94th Infantry Regiment (France)

94th Infantry Regiment

Flag of the regiment, depicting its battle honours
Active 1709–1993
Country France
Branch French Army
infantry
Type Infantry regiment
Role infantry
Motto On l'engage pour vaincre
(We engage to win)
Anniversaries Saint Maurice
Engagements Napoleonic Wars (Austerlitz),
First World War (Marne, Somme, Verdun, Chemin des Dames),
Battle of France, Algerian War
Battle honours VALMY 1792
MARENGO 1800
AUSTERLITZ 1805
FRIEDLAND 1807
ANVERS 1832
LA MARNE-L'YSER 1914
LA SOMME 1916
L'AISNE-VERDUN 1917
MONTDIDIER 1918
AFN 1952–1962

The 94th Infantry Regiment (94e régiment d’infanterie or 94e RI) was a French Army regiment. It was the inheritor of the traditions of the Imperial Guard and thus it was also known as the Grenadiers de la Garde or La Garde rather than by its number.

Origins

Flag of the regiment from 1709 to 1780

It originated in 1709 as a German regiment in the French army known as the régiment Royal-Bavière. From 1780 to 1791 it was known as the régiment Royal-Hesse-Darmstadt.

Uniform in 1762

The Revolutionary Wars

War Of The First Coalition

It took part in the battle of Valmy.

War Of The Second Coalition

It took part in the battle of Marengo.

The Napoleonic Wars

War Of The Third Coalition

It took part in the battle of Austerlitz.

War Of The Fourth Coalition

In October of 1806 it was part of Jean Baptiste Bernadotte's I Corps 3rd Division under General of Division Jean Baptiste Drouet.

It took part in the battle of Jena-Auerstädt.

In the next year it took part in the battle of Friedland.

The Peninsular War

It took part in the battle of Talavera.

Ten Days' Campaign

It took part in the Belgian revolution in the siege of Antwerp (1832).

World War 1

It took part in the First Battle of the Marne.

It took part in the battle of Yser.

It took part in the battle of the Somme.

It took part in the Second Battle of the Aisne.

World War 2

It took part in the battle of France

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, July 11, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.