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1st Foreign Regiment (France)

The 1st Foreign Regiment (French: 1er Régiment étranger, 1er RE) is a depot regiment of the Foreign Legion in the French Army. It is located at Aubagne.

1st Foreign regiment
1e Régiment étranger
Regimental badge of 1er RE
Active1841–present
CountryFrance
Branch French Army
TypeForeign Legion
RoleMusic of the Legion
IILE
Museum of the Legion
Size~600
Part ofForeign Legion Command
Garrison/HQAubagne
Motto(s)Honneur et Fidélité
ColorsGreen & Red
MarchNous sommes tous des volontaires (We are all volunteers)
AnniversariesCamerone Day (April 30) and Christmas
EngagementsCrimean War

Second Italian War of Independence

French intervention in Mexico

World War I
Levant Campaign
World War II
Algerian War
Multinational Force in Lebanon

Gulf War
Commanders
Current
commander
Lieutenant-colonel Dujon
Notable
commanders
Insignia
Beret insignia of the 1st Foreign Regiment
Abbreviation1er RE

The regiment is also responsible for running special institutions of the Legion.[1][2] These include the magazine Képi Blanc, the Legion's Athletics Team (ATHLEG), the Legion Military Band, the Legion Museum and numerous other Legion initiatives.

History edit

Royal Foreign Legion edit

Under the first restoration, the Bourbons only retained the Swiss foreign soldiers, as a mark of their loyal service rendered to France during four centuries, and with them also, four foreign regiments out of which one colonial, formed of Spanish and Portuguese. The eight reorganized foreign regiments by Napoleon at the Hundred Days formed in 1815 the Royal Foreign Legion, which became the Hohenlohe Legion, then in 1821 the Hohenlohe Regiment. Licensed in 1830, the latter contributed to form the twenty first light, then the French Foreign Legion. The Swiss regiments of the restoration disappeared in 1830, nevertheless, the Swiss were reincorporated again in the French Army from 1855 to 1859 under the successive denomination of 2nd Foreign Legion (French: La Deuxième Légion Etrangère) and 1st Foreign Regiment (French: 1er Régiment Etranger).

Creation and different nominations edit

  • On April 1, 1841 : creation of the 1st Foreign Regiment.[3]
  • 1859 : merged with the 2nd Foreign Regiment and became the Foreign Regiment.
  • 1875 : became the French Foreign Legion ("Légion étrangère").
  • January 1, 1885 : became again the 1st Foreign Regiment.

1st Regiment of the 1st Foreign Legion edit

1st Foreign Regiment of 1885 edit

The 1st Regiment of the Foreign Legion was created in 1841 based on 3 battalions in the newly created 1831 Foreign Legion.[4] The 1st Regiment of the Foreign Legion became in 1855 the 1st Regiment of the 1st Foreign Legion.[4] This regiment merged with the 2nd Foreign Regiment (1856-1861) in 1859 and became the Foreign Regiment (R.E.), (1862-1875), then came the 1st and 2nd battalion of the Foreign Legion, (1875-1884) which produced the 1st Foreign Regiment of 1885 that became the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment in 1922 and the French: 1er Régiment Etranger d'Infanterie de Marche, 1er R.E.I.M.) in 1943.[4]

1st Foreign Regiment of 1856 edit

The 1st Foreign Regiment (1er R.E.) (1856-1861) was created based on the 1st and 2nd Foreign Regiments of the 2nd Foreign Legion.[4]

1st Foreign Regiment of 1955 edit

The 1st Foreign Regiment (1er R.E) was created based on the recreated 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment (1946-1955).[4] This 1st Foreign Regiment gave formation on September 1, 1972, to the Foreign Legion Groupment (G.L.E) which became the Foreign Legion Command (C.O.M.L.E) on July 1, 1984.[4] With the Foreign Legion Command, the 1st Foreign Regiment is the (French: Maison Mère) of the Foreign Legion.[5] Being the Maison Mère means the regiment preserves tradition and serves as a basis for the entire Legion.[5][6] Quartier (garrison) Vienot of Aubagne and Sidi Bel Abbès were both named in honor of Colonel Raphaël Vienot. Aubagne also houses the French Foreign Legion Museum.[5]

The 1st Foreign Regiment is a major cornerstone in the career paths of legionnaires.[5] Legionnaires begin their careers at the 1st Foreign Regiment at the selection center of incorporation and confirm successful return upon completion of basic training before deploying to a legion operational regiment.[5] Legionnaires also pass by the 1st Foreign Regiment each time a posting of a regiment changes, and also finalize in the same regiment their departure formalities at the end of active duty service.

Missions of the 1st Foreign Regiment edit

The 1st Foreign Regiment is an administrative regiment which major missions are the support of the Foreign Legion and directed by the Foreign Legion Command.[6] However, during exterior and interior mission deployments requirements of units and regiments of the legion; the 1st Foreign Regiment usually also dispatches particular individuals or teams of specialists (O.M.L.T).[6] In addition, the foreign regiment like all regiments of the French Army, does also engage in the alert phase mission of Vigipirate.[6] The 1st Foreign Regiment also dispatches and supports world humanitarian missions around the globe during natural catastrophes and disasters.[6]

History of the garrisons, campaigns and battles edit

1841 to 1852 edit

The 1st Foreign Regiment 1er was created in Aleria on April 1, 1841, from the first three Legion battalions.

On January 1, 1849, the 1er RE, under the command of Colonel Émile Mellinet (French: Émile Mellinet), was in garrison at Oran in Algeria.

Second Empire edit

 
Captain Jean Danjou (Battle of Camarón)

On July 6, 1856, the regiment received the regimental flag colors "Emperor Napoleon III at the 1st Foreign" (French: l'Empereur Napoléon III au 1er Etranger) before initiating the campaign in Kabylie.

The foreign regiment first participated to the pacification of Algeria, then was funneled to the Crimean War where the regiment formed a brigade with the 2nd Foreign Regiment, as part of the 6th Division. The regiment participated to the Battle of Alma, and the Siege of Sevastopol. The regimental commander, colonel Vienot was killed in combat on May 1, 1855. The regiment took part in the seizure of the Malakoff tower on September 8, 1855. The regiment then took part in the Second Italian War of Independence in 1859, as part of the 2nd Infantry Division of the 2nd Army Corps of Patrice de MacMahon, Duke of Magenta. It fought in the Battle of Magenta (French: bataille de Magenta). The regiment entered triumphantly into Milan on June 7, 1859.

Returning to Algeria, the regiment was licensed on December 14, 1861, by Imperial decree. The men were accordingly transferred to the 2nd Foreign Regiment which changed designation on January 1, 1862, to become the Foreign Regiment. During the Mexican expedition from 1861 to 1867, the foreign regiment embarked to Mexico where the latter arrived on March 25, 1863, at Veracruz. The 3rd combat company fought with distinction while sacrificing itself during the Battle of Camarón (French: Bataille de Camerone) on April 30, 1863. The 1st and 2nd battalions participated in the siege of Oaxaca which capitulated in April 1865. The 2nd battalion lost on March 1, 1866, 102 men killed during the combat of Santa Isabel.[7][circular reference][8] On December 13 of the same year, the regiment left Mexico. During the Franco-Prussian War (French: Guerre franco-allemande de 1870), the Legion engaged the conflict within delay. It was at the end of September 1870, that the regiment integrated the 15th Crops 1st Brigade, 2nd Division and was found making way towards Orléans (where the regiment refused 3 times consecutively the order to retreat and where foreign Lieutenant Kara, Peter I of Serbia distinguished himself) on October and December 1870 then at Montbéliard in January 1871, where he forced the Germans to leave the city.

1871 to 1914 edit

During the Paris Commune (French: la Commune de Paris) in 1871, the regiment participated with Armée Versaillaise (French: armée versaillaise) to the semaine sanglante ("Bloody Week"). The commander-in-chief of the Armée Versaillaise was Marshal of France Patrice de Mac Mahon. The regiment then returned to Algeria in June 1871 (Mascara near Oran). On January 1, 1885, the "French Foreign Legion", named given to the "Foreign Regiment" on March 13, 1875, doubled in two foreign regiments constituted each of 4 battalions and one depot company. During the Expedition of Madagascar in 1895–1896, the foreign regiment with the 2nd Foreign Regiment, formed a Marching Battalion, which depended on the Algerian Regiment (French: Régiment Algérie), of the Army of Africa (French: l'Armée d'Afrique) under the orders of Colonel Oudri of the 2nd Foreign Regiment.

