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The Guards Rifles Battalion (German: ''Garde-Schützen-Bataillon''; French: ''Bataillon des Tirailleurs de la Garde''; nicknamed: ''Neuchâteller'' in High German; ''Neffschandeller'' in Berlin German dialect) was an infantry unit of the Prussian Army. Together with the Guards Ranger Battalion (German: Garde-Jäger-Bataillon) it formed the light infantry within the 3rd Guards Infantry Brigade in the 2nd Guards Division of the Guards Corps. The battalion consisted of four companies. == History == Since 1709 the Berlin-based Hohenzollern ruled the Principality of Neuchâtel in personal union with the Kingdom of Prussia.〔Nicolas, see references for details, p. 111.〕 They were deposed by Napoléon Bonaparte, and in 1806 he made the French Marshall Louis-Alexandre Berthier prince of Neuchâtel.〔 In the course of the Napoleonic Wars the principality provided for a rangers battalion within Napoléon's Grande Armée since 1807. The rangers were nicknamed ''Canaris'' (i.e. canaries) because of their yellow uniforms. After in 1814 Neuchâtel was restituted to the Hohenzollern, Frederick William III of Prussia assumed office as prince of Neuchâtel.〔 After the Liberation Wars the ''Conseil d’Etat'' (state council, i.e. government of Neuchâtel) addressed him in May 1814 requesting the permission to establish a special battalion, a ''Bataillon de Chasseurs'', for the service of his majesty.〔 Frederick William III then established by his most-supreme cabinet order (allerhöchste Cabinets-Ordre), issued in Paris on 19 May 1814, the ''Bataillon des Tirailleurs de la Garde'' following the same principals as with the Neuchâtel battalion within the Grande Armée.〔 To this end 400 men of minimum height were to be recruited.〔 A number of demobilised Canaries and newly enlisted men were thus recruited.〔 Major Count de Meuron became their first commander.〔 On 5 January 1815 the battalion arrived in Berlin, having marched the way from Paris.〔 The guards rifles battalion was different from all other units serving the monarch since none of its soldiers were conscripts, but all volunteer Neuchâtelois, other Swiss and Prussians.〔Nicolas, see references for details, p. 112.〕 The guards rifles, rather lacking men, were one of the units accepting one-year volunteers (Einjährig-Freiwillige).〔Since 1813 commoners with a highschool degree (such as mittlere Reife or Abitur) could apply for a one-year volunteer service allowing them an officer career in a military unit of their choice.〕 The battalion was to consist by two thirds of native Neuchâtelois and by one third of nationals of other Swiss cantons. However, this composition was indeed never realised. The required volunteer Neuchâtelois were usually hard to win so that many men of doubtful reputation and adventurers enlisted too.〔 So French, originally the vernacular and the command language, was soon replaced. Since 1816 all oral and written orders had to be in German only.〔 However, unlike other Prussian military units the guards rifles did not address their commander by his eventual military rank, but – in French tradition – as Herr Kommandeur (M. le commandeur). The composition of the battalion and the behaviour of many a rifleman earned it an ambiguous reputation.〔 While women of Berlin considered the French-speaking riflemen as charming celibates and good dancers with an attracting Franco-German jargon, their less reputated comrades were also suspected of theft and worse crimes.〔 So the saying goes, that once at the royal table a guest reported that a corpse, dressed with nothing but a shirt, had been discovered in the Schlesischer Busch, a bush south of Köpenicker Straße in Berlin. The king then carefully asked the also present commander of the guards rifles: "It was not one of your men, commander, was it?" And the commander, possibly Major von Tilly, replied that this was not likely, since a guards rifleman would have taken the shirt too.〔Nicolas, see references for details, p. 113.〕〔Stephani, see references for details, p. 10.〕 When in 1848 Neuchâtel proclaimed to be a republic, thus abolishing monarchy, the recruitment in Switzerland ended.〔 After the Neuchâtel Crisis the Hohenzollern accepted their dethronement there in 1857 and left it up to the Swiss riflemen to quit the service.〔 However, many stayed, and one of the last Swiss serving was Captain Bernard de Gélieu (Neuchâtel, *28 September 1828 – 20 April 1907, Potsdam).〔In Berlin a street was named after him. Cf. ("Gélieustraße" ), on: (''Kauperts Straßenführer durch Berlin'' ), retrieved on 5 July 2012〕 He was a royalist Neuchâtelois and proposed by the Conseil d'Etat of Neuchâtel in 1847, which had the right of nomination for the battalion's officers. The commander was the battalion's only officer chosen by the monarch. Since 1841 the guards rifles were allowed to also recruit three-year volunteers (Dreijährig-Freiwillige), ordinary conscripts who did a volunteer third year of service after two years of regular duty, allowing them to choose the military units they want to join. After in 1845 all other rifles battalions had been renamed ranger battalions the guards rifles battalion was the only using this expression in the Prussian army. After 1848 all new recruits were Prussians, after 1871 also Alsace-Lorrainians were accepted. Since the mid-19th century the battalion mostly recruited commoners and employees of forestry and proven hunters. After twelve years of service as ordinary soldier, or nine years as a noncommissioned officer, the respective rifleman received a guarantee writ (Forstversorgungsschein) to be afterwards employed in the Prussian state forestry. The higher officers were mostly of noble descent. On 1 October 1902 the newly created guards machine gun detachment No. 2 (Garde-Maschinengewehr-Abteilung Nr. 2) was assigned to the guards rifles, but redeployed to the 4th Queen Augusta Guards Grenadiers in 1913. The machine gun division was then replaced by a bicycle company and a new machine gun company, assigned to the battalion. Its reserve force was the guards reserve rifles battalion (Garde-Reserve-Schützen-Bataillon) and the 16th guards reserve ranger battalion (Reserve-Jäger-Bataillon Nr. 16). In 1912, on the occasion of his state visit to Switzerland, German Emperor William II wore his uniform as the Prussian Royal Colonel of the guards rifles, which was received with lack of understanding by many Swiss. After the First World War the guards rifles battalion was disbanded. After the November Revolution some demobilised riflemen joined the guards cavalry rifles division (Garde-Kavallerie-Schützen-Division), among them Robert Kempner.〔Kempner, see references for details, p. 22.〕 In January 1919 the ''Freikorps Garde-Schützen'' was founded, which existed until early 1920 and operated in the Baltic states as well as in West Prussia. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Guards Rifles Battalion」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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