35th Infantry Regiment (France)

35e régiment d'infanterie

Regimental badge of the 35th Infantry Regiment
Active 1604 — present
Country  France
Branch French Army
Type Mechanized infantry
Garrison/HQ Belfort
Nickname(s) The Ace of Clubs
Colours Yellow
Anniversaries 30 June 1830 (Invasion of Algiers)
Insignia
Identification
symbol
Abbreviation 35e RI
Soldier of the 35th Infantry Regiment in Afghanistan.

35th Infantry Regiment (35e régiment d'infanterie) is an infantry regiment of the French Army. Its origins date back to the formation of the régiment de Nemond in 1604 by a member of the gentry from Lorraine whose surname was Némond. During World War I it was nicknamed As de Trèfle (Ace of Clubs). It is now based at the garrison in Belfort.

Notable figures who have served with the regiment or its predecessors include the brothers Louis and Auguste de Keralio (from 1734 to 1749), Étienne-Charles de Damas-Crux (second in command of the régiment d'Aquitaine on 3 October 1779), Maurice Chevalier (in 1913) and Jean Chrétien Fischer.

Lineage

Predecessors

Commanders

Ancien Régime

Service history

World War I

1917

Farmer from Jura, civria village, Henri Romand. 3 citations of the French Army, 7 fight injuries, sergeant, cleaner slice.

1945-present

On August 9, 2017, six soldiers from the 35th Infantry Regiment participating in Opération Sentinelle were wounded in Levallois-Perret[1] in the Paris suburbs by an automobile whose driver had fled[2]. The anti-terrorist section of Paris is seized of the investigation[3].

Battle honours

Decorations

Fourragère in colours of the Médaille militaire worn by soldiers of the 35e RI

Croix de guerre 1914–1918 with four mentions in dispatches.

Insignia

Heraldry

Bibliography

References


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