In 1881, the 1st Foreign Regiment was combat engaged in Morocco (combats of Chellaha of May 19) and South Oran (combat of Chott Tigri on April 26, 1882, where 300 Legionnaires faced 8000 dissidents). The 1st Foreign Regiment combat engaged in 1900 during the Battle of the Oasis, again in South-Oran and the Moroccan confines. On January 27, 1906, the 3rd combat company of the 1st Foreign Regiment crushed the enemy which participated to the combat of El Moungar (where the 22nd company of the 2nd Foreign Regiment had endured heavy losses, and which the battle was surnamed the "Cameron of the Sands").

At the beginning of 1883, the 1st and 2nd battalions of the 1st Foreign Regiment were sent to Tonkin. They apprehended Sontay on December 16, 1883. From January 26 to March 3, 1884, 600 men of Tuyen-Quang out of which 390 Legionnaires repelled 20,000 Chinese regulars.

In 1892, the 1st Foreign Regiment was engaged in Dahomey (Actual Benin) and disembarked at Cotonu on August 22. They combat engaged in September and October. 800 Legionnaires of Colonel Fauraux faced thousands of combatants and re-embarked victorious on November 17.

Between 1892 and 1894, the companies of the 1st Foreign Regiment intervened as well in Sudan. On July 1, 1893, the legionnaires of Lieutenant Betheder and Sergent Minnaêrt fought with ferocity at Bossé. They lost 60 killed and wounded which earned this heroic Sergent (who already distinguished capability at Tonkin) the decoration of the Légion d'honneur for his bravery under fire.

In 1895–1896, the regiment was part of the expedition which went on to the conquest of Madagascar. While combats were effective, climatic conditions were terrible and caused ravages. The losses through diseases were significant (200 dead). The Legionnaires exhausted themselves and gave their full without complaints. It was customary to say that in the Expeditionary Corps : " when a French trooper entered the hospital , it would be for repatriation, a Tirailleur would enter for medical treatment, and a Legionnaire would only enter for dying". The pacification debuted in 1895 and endured till 1905, date of permanent return of units of the 1st Foreign Regiment to Algeria.

The Moroccan époque debuted in 1906. In August 1907, Chef de bataillon (CommandantMajor) Provost was killed at Casablanca while repelling a violent attack. In 1908, the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RE distinguished capability at Menabah. In 1911, the 22nd combat company of Captain Labordette endured the loss of 29 including their company commander at Alouana.

First World War edit

The regiment was not directly combat engaged in World War I. However, the regiment continued to combat administer the institution and supply men for the ensemble of foreign units engaged in the conflict. In 1914, the 1st Foreign Regiment formed the constitution totality or most of the corps of many units.

In Morocco : The 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RE supplied the entire of the 1st Marching Regiment of the 1st Foreign Regiment, 1er RM 1er RE (constituted from the 1st, 2nd and 6th battalions). These units combat engaged for 4 years at the cost of 272 killed at Taza or Sidi-Amar. The 1st Marching Regiment was dissolved on February 15, 1918, and the battalions and mounted companies became autonomous.

In France: The 1st Foreign Regiment formed the corps constitution of the 2nd Marching Regiment, 3rd Marching Regiment and 4th Marching Regiment ("Légion garibaldienne") combat engaged in France, out of which the essential constitution was formed of foreign volunteers for the duration of the war (out of which the prominents featured tour de France champion François Faber, and poets Blaise Cendrars, Camil Campanyà or Alan Seeger). Between March and July 1915, the 3rd and 4th Marching Regiments disappeared after terrible losses. The 2nd Marching Regiment which was cited at 2 occasions was annihilated (1322 killed) with his foreign brother regiment 2nd Marching Regiment of the 2nd Foreign Regiment 2e RM 2e RE in September 1915 during combats of Navarrin. The survivors constituted the renowned Marching Regiment of the Foreign Legion (RMLE) which was entrusted to Colonel Paul-Frédéric Rollet. The RMLE would be the second most decorated unit of the French Army (after the Infantry Colonial Regiment of Morocco, actual RICM).

In the Orient: A provisional regiment was formed of troops of the Army of Africa (France), with the title of 1er Régiment de Marche d'Afrique. The first two battalions were from the Zouaves, and the third battalion was formed of men from the Foreign Legion. This composite infantry battalion would be engaged with other units of the Corps expéditionnaire d'Orient in the Orient (firstly in the Gallipoli campaign in the Dardanelles, and thereafter on the Salonika front). The unit was originally formed of 2 companies of 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment (1er REI) and 2 companies of the 2nd Foreign Infantry Regiment (2e REI). The battalion headquarters company hailed from the 1er REI and the battalion commander (French: chef de bataillon) from the 2e REI. Losing 815 men under fire, the Legion Battalion of 1er RMA was cited 3 consecutive times out of which 2 at the orders of the army before being disbanded on 30 September 1917.[9]

In Tonkin, these attacks were led by Annamese agitators (French: agitateurs annamites) between August 1915 and July 1918. These action would repeat themselves until 1940. The 4th Battalion lost 216 men during this period.

Interwar period edit

In 1925, the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI counted 10,000 men repatriated in 9 battalions (8 combat battalions and 1 training battalion, the 5th, 9 specialized companies, and the Communal Depot of Foreign Regiments (DCRE)).

The 4th Battalion forming a corps at Tonkin, rejoined by the 9th created in 1926. The battalion combat engaged Annamese agitators at the cost of more than 200 fatalities.

The 8th battalion and 24th company were in Syria. They combat engaged at Messifré and Soueida on September 12, 1925. The 8th battalion would be cited 2 times at the orders of the army (the first citation was obtained while they belonged to the 4th Foreign Infantry Regiment 4e REI, before becoming the 8th battalion of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI).

The 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 6th and 7th as well the specialized units were in Algeria.

Rif War: the conquest of Morocco would require in several times the engagements of units of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI and especially since 1918.

On August 9, 1918, the 2nd Mounted Company endured terrible combats mounting to 49 fatalities out which 2 out of exhaustion. Their chief, Captain Timm, severely wounded in the leg and in the face, attached himself to a mule[10] to be able to continue his commandment and lead his men. On July 23, 1923, the 6th battalion attacked the Taghzout hill and lost 18 killed and 36 wounded.

The paroxysm of these interventions was reached in 1925-1926 during the Rif War. Four battalions (1st, 2nd, 6th, 7th) and two companies of sapeurs-Pionniers of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI were engaged (almost 2000 men). At the cost of more than 400 fatalities, the battalions illustrated themselves in furious combats often in close range corps-a-corps combat. On June 10, 1924, the 6th battalion was decimated at the cost of 4 officers killed and 60 fatalities during an operation at night to liberate the post of Mediouna. The 2nd battalion chief, Commandant (Major) Deslandre was killed while leading at the head of his Legionnaires on July 18, 1924, near Tezual.

On May 8, 1926, the general offensive was launched. All the units of the 1st Foreign Regiment were of participation, in particular the 1st, 2nd and 6th battalions. Victory was definite on May 26. Nevertheless, Chef de bataillon (Commandant -Major) Le Roch was killed in violent combats on July 14 while leading the 1st Battalion at the tips of Tizi-N'Ouidel.

The four battalions were cited 5 times (out of which 2 citations for the 6th battalion).

Second World War edit

In France: In 1939, the "1st Foreign" directed on France 2500 Cadres and Legionnaires out of the 3000 men, who formed the 11th Foreign Infantry Regiment 11e REI and 12th Foreign Infantry Regiment 12e REI. Three former regimental commanders of the 1er REI would command the 11e REI. These two regiments disappeared during the defeat of 1940 at cost of heavy losses. The 11e REI was cited at the orders of the army, the 12 e REI at the orders of the division.

In parallel, the 1st battalion of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment was transferred to the 13e DBLE which was on its way to Narvik.

