordinaires de la mer) as land forces
under the control of the
Secretary of State of
the Navy, notably for operations in
French Canada. The
Compagnies de la
Mer were transformed in
line
infantry regiments by
Napoleon, but became once more Marine Forces in
1822 (for the artillery) and 1831 (for the Infantry). These
Troupes de marines were in the 19th century the main
overseas and colonial forces of the French military. In 1900 they
were put under the orders of the
War Ministry and took the name
of
Troupes Coloniales (Colonial Forces). In 1967 the name
of the
Troupes Coloniales was changed back to
Troupes
de Marine, but they continued to serve in the French
Army.
French Navy
- The Commandos
Marine (literally "Navy Commandos", sometimes loosely
translated as "Marine commandos") are an elite special operations unit of the French
navy.
- The Navy also includes the Fusiliers Marins (literally "sailors
riflemen"), who protect naval bases and serve on capital ships.
Currently the Naval Fusiliers consists of two battalion and seven
companies and a Naval support Base.
The Naval Fusiliers and Naval Commandos are under the common
command of the
FORFUSCO or
Force
Maritime des Fusiliers Marins et Commandos in
Lorient.
Germany
The
Deutsche Marine (German Navy)
maintains two distinct marine commando organizations:
Greece
32nd Marine Brigade
"Moravas" is a unit of naval infantry maintained by the
Hellenic Army.
Honduras
The Honduran Navy established at least one 600-man Marine Infantry
Battalion (Batallón de Infantería de Marina — BIM) in 1982.
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
The
Iraqi Navy is a small force with 800
sailors and six platoons of marines designed to protect the
shoreline and inland waterways from insurgent infiltration. The
navy is also responsible for the security of offshore
oil platforms. The navy will have coastal
patrol squadrons, assault boat squadrons and a marine battalion.
The force will consist of 2,000 to 2,500 sailors by year
2010.
Israel
The
Givati Brigade functions as the
amphibious force and is one of the infantry brigades in the
Israel Defense Forces. It was
formed in December 1948 and placed under the command of
Shimon Avidan. Before that it participated in
Operation Yoav (October 15-22, 1948). Its role was to capture the
areas of Hulikat, Kawkaba and the junction which is today known as
the Givati Junction. Later it was disbanded but was reestablished
in 1983 and still exists today. Since 1999 it serves under the
Southern Command (Pikud Darom). Givati soldiers are designated by
purple berets. The Brigade's symbol is the fox, alluding to Shualei
Shimshon (שועלי שמשון, lit.
Samson's
Foxes), a unit in the
1948 Arab–Israeli War.
Italy
The
Italian military maintains two
marine type units:
South Korea
North Korea
The
NKPA's
Light Infantry Training
Guidance Bureau has a two or more amphibious light
infantry/sniper brigades.
These brigades are believed deployed to
Wonsan
on the east
coast and Namp'o
and Tasa-ri on the west coast. In organization
and manpower, they are reduced versions of the regular light
infantry brigades with a total strength of approximately 5,000 men
organized into ten battalions. Each battalion has about 400 men
organized into five companies each. Some amphibious brigade
personnel are trained as
frogmen.
Mexico
The
Mexican Navy (Armada de Mexico) - The
Mexican Marines consists
8,000 men in a brigade of three battalions, plus a battalion
attached to the Presidential
Guard Brigade, three Regional battalions with headquarters in
Mexico
City
, Acapulco
, and Veracruz
, and thirty-five independent companies and
detachments distributed among ports, bases, and zonal
headquarters. The marines are responsible for port security,
protection of the ten-kilometer coastal fringe, and patrolling
major waterways. In addition to having light arms, the marines are
equipped with 105mm towed howitzers, 60mm and 81mm mortars, and
106mm recoilless rifles, as well as
Pegaso
BMR VAP-3550 and
BTR-60 amphibious
vehicles. The marines riverine duties have been increasingly taken
over by the
Mexican Army. More recently
the Navy has ceded most of its riverine responsibilities (formally
handled by the Marines) to the Army, and has reduced the size of
the Marine force, putting them back aboard ships where they play a
vital role in drug interdiction and boarding of suspect vessels in
territorial waters.
