Life Guards (British Army)

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The Life Guards

Cap Badge of the Life Guards
Active 21 May 1922-Present
Country United Kingdom
Branch Army
Type Household Cavalry
Role Formation Reconnaissance/Ceremonial
Size Three squadrons
Part of Household Cavalry
Garrison/HQ Windsor/London
Nickname Tinned Fruit, Tins, Picadilly Butchers.
Motto Honi Soit Qui Mal Y Pense (Shame on him who thinks evil of it)
March Quick - Millanollo
Slow - Life Guards Slow March
Trot Past - Keel Row
Commanders
Colonel-in-Chief HM The Queen
Colonel of
the Regiment
Gen. The Rt Hon Charles Ronald Llewellyn Guthrie, Baron Guthrie, GCB, LVO, OBE, ADC
Insignia
Tactical Recognition Flash
Life Guards on parade
Enlarge
Life Guards on parade

The Life Guards is the senior regiment of the British Army. With the Blues and Royals they make up the Household Cavalry.

They originated in the four troops of horse guards raised by Charles II around the time of his restoration.

Membership of these was originally restricted to gentlemen, and accordingly they had no non-commissioned officers; their corporals were commissioned, and ranked as lieutenants in the rest of the army. This state of affairs persisted until 1756.

The units first saw action at the Battle of Sedgemoor during the Monmouth Rebellion in 1685.

In 1788, these troops were reorganised into two regiments, the 1st and 2nd Regiments of Life Guards (from 1877, simply 1st Life Guards and 2nd Life Guards). In 1815 they were part of The Household Brigade at the Battle of Waterloo.

In late 1918 after much service in the First World War the two regiments gave up their horses and were re-roled as machine gun battalions, becoming the 1st and 2nd Battalions, Guards Machine Gun Regiment. They reverted to their previous names and roles after the end of the war.

In 1922 the two regiments were merged into one regiment, the Life Guards.

In 1992, as part of the Options for Change defence review, the Life Guards were amalgamated for operational purposes with the Blues and Royals, forming the Household Cavalry Regiment (armoured reconnaissance) and the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment (ceremonial duties). However they maintain their regimental identity, with distinct uniforms and traditions, and their own colonel.

In common with the Blues and Royals, they have a peculiar non-commissioned rank structure: see the Household Cavalry page for details. (In brief, they lack sergeants, replacing them with multiple grades of corporal.)

Contents

[edit] Battle honours

[combined battle honours of 1st Life Guards and 2nd Life Guards, with the following emblazoned]:1

  • Dettingen, Peninsula, Waterloo, Tel-el-Kebir, Egypt 1882, Relief of Kimberley, Paardeberg, South Africa 1899-1900
  • The Great War2: Mons, Le Cateau, Marne 1914, Aisne 1914, Messines 1914, Ypres 1914 '17 '18, Somme 1916 '18, Arras 1917 '18, Hindenburg Line, France and Flanders 1914-18
  • The Second World War3: Mont Pincon, Souleuvre, Noireau Crossing, Amiens 1944, Brussels, Neerpelt, Nederrijn, Nijmegen, Lingen, Bentheim, North-West Europe 1944-45, Baghdad 1941, Iraq 1941, Palmyra, Syria 1941, El Alamein, North Africa 1942-43, Arezzo, Advance to Florence, Gothic Line, Italy 1944
  • Wadi al Batin, Gulf 1991, Al Basrah, Iraq 20033

1. the regiment maintained the fiction of separate regiments until 1928, receiving in 1927 two separate sets of Standards with different (but almost identical) battle honours emblazoned.
2. revised combined list issued May 1933, omitting from emblazonment "Passchendaele" and St. Quentin Canal" of the 1st Life Guards.
3. awarded jointly to The Life Guards and Blues and Royals, for services of Household Cavalry Regiment.

[edit] Alliances

  • Flag of Pakistan Pakistan - The President's Bodyguard

[edit] Affiliated Yeomanry

[edit] Order of Precedence

Preceded by:
First in Order of
Precedence of the Cavalry
Cavalry Order of Precedence Succeeded by:
Blues and Royals
(Royal Horse Guards and 1st Dragoons)

[edit] External links

In other languages