In 1941, two battalions of the 1er REI and the company "hors rang" (CHR) constituted the 4th Demi-Brigade of the Foreign Legion (4e DBLE) sent to Senegal. The 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI grew back in size by integrating the veterans of the 6th Foreign Infantry Regiment 6e REI whom fought in Syria.

In November 1942, the 1st Battalion of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI illustrated capability during combats against the Afrika Korps in Tunisia. The 2nd company was annihilated in the Djebel Mansour and was cited at the orders of the army.

With the return of the 4th Demi-Brigade of the Foreign Legion (4e DBLE) to Sidi-Bel-Abbès and the beginning of the campaign of Tunisia in 1943, the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI became the 1st Foreign Marching Infantry Regiment 1er REIM on April 16, 1943. Formed of three battalions, the regiment illustrated combat ability at the cost of 380 fatalities by inflicting heavy losses to the enemy at Pont du Fhas and in the Djebel Zaghouan. For actions incurred, the regiment was cited at the orders of the army, a citation which currently adorns the regimental colors flag of the regiment. The veterans of the 1st Foreign Marching Infantry Regiment 1er REIM and 3rd Foreign Marching Infantry Regiment 3e REIM, would form again the renowned Marching Regiment of the Foreign Legion (RMLE) which participated in full to the total liberation of the national territory.

The 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI ceased to exist on June 30, 1943. The respective missions were assured by the DCRE at Bel-Abbès.

Indochina War edit

The 1st Foreign Regiment was reborn on May 1, 1946. The regiment participated along the various combat specialized units which would partake operations in which the Legion would lead until 1962 (notably the Mounted Saharan Companies). The regiment accordingly was fully dedicated to the selection, training/instruction of foreign volunteers, institution administration and funneling via the communal depot, general reinforcements for units engaged in Indochina. Accordingly, the regiment did not actually participate directly to the conflict.

On September 1, 1950, the Autonomous Group of the Foreign Legion (GALE) was created, commanded consecutively by Générals Jean Olié and Paul Gardy. This Autonomous Foreign Legion Group was the Commandment ancestor of the actual Legion.

Algerian War edit

During the stir-up of "Events in Algeria", the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RE, like all Legion regiments which lived in Algeria since 1831 would participate to combats which would last until 1962; the regiment endured the loss of 92 Officers, Sous-Officiers (Sergeants to Warrant Officers) and Legionnaires while placing out of combat 1151 rebels and recuperating 529 individual and collective arms.

A couple of dates: November 18, 1954, death of Sous-lieutenant of the 3rd Marching Battalion in Djebel Orbata. On January 7, 1958, the 6th company of Center Instruction No 2 destroyed a band of rebels north-west of Franchetti. On March 5, 1961, the tactical general staff headquarters of the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RE at the orders of battalion chief (Commandant -Major) Fournier was engaged in the region of Sebdou then Djilali. The section of student candidate sous-officiers of Adjudant Kemenceî responded to the rebels and beat 24, at the cost of 2 fatalities. On August 11, 1961, rebels infiltrated to Sidi-Bel-Abbès. Spotted, they entrenched themselves in a house. The Legionnaires of the 1st Foreign Regiment mounted the assault at the cost of 3 fatalities, out of Legionnaire Zimmerman would be last fatality in Algeria.

Departure: On September 29, 1962, the bodies of général Paul-Frédéric Rollet, Chef de bataillon (Prince) Aage de Danemark, and Legionnaire Zimmermann (representing the ensemble of Legionnaires whom died in Algeria) were transferred to the cemetery at Puyloubier (Bouches du Rhône). October 24, 1962, marked the continental departure ceremony at the Monument aux Morts (which was dismantled and repatriated to Aubagne). The black pavilions brought back from Tuyen-Quang in 1885 by Captain Borelli were burned in application of wishes to have them never leave Sidi-Bel-Abbès. October 26, marked the continental departure.

The 1st Foreign Regiment kept units in the Sahara in accordance with the Evian Accords (defence of the French nuclear test site). The last legionnaires of these Saharan companies would return to Aubagne in 1969 and would notably be garrisoned at Bou-Sfer (with the 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment 2e REP and 1st Foreign Cavalry Regiment 1er REC leaving in 1967).

Since 1962 edit

On July 15, 1962, the precursors arrived at the camp de la Demande at Aubagne, which would become quartier (garrison) Vienot. Colonel Vaillant, regimental commander, disembarked with the regimental colors flag on October 26, 1962.

On April 29, 1963, the first Cameron eve night in metropolis had lieu. On April 30 was the inauguration of the Monument aux Morts repatriated from Algeria and the celebration of the centennial of the battle of Cameron with a military parade.

The Instruction Group of the Foreign Legion (GILE) garrisoned at Corte (Haute-Corse) and Bonifacio (South of Corsica).

In October 1969 : The Motorized Company of the Foreign Legion (CMLE) of the 1st Foreign Regiment was enacted in Corte. The Motorized Company was deployed to Chad at the occasion of Opération Tacaud. The company endured 6 fatalities in combat alongside the 2e REP until disengaging in 1970. The Motorized Company became the 6th company of the Operational Group of the Foreign Legion (GOLE) (created on March 9, 1971).

The 1st Foreign Regiment was split in two giving birth to the 2nd Foreign Infantry Regiment, which took on the former Instruction Group of the Foreign Legion and Operational Group of the Foreign Legion stationed in Corsica.

On July 1, 1981 : creation of the 31st Brigade, which the 1st Foreign Regiment was part of. One unit was deployed to Lebanon within the cadre of the Multinational Force in Lebanon (FMSB) from May to September 1983 (Command element & immediate support, the value size of a company).

September 1990 to April 1991: The 1st Foreign Regiment engaged a Transport Platoon within the cadres of Opération Daguet in the Gulf.

Since 1991, the regiment has regularly supplied and reinforced units of the Legion deployed abroad as well as interior missions (notably Sentinel since 2015).

Organisation edit

The regiment consists of three companies, as follows:[11]

  • Pionniers Sections of Tradition
  • Compagnie de Commandement et des Services Régimentaire (CCSR) – Regimental Command and Services Company
  • Compagnie des Services de la Légion Étrangère (CSLE) – Foreign Legion Services Company
  • Compagnie Administrative du Personnel de la Légion Étrangère (CAPLE) – Foreign Legion Personnel Administration Company

It also runs the following:[11]

  • Institution des Invalides de la Légion Étrangère (IILE) à Puyloubier – Foreign Legion Invalid Institution, at Puyloubier
  • Centre d’Hébergement et d’Accueil de la Légion Étrangère (CHALE) à la Ciotat – Foreign Legion Accommodation & Welcome Center, at Ciotat
  • Centre des Permissionnaires de la Légion Étrangère de la Malmousque (CPLEM) à Marseille – Foreign Legion Leave Center, at Malmousque

Also reported within the regiment is the Foreign Legion Emergency Staff and Statistics Division, a Legion intelligence section.

Tradition edit

Insignia edit

The insignia of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment, (1er R.E.I), (1950-1955) retook the symbolics of the Foreign Legion with the grenade of 7 flames and the green, red colors of the legion. The regiment is represented inside the grenade while the globe commemorates the relic of the Foreign Legion in Sidi Bel Abbès.

The current insignia of the 1st Foreign Regiment, (1er R.E), retook the symbolic ruban of the Commemorative medal of the Mexico Expedition created in 1863. This insignia was initially destined for the 3rd company of the 4th Foreign Regiment 4e RE in 1936. The insignia became that of the Autonomous Group of the Foreign Legion, (G.A.L.E) and was then adopted by the 1st Foreign Regiment, (1er R.E.) in 1955.

The insignia makes reference to a white diamond shape on which figures the arms of Mexico (a black coloured Mexican golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos), locking on a serpent, as depicted on the flag of Mexico) and a saltire with Foreign Legion and Mexican colors.

Regimental colors edit

 
Regimental Colors of the 1st Foreign Regiment, 1er R.E
 
Verso Colors of the 1st Foreign Regiment, 1er R.E with Honneur et Fidélité.