Myanmar
The
Myanmar Navy raised a naval
infantry battalion of 800 men in 1964, followed by a second
battalion in 1967, 3rd and 4th battalions may have also been
raised. They were deployed mainly to the Arakan and Tenasserim
areas, and to the Irrawaddy delta, to assist in counter-insurgency
operations, but also performed other security duties.
Netherlands
The
Royal Netherlands Navy
(
Koninklijke Marine) naval infantry unit is the
Royal Netherlands Marine Corps
(
Korps Mariniers). Founded in 1665, originally as an
infantry regiment to the Dutch Navy.
Today, it is a
brigade, made of 3 marine infantry battalions (of which 1 in
Aruba
and Curacao
), 1 amphibious combat support battalion
and 1 logistical battalion. The Dutch Marine Corps is a
light infantry unit, operating as a rapid-reaction force,
deployable anywhere in the world within a 48-hours notice. Dutch
marines train in all possible geological and climate conditions for
their role.
Enlisted marine recruit training lasts 30 weeks, as for marine
officers, it takes up to 5 years (including naval academy). Similar
to the United Kingdom's
Royal Marines,
they both share a Bond of Friendship.
Norway
Kystjegerkommandoen (KJK: in
English "The Coastal Ranger Command") of the
Norwegian Navy is an amphibious unit trained
to operate in littoral combat theatres, filling the role of a
marine corps and coastal artillery.
Pakistan
Paraguay
The Paraguayan Marine Corps (Cuerpo de Fuzilieros Navale) is a
battalion sized organization consisting of four company sized
brigades.
Peru
3,000 man
Marine Infantry of
Peru included an amphibious brigade of three battalions and
local security units with two transports (one used as a school
ship), four tank landing ships, and about forty Portuguese
Chaimite armored personnel carriers. Since 1982
IMAP detachments have been deployed, under army command, in
counterinsurgency capacities in Ayacucho and Huancavelica
departments.
Philippines
The
Philippine Marine Corps
(PMC) has a strength of about 9,000 men divided into three (3)
brigades. The Marine units include three infantry manoeuvre
brigades, each composed of three tactical infantry battalions with
one infantry battalion in reserve and one heavy weapons battalion
(composed of the 105mm howitzer, 106mm recoilless gun, along with
amphibious vehicles (LVT) and various armoured units). Two of the
Marine battalions have specialised roles: the Force Reconnaissance
(Recon) battalion is used for rapid airlift to troubled areas. This
Recon Battalion is also trained in shipboarding attacks. The Marine
Guard battalion is deployed in urban warfare and in defence of
installations. The Philippine Marine Corps is also considered the
shock force of the Armed Forces and is the first unit to be
involved in any amphibious or seaborne clashes.
Poland
Poland maintains two marine type forces
- The Polish Navy maintains several
naval Infantry units responsible for port and coastal
security.
Portugal
Since 1621 the
Portuguese Navy has
maintained a naval infantry corps, which is currently known as
Corpo de Fuzileiros. The
Portuguese Marine Corps consists of about 1500 men, including two
naval infantry battalions, a naval police unit, a special
operations unit and several support units (logistical, fire
support, landing craft, etc.).
Romania

307th Marine Battalion Insignia
The
307th Marine
Battalion (
Batalionul 307 Infanterie Marină)
is the
light infantry/
reconnaissance/
special operations unit of the
Romanian Navy.
It is located in Babadag
, Tulcea County, and it
was formed in the mid 1970s for the defence of the Danube Delta and Romanian Black Sea
shore. Its operational capabilities are the
same as those of the
United
States Marine Corps Reconnaissance Battalions, which provided
member exchange programmes and instructors to its Romanian
counterpart.
Its base is
near the largest military training range in Romania
.
Russia

"The soldiers of Navy".
