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History of British light infantry : ウィキペディア英語版
History of British light infantry

The history of British light infantry goes back to the early days of the British Army, when irregular troops and mercenaries added skills in light infantry fighting. From the beginning of the nineteenth century, the Army dedicated some line regiments as specific light infantry troops, were trained under the Shorncliffe System devised by Sir John Moore and Sir Kenneth MacKenzie Douglas. The light infantry had the nickname "light bobs" first used during the American Wars of Independence, and commonly applied to the Light Division during the Napoleonic wars.〔(Gavin K. Watt,''Rebellion in the Mohawk Valley: The St. Leger Expedition of 1777'' )〕〔(crossing'' by David Hackett Fischer )〕〔(''Wellington's Infantry'' by Bryan Fosten )〕
==Origins of British light infantry==
Until the beginning of the 19th century, the British Army relied on irregulars and mercenaries to provide most of its light infantry.〔Chappell, p. 6〕 During the Seven Years' War and the American wars, the need for more skirmishers, scouts resulted in a temporary secondment of regular line companies.〔Chappell, pp. 6–7〕 These were frequently denigrated by regular army officers, and the specially trained companies were disbanded when the need for them decreased.〔Chappell, p. 7〕 It was Lord George Howe who is credited with beginning to truly promote a dedicated light infantry training regimen, based on the battle tactics of the American Woodland Nations, during the Ticonderoga Campaign of 1758. From 1770 regular regiments were required to include a company of light infantry in their establishment, but the training of such light troops was inconsistent, and frequently inadequate.〔Chappell, pp 6,9〕 Beginning a restructure of the British Army in the late 18th century, the Duke of York recognised a need for dedicated light troops.〔Chappell, pp. 8, 10〕 Certainly, the lack of such troops presented a further concern for the British Army, newly faced with a war against Napoleon and his experienced light infantry, the ''chasseurs''.〔Chappell, p. 8〕 During the early years of the war against Revolutionary France, the British Army was bolstered by light infantry mercenaries from Germany and the Low Countries, including the nominally British 60th Foot.
"It was finally decided in December 1797 to raise a fifth battalion for the 60th Royal Americans from the foreign, predominantly German, rifle corps still serving with British forces as a Jäger battalion. Here it must be stressed that, of course, Riflemen differed from the generality of light infantry in that they had a specialist role as sharpshooters.... Consequently, on 30 December 1797, 17 officers and 300 rank and file of the chasseur companies of Hompesch's Light Infantry under their existing Lieutenant-Colonel, Baron Francis de Rottenberg, were so constituted."〔 Elliott-Wright, p. 40〕 The British light infantry companies proved inadequate against the experienced French during the Flanders campaign, and in the Netherlands in 1799, and infantry reform became urgent.〔Chappell, pp. 9–10〕 "So useful had the fifth battalion proved, that in 1799 a rifle company was attached to each of the red-coated battalions of the 60th: the first, second, third, fourth. At the same time, a further two battalions of Germans were raised to serve as Riflemen and dressed in green, becoming the sixth and seventh battalions of the 60th.... ()y late 1799 the British Army, albeit in its 'foreign' regiment, the 60th, already had in excess of three battalions of Riflemen and the Duke of York needed little additional evidence that a specialist 'British' rifle corps was now long overdue."〔Elliott-Wright, pp. 46-47〕

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