Regimental Song edit

Chant de Marche : Nous sommes tous des volontaires featuring:[12]

Nous sommes tous des volontaires,
Les gars du 1er étranger,
Notre devise est légendaire,
Honneur FidélitéFidélité,
Marchons légionnaires,
Dans la boue, dans le sable brûlant, (bis)
Marchons l'âme légère, (bis)
Et le cœur vaillant, (bis)
Marchons légionnaires. (bis)

Nous marchons gaiement en cadence,
Malgré le vent malgré la pluie,
Les meilleurs soldats de la France,
Sont là devant vous, les voici.

Partout où le combat fait rage,
L'on voit le 1er étranger,
Exemple d'héroïsme, de courage,
Se couvrir de glorieux lauriers.

Gardons dans le fond de nos âmes,
Le souvenir de nos aînés,
Et pour la grenade à sept flammes,
Loyal prêt à tout sacrifier.

Decorations edit

Honors edit

Battle honours edit

Foreign Legion and Regimental Commanders edit

Tenure (1841–1955) edit

1st Regiment of the 1st Foreign Legion Tenure (1841 -1856)[14]
1er Régiment étranger de la Légion étrangère, (1er R.E.L.E)[14]

  • 1841 : colonel de Mollenbeck
  • 1842 : colonel Despinoy
  • 1843 : colonel Mouret
  • 1846 : colonel Mellinet
  • 1850 : colonel de Givry
  • 1851 : colonel Bazaine
  • 1854 : colonel Vienot killed heading the regiment
  • 1855 : colonel Levy
  • 1855 : colonel de Cordoue

1st Foreign Regiment Tenure (1856–1862)[14]
1er Régiment étranger, (1er R.E)[14]

  • 1856 : colonel Meyer
  • 1858 : colonel de Saint-André
  • 1858 : colonel Granchette
  • 1858 : colonel Brayer
  • 1859 : colonel Martinez

Foreign Regiment Tenure (1862–1875)[14]
Régiment étranger, (R.E.)[14]

  • 1862 : colonel Butet
  • 1862 : colonel Jeanningros
  • 1865 : colonel Lavoignet
  • 1865 : colonel d'Ornano
  • 1866 : general Jeanningros
  • 1866 : colonel de Courcy
  • 1866 : colonel Guilhem
  • 1867 : colonel Deplanque
  • 1870 : colonel de Curten
  • 1870 : colonel Thierry
  • 1871 : colonel Chaulan
  • 1871 : colonel de Mallaret

Foreign Legion Tenure (1875–1884)[14]
Légion étrangère, (L.E)[14]

  • 1875 : colonel de Mallaret
  • 1881 : colonel de Négrier
  • 1883 : colonel Grisot

1st Foreign Regiment Tenure (1885-1942)[14]
1er Régiment Etranger, (1er R.E)[14]

  • 1885 : colonel Grisot
  • 1886 : colonel Wattringue
  • 1890 : colonel Barberet
  • 1891 : colonel Zeni
  • 1895 : colonel de Villebois-Mareuil
  • 1896 : colonel Bertrand
  • 1900 : colonel Dautelle
  • 1904 : colonel René Boutegourd
  • 1907 : colonel Girardot
  • 1910 : colonel Bavouzet
  • 1913 : colonel Boyer
  • 1914 : Lt.colonel Cosman
  • 1914 : colonel Tahon
  • 1915 : Lt.colonel Met
  • 1916 : Lt.colonel Heliot
  • 1918 : Lt.colonel Forey
  • 1920 : colonel Boulet-Desbarreau
  • 1925 : colonel Rollet
  • 1931 : colonel Nicolas
  • 1934 : colonel Maire
  • 1934 : colonel Debas
  • 1935 : colonel Azas
  • 1939 : colonel Robert
  • 1940 : colonel Flan
  • 1940 : colonel Girard
  • 1940 : colonel Bouty
  • 1941 : colonel Lambert
  • 1941 : colonel Barre
  • 1942 : colonel Vias

1st Foreign Marching Infantry Regiment Tenure (1943)[14]
1er Régiment étranger d'infanterie de marche, (1er R.E.I.M)[14]

  • 1943 : Lt.colonel Gentis

1st Foreign Infantry Regiment Tenure (recreated 1949-1955)[14]
1er régiment étranger d'infanterie, (1er R.E.I)[14]

  • 1949 : colonel Babonneau
  • 1949 : colonel Gaultier
  • 1950 : colonel Pénicaut
  • 1953 : colonel Thomas
  • 1955 : colonel Raberin

Tenure (1955-present) edit

  • 1956 : colonel Thomas[15]
  • 1959 : colonel Brothier[15]
  • 1961 : colonel Vaillant[15]
  • 1963 : colonel Vadot[15]
  • 1966 : colonel Chenel[15]
  • 1968 : colonel Fuhr[15]
  • 1970 : colonel Letestu[15]
  • 1972 : Lt.colonel Plantevin[15]
  • 1974 : colonel Riou[15]
  • 1976 : colonel Delsuc[15]
  • 1976 : colonel Thibout[15]
  • 1978 : colonel Ameline[15]
  • 1980 : colonel Talbourdet[15]
  • 1982 : Lt.colonel Bénézit[15]
  • 1984 : colonel Cler[15]
  • 1986 : colonel Carles[15]
  • 1989 : colonel Bernier[15]
  • 1992 : colonel Cayrou[15]
  • 1994 : colonel Raymond[15]
  • 1996 : colonel Blevin[15]
  • 1998 : colonel Pierson[15]
  • 2000 : colonel Relave[15]
  • 2002 : colonel Guenin[15]
  • 2004 : Lt.colonel Lantaires[15]
  • 2006 : colonel Hackenbruch[15]
  • 2008 : colonel Labat[15]
  • 2010 : colonel des Courtils[15]
  • 2012 : Lt.colonel de Besombes[15]
  • 2014 : colonel Rousseau[15]
  • 2016 : Lt.colonel Dujon[15]

Notable members edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "1er Régiment Étranger (1er RE)". Retrieved 2022-03-26.
  2. ^ "Foreign Legion Command". Retrieved 2022-03-26.
  3. ^ In Le 1er Étranger (The 1st Foreign Regiment), page I-8
  4. ^ a b c d e f [1] 2016-03-23 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment, Affiliations of the 1st Foreign Regiment
  5. ^ a b c d e [2] 2015-10-03 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment, Regiment History
  6. ^ a b c d e [3] 2015-10-03 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment, the 1st Foreign Regiment
  7. ^ (Spanish) Battle Report short
  8. ^ (Spanish) Battle Report long
  9. ^ "Foreign Legion in the Balkans: 1915-1919". foreignlegion.info. Retrieved 22 June 2021. Here is the detailed history of the French Foreign Legion in the Balkans during the First World War.
  10. ^ Mounted Companies (Compagnies montées de la Légion étrangère)
  11. ^ a b "Le 1er Régiment étranger". Legion Etrangere. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  12. ^ [4] 2015-09-30 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment, Chant du 1er Régiment étranger
  13. ^ a b [5] 2015-09-30 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment, Regimental Colors and decorations
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n [6] Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment, Foreign Legion and Regimental Commanders (1841–1955)
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad [7] 2017-10-19 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment, Regimental Commanders (1955-present)

Bibliography edit

  • Mongin, Jean Marie (2019). La Légion Étrangère: 1831-1962, une histoire par l'uniforme de la légion étrangère (in French). Illustrated by André Jouineau. Bayeux: Heimdal. ISBN 978-2840485360.
  • Windrow, Martin (1971). French Foreign Legion. Men-at-Arms. London: Osprey. ISBN 978-0-85-045051-4.
  • Windrow, Martin (2011). French Foreign Legionnaire 1890 - 1914. Warrior. London: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84-908422-2.
  • Windrow, Martin (2010). French Foreign Legion 1872–1914. Men-at-Arms. London: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84-908326-3.
  • Windrow, Martin (1999). French Foreign Legion 1914–45. Men-at-Arms. London: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-85-532761-0.
  • Windrow, Martin (1996). French Foreign Legion - Infantry and Cavalry since 1945. Men-at-Arms. London: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-85-532621-7.