From the series "The 25-anniversary of the Red Army and Navy
of the USSR", 1943
The
Russian Naval Infantry,
( ) are the amphibious forces of the
Russian Armed Forces.
The naval
infantry includes the 55th Division of the Russian Pacific Fleet, the detached
brigades of the Northern
and Baltic
Fleets and of the Caspian
Military Flotilla, and the detached regiment of the Black Sea Fleet. SPUTNIK is the name
of the Arctic
Ocean
Northern Fleet Marine Main Naval Base.
Saudi Arabia
The
Saudi Navy maintains two 1500
(approx) man marine brigades consisting of three battalions each.
The brigades are assigned to the Western Fleet Headquartered in
Jeddah and the Eastern Fleet headquartered in Jubail. The brigades
are equipped with 200
Pegaso BMR AFV's
and US made HMMWVs.
South Africa
The
South African Navy's new
Rapid Reaction Squadron is a marine type unit. It is planned that
this squadron will eventually be a battalion sized unit. Currently
it consists of roughly two companies. Members are sailors and use
Naval ranks. They are trained in infantry combat up to company
sized operations. They are also used for crowd control and conduct
peacekeeping operations. During peacekeeping operations they are
meant to augment and Army infantry battalion. Their role is very
similar to the now disbanded
South Africa Marine Corps.
Spain
The
Spanish Navy Marines
(
Infantería de Marina), are the oldest existing marine
force in the world, as they were established on February 27, 1537
by
Charles I when he
permanently assigned the
Compañías Viejas del Mar de
Nápoles (Naples Sea's Old Companies) to the
Escuadras de
Galeras del Mediterráneo (Mediterranean Galley Squadrons).
Their red trouser stripes mark the
Infanteria de Marina as
part of the
Royal Household
Corps, a honor only shared with the Royal Guard, and were given
by
Charles III to the marines
in reward for their fierce defence of the Castillo del Morro in
Havana against the British fleet in 1763.
Miguel de Cervantes fought as a
Infante de Marina in the naval battle of Lepanto (1571),
receiving a wound that permanently crippled his left arm.
Sri Lanka
- Special Boat
Squadron is the elite special operations unit of the
Sri Lanka Navy. It is capable of
carrying out amphibious raids/operations, maritime
counter-terrorism, reconnaissance and target indication, combat
swimmer missions and small boat operations. As a Special Forces
unit, its role is not limited to water-borne operations. It also
conducts operations on land, either with ground combat units of the
Navy and the Army, or separately.
- Naval Patrolmen
are naval infantry units of the Sri Lanka
Navy. Its current size is unknown, however it may be 2-3
battalions strong. These units were formed primary as a protective
force for base and port security, but has since been trained and
deployed for amphibious and land combat operations. In addition to
being equipped with light arms, the patrolmen have 60mm, 82mm
mortars and operate Unibuffel light
armored vehicles
Sweden
Swedish amphibious Corps (
Svenska amfibiekåren) is the
amphibious arm of the
Swedish Navy. The
corps is organized in one amhipious battalion, capable of
everything from reconnaissance, amphibious assaults and combat on,
of and under the surface. The Amphibious Corps wears the green
beret.
Republic of China (Taiwan)
Thailand
Turkey
The
Turkish Navy maintains several
Marine and Special Operations units. These include the Amphibious
Marines Brigade (Amfibi Deniz Piyade Tugayı), several
commando detachments and two special operations
forces:
- Amphibious Marines Brigade - (Amfibi Deniz
Piyade Tugayı) consisting of 4500 men based in Foça
near
İzmir
, three
amphibious battalions, an MBT
battalion, an artillery battalion, a
support battalion and other company-sized units.
- Su Altı Taarruz - (S.A.T.)
(Underwater Attack). The missions of the Su Altı Taarruz (SAT)
include the acquisition of military intelligence, amphibious
assault, counter-terrorism and VIP protection.
- Su Altı Savunma - (S.A.S.)
(Underwater Defense).
