1st Artillery Regiment (France)

The 1st Artillery Regiment is a regiment of artillery in the French Army tracing its modern history to 1791 when the Régiment de La Fére was re-organised into the 1st Artillery Regiment after the French Revolution.

Régiment de La Fère
1ére Régiment d'Artillerie à Pied
1ére Régiment d'Artillerie
Insignia of the 1st Artillery Regiment
Active1671–Present
Country France
BranchFrench Army
TypeArtillery
Part of1st Division
Garrison/HQBelfort
Motto(s)Royal d'abord premier toujours
Conflicts
DecorationsCroix de guerre 1914-1918
with two palms
Commanders
Current
commander
LtCol Raphaël Bernard

History

Colours of the Régiment de La Fère

It was raised as the Régiment de la Fère in 1765, from the 1st battalion of the Régiment Royal-Artillerie. In 1791, after the French Revolution, it had the title of its aristocratic patron removed and was given the number 1, as the seniormost French regiment of artillery. In 1785, Napoleon Bonaparte was commissioned into this regiment as a sous lieutenant. He officially served until 1790, but he spent most of that time on leave in Corsica, where he led a battalion of Republican volunteers.[1]

Current Organisation

The current organisation of the regiment is:[2]

  • Command and Logistics Battery
  • 1ére Batterie (MLRS M270)
  • 2éme Batterie (MLRS M270)
  • 3éme Batterie (MLRS M270)
  • 4éme Batterie (COBRA, anti-battery)
  • 5éme Batterie (GA10 Ground-Alert anti-battery)
  • 6éme Batterie (Reserve)
  • Maintenance Battery

References

  1. Cronin, Vincent (1973). Napoleon. Harmondsworth, UK: Pelican Books. ISBN 978-0140217162, p. 47.
  2. "1er régiment d'artillerie". www.defense.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
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