Websites edit

  • www.legion-etrangere.com

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Képi Blanc magazine
  • 1st Foreign Regiment's history - History & images of the 1er RE

foreign, regiment, france, foreign, regiment, french, régiment, étranger, depot, regiment, foreign, legion, french, army, located, aubagne, foreign, regiment1e, régiment, étrangerregimental, badge, reactive1841, presentcountryfrancebranchfrench, armytypeforeig. The 1st Foreign Regiment French 1er Regiment etranger 1er RE is a depot regiment of the Foreign Legion in the French Army It is located at Aubagne 1st Foreign regiment1e Regiment etrangerRegimental badge of 1er REActive1841 presentCountryFranceBranchFrench ArmyTypeForeign LegionRoleMusic of the LegionIILEMuseum of the LegionSize 600Part ofForeign Legion CommandGarrison HQAubagneMotto s Honneur et FideliteColorsGreen amp RedMarchNous sommes tous des volontaires We are all volunteers AnniversariesCamerone Day April 30 and ChristmasEngagementsCrimean War Siege of Sevastopol 1854Second Italian War of Independence Battle of MagentaFrench intervention in Mexico Battle of CamaronWorld War ILevant CampaignWorld War IIAlgerian WarMultinational Force in Lebanon Gulf WarCommandersCurrentcommanderLieutenant colonel DujonNotablecommandersFrancois Achille Bazaine Raphael Vienot Pierre Joseph Jeanningros Paul Frederic RolletInsigniaBeret insignia of the 1st Foreign RegimentAbbreviation1er RE The regiment is also responsible for running special institutions of the Legion 1 2 These include the magazine Kepi Blanc the Legion s Athletics Team ATHLEG the Legion Military Band the Legion Museum and numerous other Legion initiatives Contents 1 History 1 1 Royal Foreign Legion 1 2 Creation and different nominations 1 3 1st Regiment of the 1st Foreign Legion 1 3 1 1st Foreign Regiment of 1885 1 4 1st Foreign Regiment of 1856 1 5 1st Foreign Regiment of 1955 1 5 1 Missions of the 1st Foreign Regiment 2 History of the garrisons campaigns and battles 2 1 1841 to 1852 2 2 Second Empire 2 3 1871 to 1914 2 4 First World War 2 5 Interwar period 2 6 Second World War 2 7 Indochina War 2 8 Algerian War 2 9 Since 1962 3 Organisation 4 Tradition 4 1 Insignia 4 2 Regimental colors 4 3 Regimental Song 4 4 Decorations 4 5 Honors 4 5 1 Battle honours 5 Foreign Legion and Regimental Commanders 5 1 Tenure 1841 1955 5 2 Tenure 1955 present 6 Notable members 7 Gallery 8 See also 8 1 References 8 2 Bibliography 8 3 Websites 9 External linksHistory editMain article Origins of the French Foreign Legion Royal Foreign Legion edit Under the first restoration the Bourbons only retained the Swiss foreign soldiers as a mark of their loyal service rendered to France during four centuries and with them also four foreign regiments out of which one colonial formed of Spanish and Portuguese The eight reorganized foreign regiments by Napoleon at the Hundred Days formed in 1815 the Royal Foreign Legion which became the Hohenlohe Legion then in 1821 the Hohenlohe Regiment Licensed in 1830 the latter contributed to form the twenty first light then the French Foreign Legion The Swiss regiments of the restoration disappeared in 1830 nevertheless the Swiss were reincorporated again in the French Army from 1855 to 1859 under the successive denomination of 2nd Foreign Legion French La Deuxieme Legion Etrangere and 1st Foreign Regiment French 1er Regiment Etranger Creation and different nominations edit On April 1 1841 creation of the 1st Foreign Regiment 3 1859 merged with the 2nd Foreign Regiment and became the Foreign Regiment 1875 became the French Foreign Legion Legion etrangere January 1 1885 became again the 1st Foreign Regiment 1st Regiment of the 1st Foreign Legion edit 1st Foreign Regiment of 1885 edit The 1st Regiment of the Foreign Legion was created in 1841 based on 3 battalions in the newly created 1831 Foreign Legion 4 The 1st Regiment of the Foreign Legion became in 1855 the 1st Regiment of the 1st Foreign Legion 4 This regiment merged with the 2nd Foreign Regiment 1856 1861 in 1859 and became the Foreign Regiment R E 1862 1875 then came the 1st and 2nd battalion of the Foreign Legion 1875 1884 which produced the 1st Foreign Regiment of 1885 that became the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment in 1922 and the French 1er Regiment Etranger d Infanterie de Marche 1er R E I M in 1943 4 1st Foreign Regiment of 1856 edit The 1st Foreign Regiment 1er R E 1856 1861 was created based on the 1st and 2nd Foreign Regiments of the 2nd Foreign Legion 4 1st Foreign Regiment of 1955 edit The 1st Foreign Regiment 1er R E was created based on the recreated 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1946 1955 4 This 1st Foreign Regiment gave formation on September 1 1972 to the Foreign Legion Groupment G L E which became the Foreign Legion Command C O M L E on July 1 1984 4 With the Foreign Legion Command the 1st Foreign Regiment is the French Maison Mere of the Foreign Legion 5 Being the Maison Mere means the regiment preserves tradition and serves as a basis for the entire Legion 5 6 Quartier garrison Vienot of Aubagne and Sidi Bel Abbes were both named in honor of Colonel Raphael Vienot Aubagne also houses the French Foreign Legion Museum 5 The 1st Foreign Regiment is a major cornerstone in the career paths of legionnaires 5 Legionnaires begin their careers at the 1st Foreign Regiment at the selection center of incorporation and confirm successful return upon completion of basic training before deploying to a legion operational regiment 5 Legionnaires also pass by the 1st Foreign Regiment each time a posting of a regiment changes and also finalize in the same regiment their departure formalities at the end of active duty service Missions of the 1st Foreign Regiment edit The 1st Foreign Regiment is an administrative regiment which major missions are the support of the Foreign Legion and directed by the Foreign Legion Command 6 However during exterior and interior mission deployments requirements of units and regiments of the legion the 1st Foreign Regiment usually also dispatches particular individuals or teams of specialists O M L T 6 In addition the foreign regiment like all regiments of the French Army does also engage in the alert phase mission of Vigipirate 6 The 1st Foreign Regiment also dispatches and supports world humanitarian missions around the globe during natural catastrophes and disasters 6 History of the garrisons campaigns and battles edit1841 to 1852 edit The 1st Foreign Regiment 1er was created in Aleria on April 1 1841 from the first three Legion battalions On January 1 1849 the 1er RE under the command of Colonel Emile Mellinet French Emile Mellinet was in garrison at Oran in Algeria Second Empire edit nbsp Captain Jean Danjou Battle of Camaron On July 6 1856 the regiment received the regimental flag colors Emperor Napoleon III at the 1st Foreign French l Empereur Napoleon III au 1er Etranger before initiating the campaign in Kabylie The foreign regiment first participated to the pacification of Algeria then was funneled to the Crimean War where the regiment formed a brigade with the 2nd Foreign Regiment as part of the 6th Division The regiment participated to the Battle of Alma and the Siege of Sevastopol The regimental commander colonel Vienot was killed in combat on May 1 1855 The regiment took part in the seizure of the Malakoff tower on September 8 1855 The regiment then took part in the Second Italian War of Independence in 1859 as part of the 2nd Infantry Division of the 2nd Army Corps of Patrice de MacMahon Duke of Magenta It fought in the Battle of Magenta French bataille de Magenta The regiment entered triumphantly into Milan on June 7 1859 Returning to Algeria the regiment was licensed on December 14 1861 by Imperial decree The men were accordingly transferred to the 2nd Foreign Regiment which changed designation on January 1 1862 to become the Foreign Regiment During the Mexican expedition from 1861 to 1867 the foreign regiment embarked to Mexico where the latter arrived on March 25 1863 at Veracruz The 3rd combat company fought with distinction while sacrificing itself during the Battle of Camaron French Bataille de Camerone on April 30 1863 The 1st and 2nd battalions participated in the siege of Oaxaca which capitulated in April 1865 The 2nd battalion lost on March 1 1866 102 men killed during the combat of Santa Isabel 7 circular reference 8 On December 13 of the same year the regiment left Mexico During the Franco Prussian War French Guerre franco allemande de 1870 the Legion engaged the conflict within delay It was at the end of September 1870 that the regiment integrated the 15th