Ukraine
Ukrainian Marines, founded in
1993 from a unit of the former Soviet Naval Infantry.
United Arab Emirates
The
UAE
maintains a small battalion sized marine force
called the UAE Marines, it is equipped with BTR-3s.
United Kingdom
The
Royal Marines (RM) of the United
Kingdom
were formed in 1664 and are a part of the Royal Navy. They have the longest infantry
training in the world, which stands at 32 weeks for an enlisted
recruit and 54 weeks for an officer recruit.
They include a
commando brigade (3 Commando Brigade
RM), a naval security unit responsible for guarding
Britain's naval nuclear weapons and other security duties (the
Fleet Protection
Group RM), a commando training centre, a landing craft and
boat-training group which is also a parent unit for three landing
craft units deployed on amphibious-support ships, a naval Special
Forces unit (the Special Boat Service
) and a naval band service (Royal Marines Band
Service).
United States
Uruguay
The Uruguayan Marine Corps-FUSNA (Cuerpo de Fusileros Navales) is a
battalion-sized organization consisting of four company sized
brigades.
Venezuela
The
Venezuelan Marine Corps
(Infantería de Marina) of Venezuela
is a sub-division of the Venezuelan Navy which forms
part of the National Armed
Forces of the BRV
.
Headquartered in Meseta de Mamo, Vargas, the estimated numerical
strength of this unit is of approx. 8,000 men and women. Its
mission is to "enlist and direct its units in order to form the
disembarking force and/or support of amphibious or special
operations; executing naval safeguarding and environmental
policing, as well as actively participating in the national
development".
Vietnam
The
Vietnam People's Navy
maintains a Naval Infantry Force of which not much is known. It
once stood at 11 brigades each of several battalions. The first
Naval Infantry unit was established in 1975 is 126th Brigade.
Nowadays, Vietnam maintains two Naval Infantry brigades, the 101st
Brigade and 147th Brigade.
Historical Marine forces
Ancient Rome
The
Roman Navy was known to use marines
and naval personnel were trained for raiding and also provided at
least two
legions (
I Adiutrix and
II Adiutrix) for service on land.
The various provincial fleets were usually given provided with
marines from the adjacent legions.
Australia
The
Royal
Australian Navy Beach Commandos were formed and were active
during the
Second World War. They
are no longer active.
Austria-Hungary
The
Royal Austrian Marines, a
part of the
Austro-Hungarian
Navy, existed until 1918.
Byzantine Empire
For
several centuries, the Byzantine navy
used the descendants of the Mardaites, who
were settled in southern Anatolia
and Greece
, as marines
and rowers for its ships. Emperor Basil I
also established a separate marine regiment, 4,000 strong, for the
central Imperial Fleet based at Constantinople
. These were professional troops, and were
counted among the elite
tagmata
troops.
In the
1260s, when emperor Michael
VIII Palaiologos rebuilt the navy, he recruited the
Tzakones (settlers from Laconia
) and the Gasmouloi (men of mixed Greek-Latin descent) as special marine
troops. Despite the progressive decline and virtual
disappearance of the navy, they remained active until the late
Palaiologan period.
Confederate States of America
The
Confederate States
Marine Corps (CSMC), a branch of the
Confederate States Navy, was
established by the
Confederate
Congress on 16 March 1861.
The Netherlands
The corps was founded on 10 December 1665 during the Second
Anglo-Dutch War by the unofficial leader of the republic Johan de
Witt and Admiral Michiel de Ruyter as the Regiment de Marine. Its
leader was Willem Joseph Baron van Ghent. The Dutch had
successfully used ordinary soldiers in ships at sea in the First
Anglo-Dutch War. It was the fifth European Marine unit formed,
being preceded by the Spanish Marines (1537), the Portuguese
Marines (1610), the French Marines (1622) and the English Royal
Marines (1664). Like Britain, the Netherlands has had several
periods when its Marines were disbanded. The Netherlands itself was
under French occupation or control from 1810 until 1813. A new
Marine unit was raised on 20 March 1801 during the time of the
Batavian Republic and on 14 August
1806 the Korps Koninklijke Grenadiers van de Marine was raised
under King Louis Bonaparte. The modern Korps Mariniers dates from
1814, receiving its current name in 1817.