Crops 1st Brigade 2nd Division and was found making way towards Orleans where the regiment refused 3 times consecutively the order to retreat and where foreign Lieutenant Kara Peter I of Serbia distinguished himself on October and December 1870 then at Montbeliard in January 1871 where he forced the Germans to leave the city 1871 to 1914 edit During the Paris Commune French la Commune de Paris in 1871 the regiment participated with Armee Versaillaise French armee versaillaise to the semaine sanglante Bloody Week The commander in chief of the Armee Versaillaise was Marshal of France Patrice de Mac Mahon The regiment then returned to Algeria in June 1871 Mascara near Oran On January 1 1885 the French Foreign Legion named given to the Foreign Regiment on March 13 1875 doubled in two foreign regiments constituted each of 4 battalions and one depot company During the Expedition of Madagascar in 1895 1896 the foreign regiment with the 2nd Foreign Regiment formed a Marching Battalion which depended on the Algerian Regiment French Regiment Algerie of the Army of Africa French l Armee d Afrique under the orders of Colonel Oudri of the 2nd Foreign Regiment In 1881 the 1st Foreign Regiment was combat engaged in Morocco combats of Chellaha of May 19 and South Oran combat of Chott Tigri on April 26 1882 where 300 Legionnaires faced 8000 dissidents The 1st Foreign Regiment combat engaged in 1900 during the Battle of the Oasis again in South Oran and the Moroccan confines On January 27 1906 the 3rd combat company of the 1st Foreign Regiment crushed the enemy which participated to the combat of El Moungar where the 22nd company of the 2nd Foreign Regiment had endured heavy losses and which the battle was surnamed the Cameron of the Sands At the beginning of 1883 the 1st and 2nd battalions of the 1st Foreign Regiment were sent to Tonkin They apprehended Sontay on December 16 1883 From January 26 to March 3 1884 600 men of Tuyen Quang out of which 390 Legionnaires repelled 20 000 Chinese regulars In 1892 the 1st Foreign Regiment was engaged in Dahomey Actual Benin and disembarked at Cotonu on August 22 They combat engaged in September and October 800 Legionnaires of Colonel Fauraux faced thousands of combatants and re embarked victorious on November 17 Between 1892 and 1894 the companies of the 1st Foreign Regiment intervened as well in Sudan On July 1 1893 the legionnaires of Lieutenant Betheder and Sergent Minnaert fought with ferocity at Bosse They lost 60 killed and wounded which earned this heroic Sergent who already distinguished capability at Tonkin the decoration of the Legion d honneur for his bravery under fire In 1895 1896 the regiment was part of the expedition which went on to the conquest of Madagascar While combats were effective climatic conditions were terrible and caused ravages The losses through diseases were significant 200 dead The Legionnaires exhausted themselves and gave their full without complaints It was customary to say that in the Expeditionary Corps when a French trooper entered the hospital it would be for repatriation a Tirailleur would enter for medical treatment and a Legionnaire would only enter for dying The pacification debuted in 1895 and endured till 1905 date of permanent return of units of the 1st Foreign Regiment to Algeria The Moroccan epoque debuted in 1906 In August 1907 Chef de bataillon Commandant Major Provost was killed at Casablanca while repelling a violent attack In 1908 the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RE distinguished capability at Menabah In 1911 the 22nd combat company of Captain Labordette endured the loss of 29 including their company commander at Alouana First World War edit The regiment was not directly combat engaged in World War I However the regiment continued to combat administer the institution and supply men for the ensemble of foreign units engaged in the conflict In 1914 the 1st Foreign Regiment formed the constitution totality or most of the corps of many units In Morocco The 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RE supplied the entire of the 1st Marching Regiment of the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RM 1er RE constituted from the 1st 2nd and 6th battalions These units combat engaged for 4 years at the cost of 272 killed at Taza or Sidi Amar The 1st Marching Regiment was dissolved on February 15 1918 and the battalions and mounted companies became autonomous In France The 1st Foreign Regiment formed the corps constitution of the 2nd Marching Regiment 3rd Marching Regiment and 4th Marching Regiment Legion garibaldienne combat engaged in France out of which the essential constitution was formed of foreign volunteers for the duration of the war out of which the prominents featured tour de France champion Francois Faber and poets Blaise Cendrars Camil Campanya or Alan Seeger Between March and July 1915 the 3rd and 4th Marching Regiments disappeared after terrible losses The 2nd Marching Regiment which was cited at 2 occasions was annihilated 1322 killed with his foreign brother regiment 2nd Marching Regiment of the 2nd Foreign Regiment 2e RM 2e RE in September 1915 during combats of Navarrin The survivors constituted the renowned Marching Regiment of the Foreign Legion RMLE which was entrusted to Colonel Paul Frederic Rollet The RMLE would be the second most decorated unit of the French Army after the Infantry Colonial Regiment of Morocco actual RICM In the Orient A provisional regiment was formed of troops of the Army of Africa France with the title of 1er Regiment de Marche d Afrique The first two battalions were from the Zouaves and the third battalion was formed of men from the Foreign Legion This composite infantry battalion would be engaged with other units of the Corps expeditionnaire d Orient in the Orient firstly in the Gallipoli campaign in the Dardanelles and thereafter on the Salonika front The unit was originally formed of 2 companies of 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI and 2 companies of the 2nd Foreign Infantry Regiment 2e REI The battalion headquarters company hailed from the 1er REI and the battalion commander French chef de bataillon from the 2e REI Losing 815 men under fire the Legion Battalion of 1er RMA was cited 3 consecutive times out of which 2 at the orders of the army before being disbanded on 30 September 1917 9 In Tonkin these attacks were led by Annamese agitators French agitateurs annamites between August 1915 and July 1918 These action would repeat themselves until 1940 The 4th Battalion lost 216 men during this period Interwar period edit In 1925 the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI counted 10 000 men repatriated in 9 battalions 8 combat battalions and 1 training battalion the 5th 9 specialized companies and the Communal Depot of Foreign Regiments DCRE The 4th Battalion forming a corps at Tonkin rejoined by the 9th created in 1926 The battalion combat engaged Annamese agitators at the cost of more than 200 fatalities The 8th battalion and 24th company were in Syria They combat engaged at Messifre and Soueida on September 12 1925 The 8th battalion would be cited 2 times at the orders of the army the first citation was obtained while they belonged to the 4th Foreign Infantry Regiment 4e REI before becoming the 8th battalion of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI The 1st 2nd 3rd 5th 6th and 7th as well the specialized units were in Algeria Rif War the conquest of Morocco would require in several times the engagements of units of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI and especially since 1918 On August 9 1918 the 2nd Mounted Company endured terrible combats mounting to 49 fatalities out which 2 out of exhaustion Their chief Captain Timm severely wounded in the leg and in the face attached himself to a mule 10 to be able to continue his commandment and lead his men On July 23 1923 the 6th battalion attacked the Taghzout hill and lost 18 killed and 36 wounded The paroxysm of these interventions was reached in 1925 1926 during the Rif War Four battalions 1st 2nd 6th 7th and two companies of sapeurs Pionniers of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI were engaged almost 2000 men At the cost of more than 400 fatalities the battalions illustrated themselves in furious combats often in close range corps a corps combat On June 10 1924 the 6th battalion was decimated at the cost of 4 officers killed and 60 fatalities during an operation at night to liberate the post of Mediouna The 2nd battalion chief Commandant Major Deslandre was killed while leading at the head of his Legionnaires on July 18 1924 near Tezual On May 8 1926 the general offensive was launched All the units of the 1st Foreign Regiment were of participation in particular the 1st 2nd and 6th battalions Victory was definite on May 26 Nevertheless Chef de bataillon Commandant Major Le Roch was killed in violent combats on July 14 while leading the 1st Battalion at the tips of Tizi N Ouidel The four battalions were cited 5 times out of which 2 citations for the 6th battalion Second World War edit In France In 1939 the 1st Foreign directed on France 2500 Cadres and Legionnaires out of the 3000 men who formed the 11th Foreign Infantry Regiment 11e REI and 12th Foreign Infantry Regiment 12e REI Three former regimental commanders of the 1er REI would command the 11e REI These two regiments disappeared during the defeat of 1940 at cost of heavy losses The 11e REI was cited at the orders of the army the 12 e REI at the orders of the division In parallel the 1st battalion of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment was transferred to the 13e DBLE which was on its way to Narvik In 1941 two battalions of the 1er REI and the company hors rang CHR constituted the 4th Demi Brigade of the Foreign Legion 4e DBLE sent to Senegal The 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI grew back in size by integrating the veterans of the 6th Foreign Infantry Regiment 6e REI whom fought in Syria In November 1942 the 1st Battalion of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI illustrated capability during combats against the Afrika Korps in Tunisia The 2nd company was annihilated in the Djebel Mansour and was cited at the orders of the army With the return of the 4th Demi Brigade of the Foreign Legion 4e DBLE to Sidi Bel Abbes and the beginning of the campaign of Tunisia in 1943 the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI became the 1st Foreign Marching Infantry Regiment 1er REIM on April 16 1943 Formed of three battalions the regiment illustrated combat ability at the cost of 380 fatalities by inflicting heavy losses to the enemy at Pont du Fhas and in the Djebel Zaghouan For actions incurred the regiment was cited at the orders of the army a citation which currently adorns the regimental colors flag of the regiment The veterans of the 1st Foreign Marching Infantry Regiment 1er REIM and 3rd Foreign Marching Infantry Regiment 3e REIM would form again the renowned Marching Regiment of the Foreign Legion RMLE which participated in full to the total liberation of the national territory The 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er REI ceased to exist on June 30 1943 The respective missions were assured by the DCRE at Bel Abbes Indochina War edit The 1st Foreign Regiment was reborn on May 1 1946 The regiment participated along the various combat specialized units which would partake operations in which the Legion would lead until 1962 notably the Mounted Saharan Companies The regiment accordingly was fully dedicated to the selection training instruction of foreign volunteers institution administration and funneling via the communal depot general reinforcements for units engaged in Indochina Accordingly the regiment did not actually participate directly to the conflict On September 1 1950 the Autonomous Group of the Foreign Legion GALE was created commanded consecutively by Generals Jean Olie and Paul Gardy This Autonomous Foreign Legion Group was the Commandment ancestor of the actual Legion Algerian War edit During the stir up of Events in Algeria the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RE like all Legion regiments which lived in Algeria since 1831 would participate to combats which would last until 1962 the regiment endured the loss of 92 Officers Sous Officiers Sergeants to Warrant Officers and Legionnaires while placing out of combat 1151 rebels and recuperating 529 individual and collective arms A couple of dates November 18 1954 death of Sous lieutenant of the 3rd Marching Battalion in Djebel Orbata On January 7 1958 the 6th company of Center Instruction No 2 destroyed a band of rebels north west of Franchetti On March 5 1961 the tactical general staff headquarters of the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er RE at the orders of battalion chief Commandant Major Fournier was engaged in the region of Sebdou then Djilali The section of student candidate sous officiers of Adjudant Kemencei responded to the rebels and beat 24 at the cost of 2 fatalities On August 11 1961 rebels infiltrated to Sidi Bel Abbes Spotted they entrenched themselves in a house The Legionnaires of the 1st Foreign Regiment mounted the assault at the cost of 3 fatalities out of Legionnaire Zimmerman would be last fatality in Algeria Departure On September 29 1962 the bodies of general Paul Frederic Rollet Chef de bataillon Prince Aage de Danemark and Legionnaire Zimmermann representing the ensemble of Legionnaires whom died in Algeria were transferred to the cemetery at Puyloubier Bouches du Rhone October 24 1962 marked the continental departure ceremony at the Monument aux Morts which was dismantled and repatriated to Aubagne The black pavilions brought back from Tuyen Quang in 1885 by Captain Borelli were burned in application of wishes to have them never leave Sidi Bel Abbes October 26 marked the continental departure The 1st Foreign Regiment kept units in the Sahara in accordance with the Evian Accords defence of the French nuclear test site The last legionnaires of these Saharan companies would return to Aubagne in 1969 and would notably be garrisoned at Bou Sfer with the 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment 2e REP and 1st Foreign Cavalry Regiment 1er REC leaving in 1967 Since 1962 edit On July 15 1962 the precursors arrived at the camp de la Demande at Aubagne which would become quartier garrison Vienot Colonel Vaillant regimental commander disembarked with the regimental colors flag on October 26 1962 On April 29 1963 the first Cameron eve night in metropolis had lieu On April 30 was the inauguration of the Monument aux Morts repatriated from Algeria and the celebration of the centennial of the battle of Cameron with a military parade The Instruction Group of the Foreign Legion GILE garrisoned at Corte Haute Corse and Bonifacio South of Corsica In October 1969 The Motorized Company of the Foreign Legion CMLE of the 1st Foreign Regiment was enacted in Corte The Motorized Company was deployed to Chad at the occasion of Operation Tacaud The company endured 6 fatalities in combat alongside the 2e REP until disengaging in 1970 The Motorized Company became the 6th company of the Operational Group of the Foreign Legion GOLE created on March 9 1971 The 1st Foreign Regiment was split in two giving birth to the 2nd Foreign Infantry Regiment which took on the former Instruction Group of the Foreign Legion and Operational Group of the Foreign Legion stationed in Corsica On July 1 1981 creation of the 31st Brigade which the 1st Foreign Regiment was part of One unit was deployed to Lebanon within the cadre of the Multinational Force in Lebanon FMSB from May to September 1983 Command element amp immediate support the value size of a company September 1990 to April 1991 The 1st Foreign Regiment engaged a Transport Platoon within the cadres of Operation Daguet in the Gulf Since 1991 the regiment has regularly supplied and reinforced units of the Legion deployed abroad as well as interior missions notably Sentinel since 2015 Organisation editThe regiment consists of three companies as follows 11 Pionniers Sections of Tradition Compagnie de Commandement et des Services Regimentaire CCSR Regimental Command and Services Company Compagnie des Services de la Legion Etrangere CSLE Foreign Legion Services Company Compagnie Administrative du Personnel de la Legion Etrangere CAPLE Foreign Legion Personnel Administration CompanyIt also runs the following 11 Institution des Invalides de la Legion Etrangere IILE a Puyloubier Foreign Legion Invalid Institution at Puyloubier Centre d Hebergement et d Accueil de la Legion Etrangere CHALE a la Ciotat Foreign Legion Accommodation amp Welcome Center at Ciotat Centre des Permissionnaires de la Legion Etrangere de la Malmousque CPLEM a Marseille Foreign Legion Leave Center at MalmousqueAlso reported within the regiment is the Foreign Legion Emergency Staff and Statistics Division a Legion intelligence section Tradition editMain article Foreign Legion Command Insignia edit nbsp Regimental Insignia of the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er R E nbsp The Foreign Legion Groupment G L E in the 31st Brigade featuring Poseidon nbsp Pionniers of the 1st Foreign