The battle honors on the Korps Mariniers' colors are:
Raid on the Medway (1667), Kijkduin
(1673), Sennefe (1674), Spain, Dogger Bank (1781), West Indies,
Algiers (1816), Atjeh, Bali, Rotterdam (1940), Java Sea (1942),
Java and Madoera (1947-1948), and New Guinea (1962).
Gran Colombia
The Confederation of
Gran Colombia
Marines were formed in 1822 and were disbanded in 1829, Personnel
were mostly from Venezuela.
Germany
- German Empire
- During the German Imperial era, three ‘sea
battalions’ or Seebatallione
[193987] based at Kiel
, Wilhelmshaven
and Tsingtao
were maintained. These units served
intermittently as colonial intervention forces. The III
Seebatallion at the imperial navy’s east Asian station at
Tsingtao was the only all-German unit with permanent status in a
protectorate/colony. The battalion fought at the Siege of Tsingtao.
- East Germany
- The East German
army's Nr29. Regiment ("Ernst Moritz Arndt") was a
Motorized Rifle Regiment
intended for amphibious operations in the Baltic Sea. while the
Volksmarine Kampfschwimmer: Combat
swimmer units intended for support of amphibious operations and for
raiding.
France
The
Ordinary Marine Companies
(
Compagnies Ordinaires de la Mer) was a French Marine
force created in 1622.
Japan
- The Imperial Japanese
Navy's Land
Forces maintained several combat units.
- Special Naval Landing Forces
were the Empire of
Japan
's marine corps. Japan no longer has
marines.
- The IJN also maintained the Guard Forces keibitai and
Defense Units bobitai both of whom also received amphibious assault and beach defence
training, however, their performance was poor or average when they
were used as assault troops.
- The Imperial Japanese
Army's 3,500 man 1st to 4th Sea-Landing Brigades, were used to
conduct amphibious assaults on an island but afterward they stayed
to garrison that island.
Iraq
Italy
The
Blackshirt militia maintained an independent
Marine
Group with four MVSN battalions (24th, 25th, 50th and
60th).
Lebanon
The
Lebanese Forces militia maintained a small elite Marine unit until
the LF was disarmed and disbanded the unit. The Marines were the
navy of the militia and it maintained a force of small boats.
Ottoman Empire
The role of
Ottoman naval infantry
originated in
Orhan's conquest of the Karasi
Beylik and the capture of its fleet. From
then on
Janissaries and
Azaps were sometimes deployed as marines during the
14th Century.
The Deniz azaps were
used during the 16th Century; while troops called Levend
(Bahriyeli) were raised on and off over the
centuries - over 50,000 of them by the late 18th century.
The last raised units were the
Ta'ifat al Ru'sa (
corsair captains militia) recruited from among the
North
African Arabs and indigenous
Berbers. Ottoman marines were part of the
Ottoman navy.
Portuguese Empire
Portugal
raised numerous companies of Special Marines (Fuzileiros
Especiais) and African Special Marines (Fuzileiros
Especiais Africanos), both at home and in the African colonies
of Guinea-Bissau
, Angola
and Mozambique
, for service in Africa during the Portuguese Colonial Wars. The
African Special Marines were all-black units.
Russian Empire
The Imperial Russian Navy used several regiments of marine equipage
troops that fought as much on land as they served in ship
detachments. One battalion was formed within the Guard, and served
on the Imperial family's ships.
Soviet Union
The Soviet Navy had a number of small battalion-sized naval
infantry and coastal defence units that mostly served in the ports
and bases before the Second World War. During the war, and building
on the visuals of the mutinied sailors of Petrograd in 1917, the
Stavka ordered formation of naval infantry
brigades from the surplus to either ship or shore duty sailors, and
forty brigades served in mostly ground troops roles until 1944 when
they were used for amphibious operations in Norway and along the
Black Sea coast.