Regiment nbsp Codex Mendoza nbsp Beret insignia of the 1st Foreign RegimentThe insignia of the 1st Foreign Infantry Regiment 1er R E I 1950 1955 retook the symbolics of the Foreign Legion with the grenade of 7 flames and the green red colors of the legion The regiment is represented inside the grenade while the globe commemorates the relic of the Foreign Legion in Sidi Bel Abbes The current insignia of the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er R E retook the symbolic ruban of the Commemorative medal of the Mexico Expedition created in 1863 This insignia was initially destined for the 3rd company of the 4th Foreign Regiment 4e RE in 1936 The insignia became that of the Autonomous Group of the Foreign Legion G A L E and was then adopted by the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er R E in 1955 The insignia makes reference to a white diamond shape on which figures the arms of Mexico a black coloured Mexican golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos locking on a serpent as depicted on the flag of Mexico and a saltire with Foreign Legion and Mexican colors Regimental colors edit nbsp Regimental Colors of the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er R E nbsp Verso Colors of the 1st Foreign Regiment 1er R E with Honneur et Fidelite Regimental Song edit Chant de Marche Nous sommes tous des volontaires featuring 12 Nous sommes tous des volontaires Les gars du 1er etranger Notre devise est legendaire Honneur Fidelite Fidelite Marchons legionnaires Dans la boue dans le sable brulant bis Marchons l ame legere bis Et le cœur vaillant bis Marchons legionnaires bis Nous marchons gaiement en cadence Malgre le vent malgre la pluie Les meilleurs soldats de la France Sont la devant vous les voici Partout ou le combat fait rage L on voit le 1er etranger Exemple d heroisme de courage Se couvrir de glorieux lauriers Gardons dans le fond de nos ames Le souvenir de nos aines Et pour la grenade a sept flammes Loyal pret a tout sacrifier Decorations edit Legion of Honour on April 28 1906 Croix de guerre 1939 1945 France with 1 palm 13 Gold Medal of the City of Milan since March 9 1909 Cross with swords of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta nbsp Legion of Honour nbsp Croix de guerre 1939 1945 with 1 palm nbsp Gold Medal of the City of MilanHonors edit Battle honours edit Sevastopol 1855 13 Kabilie 1857 Magenta 1859 Camerone 1863 Extreme Orient 1884 1885 Dahomy Maroc 1892 1907 1925 Madagascar 1895 1905 Orient 1915 17 AFN 1952 1962Foreign Legion and Regimental Commanders editMain articles Origins of the French Foreign Legion Foreign Legion Command and Honneur et Fidelite Tenure 1841 1955 edit 1st Regiment of the 1st Foreign Legion Tenure 1841 1856 14 1er Regiment etranger de la Legion etrangere 1er R E L E 14 1841 colonel de Mollenbeck 1842 colonel Despinoy 1843 colonel Mouret 1846 colonel Mellinet 1850 colonel de Givry 1851 colonel Bazaine 1854 colonel Vienot killed heading the regiment 1855 colonel Levy 1855 colonel de Cordoue1st Foreign Regiment Tenure 1856 1862 14 1er Regiment etranger 1er R E 14 1856 colonel Meyer 1858 colonel de Saint Andre 1858 colonel Granchette 1858 colonel Brayer 1859 colonel Martinez Foreign Regiment Tenure 1862 1875 14 Regiment etranger R E 14 1862 colonel Butet 1862 colonel Jeanningros 1865 colonel Lavoignet 1865 colonel d Ornano 1866 general Jeanningros 1866 colonel de Courcy 1866 colonel Guilhem 1867 colonel Deplanque 1870 colonel de Curten 1870 colonel Thierry 1871 colonel Chaulan 1871 colonel de MallaretForeign Legion Tenure 1875 1884 14 Legion etrangere L E 14 1875 colonel de Mallaret 1881 colonel de Negrier 1883 colonel Grisot 1st Foreign Regiment Tenure 1885 1942 14 1er Regiment Etranger 1er R E 14 1885 colonel Grisot 1886 colonel Wattringue 1890 colonel Barberet 1891 colonel Zeni 1895 colonel de Villebois Mareuil 1896 colonel Bertrand 1900 colonel Dautelle 1904 colonel Rene Boutegourd 1907 colonel Girardot 1910 colonel Bavouzet 1913 colonel Boyer 1914 Lt colonel Cosman 1914 colonel Tahon 1915 Lt colonel Met 1916 Lt colonel Heliot 1918 Lt colonel Forey 1920 colonel Boulet Desbarreau 1925 colonel Rollet 1931 colonel Nicolas 1934 colonel Maire 1934 colonel Debas 1935 colonel Azas 1939 colonel Robert 1940 colonel Flan 1940 colonel Girard 1940 colonel Bouty 1941 colonel Lambert 1941 colonel Barre 1942 colonel Vias1st Foreign Marching Infantry Regiment Tenure 1943 14 1er Regiment etranger d infanterie de marche 1er R E I M 14 1943 Lt colonel Gentis1st Foreign Infantry Regiment Tenure recreated 1949 1955 14 1er regiment etranger d infanterie 1er R E I 14 1949 colonel Babonneau 1949 colonel Gaultier 1950 colonel Penicaut 1953 colonel Thomas 1955 colonel RaberinTenure 1955 present edit 1956 colonel Thomas 15 1959 colonel Brothier 15 1961 colonel Vaillant 15 1963 colonel Vadot 15 1966 colonel Chenel 15 1968 colonel Fuhr 15 1970 colonel Letestu 15 1972 Lt colonel Plantevin 15 1974 colonel Riou 15 1976 colonel Delsuc 15 1976 colonel Thibout 15 1978 colonel Ameline 15 1980 colonel Talbourdet 15 1982 Lt colonel Benezit 15 1984 colonel Cler 15 1986 colonel Carles 15 1989 colonel Bernier 15 1992 colonel Cayrou 15 1994 colonel Raymond 15 1996 colonel Blevin 15 1998 colonel Pierson 15 2000 colonel Relave 15 2002 colonel Guenin 15 2004 Lt colonel Lantaires 15 2006 colonel Hackenbruch 15 2008 colonel Labat 15 2010 colonel des Courtils 15 2012 Lt colonel de Besombes 15 2014 colonel Rousseau 15 2016 Lt colonel Dujon 15 Notable members editCaptain Jean Danjou Peter I of Serbia Captain Joseph Arthur Dufaure du Bessol Siegfried Freytag German Aviation Ace Brigadier General Giuseppe Garibaldi II with his 5 brothers 2 of whom were killed in combats at Argonne in 1915 Hermann Eckstein 1903 1976 Eugene Jaques Bullard Pierre Segretain Pierre Jeanpierre Peter J Ortiz Serge Andolenko Louis Antoine Gaultier Gabriel BablonGallery edit nbsp Relic of the Foreign Legion at Sidi bel Abbes nbsp Place d armes of garrison quartier Vienot at Aubagne nbsp Monument Morts LegionSee also editMajor France Swiss Guard Moroccan Division Marching Regiment of the Foreign Legion List of French Foreign Legion unitsReferences edit 1er Regiment Etranger 1er RE Retrieved 2022 03 26 Foreign Legion Command Retrieved 2022 03 26 In Le 1er Etranger The 1st Foreign Regiment page I 8 a b c d e f 1 Archived 2016 03 23 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment Affiliations of the 1st Foreign Regiment a b c d e 2 Archived 2015 10 03 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment Regiment History a b c d e 3 Archived 2015 10 03 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment the 1st Foreign Regiment Spanish Battle Report short Spanish Battle Report long Foreign Legion in the Balkans 1915 1919 foreignlegion info Retrieved 22 June 2021 Here is the detailed history of the French Foreign Legion in the Balkans during the First World War Mounted Companies Compagnies montees de la Legion etrangere a b Le 1er Regiment etranger Legion Etrangere Retrieved 2011 12 31 4 Archived 2015 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment Chant du 1er Regiment etranger a b 5 Archived 2015 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment Regimental Colors and decorations a b c d e f g h i j k l m n 6 Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment Foreign Legion and Regimental Commanders 1841 1955 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad 7 Archived 2017 10 19 at the Wayback Machine Official Website of the 1st Foreign Regiment Regimental Commanders 1955 present Bibliography edit Mongin Jean Marie 2019 La Legion Etrangere 1831 1962 une histoire par l uniforme de la legion etrangere in French Illustrated by Andre Jouineau Bayeux Heimdal ISBN 978 2840485360 Windrow Martin 1971 French Foreign Legion Men at Arms London Osprey ISBN 978 0 85 045051 4 Windrow Martin 2011 French Foreign Legionnaire 1890 1914 Warrior London Osprey ISBN 978 1 84 908422 2 Windrow Martin 2010 French Foreign Legion 1872 1914 Men at Arms London Osprey ISBN 978 1 84 908326 3 Windrow Martin 1999 French Foreign Legion 1914 45 Men at Arms London Osprey ISBN 978 1 85 532761 0 Windrow Martin 1996 French Foreign Legion Infantry and Cavalry since 1945 Men at Arms London Osprey ISBN 978 1 85 532621 7 Websites edit www legion etrangere comExternal links editOfficial website Legion recrute Kepi Blanc magazine 1st Foreign Regiment s history History amp images of the 1er RE Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1st Foreign Regiment France amp oldid 1192637536, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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