South Africa
The
South Africa Marine
Corps was set up as a sub-branch of the
South African Navy in 1979, with the
primary purpose of protecting harbours. The Marines were disbanded
in 1989, following a major restructuring of the Navy at the end of
the
South African Border
War.
United Kingdom
- The Royal Marines date from the
establishment of a Maritime Regiment of Foot in 1664. Six regiments
of Marine Regiments for Sea were formed in 1702 but by
1713 they had been disbanded or taken into the army as regiments of
foot. In 1755, a permanent corps of fifty companies of marines was
established for direct service under the Admiralty and this force
has an unbroken descent to the Royal Marines of today. See History of the Royal
Marines.
- The Royal Navy has since its
beginning formed naval landing parties of seamen for action ashore,
this being later formalised into the Naval
Brigades. These brigades would often dismount guns from their
parent vessels for use ashore, these guns often being the only
artillery available. The most famous example of this form of land
service was provided by the guns accompanying the forces relieving
Ladysmith
.
- The
Corps of Colonial Marines
was a British Marine Corps formed during the mid 1840s to serve in
the remaining British America
colonies (mainly the West
Indies
). The Colonial Marines were controlled by
the Royal Marines as an auxiliary
force. Initially recruited from freed or escaped slaves from the
United States and later from local inhabitants, these units were
either disbanded or absorbed by the West India Regiment.
- In the First World War, the
shortage of ground forces for the Western
Front in 1914 led to the creation of the Royal Naval Division, composed of two
brigades of sailors and the brigade formed by the Royal Marines.
The Division was part of the Royal Navy
but for command purposes was integrated into the army's command
structure. The sailors were initially disappointing as infantry,
but eventually developed into one of the better divisions.
The
division participated in the defence of the Belgian city of
Antwerp
in late 1914, and then served with heavy casualties
at the Battle of
Gallipoli. At different times the Division included
various army units. The division ceased to exist after the end of
the First World War. Only men are allowed in the Royal
Marines.
United States
- Gooch's Marines, the 61st Foot,
raised in the American colonies for the War of Jenkins' Ear in 1739. This was a
3,000 man American regiment of the British
Army that served alongside British
Marines. Among its officers was Lawrence Washington,
half-brother of George Washington.
It was disbanded as a regiment in 1742 and the remaining
independent companies were merged with another regiment in
1746.
- Nobel Jones' Company of Marine Boatmen of the Georgia militia
also fought in the War of Jenkins'
Ear, helping defeat a Spanish amphibious landing on St. Simons
Island in the Battle of Gully
Hole Creek and the Battle of
Bloody Marsh.
- American Colonial
Marines were State Marines were raised for the various state
navies that came into existence shortly before the Revolutionary War.
- The Continental Marines were
the Marine force of the American Colonies during American Revolutionary War. The
corps was formed by the Continental
Congress in November 10, 1775 and was disbanded in 1783. The
Continental Marines' first and only Commandant was Captain Samuel Nicholas.
- Hillet Marine River Regiment of the Union
Army during the American Civil
War, this regiment consisted of 10 rifle companies, a Cavalry
Battalion of 5 companies, and an artillery battalion of three
batteries, all of whom operated from Mississippi River gunboats.
Republic of Vietnam
The
Republic of Vietnam
Marine Corps (VNMC) was established by President
Ngo Dinh Diem on October 13, 1954, and then
disbanded on 1 May 1975 after the
reunification of Vietnam.
Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia Navy (the entire coast of
Yugoslavia was part of a naval region headquartered at Split
) maintained the 12th Naval Infantry Brigade
(Mornaricka Pesadijska Brigada) near Kotor
, a coastal
town in Montenegro
. The brigade consisted of 900 to 2000 men in
three battalions. As a multi-ethnic unit, the brigade was broken up
during the
Breakup of
Yugoslavia, and it saw little action. The largest remnant moved
to Montenegro.
See also
References
External links