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Cockade

A cockade is a knot of ribbons, or other circular- or oval-shaped symbol of distinctive colours which is usually worn on a hat or cap.

A woman fastening a red-and-white cockade to a Polish insurgent's square-shaped rogatywka cap during the January Uprising of 1863–64
Charles Edward Stuart wearing a hat with a white (Jacobite) cockade
John of Austria wearing as a brassard the red cockade of the Spanish armies

Eighteenth century

 
General André Masséna of the French Revolutionary Army wearing a bicorne with a tricolor cockade

In the 18th and 19th centuries, coloured cockades were used in Europe to show the allegiance of their wearers to some political faction, or to show their rank or to indicate a servant's livery.[1][2] Because individual armies might wear a variety of differing regimental uniforms, cockades were used as an effective and economical means of national identification.[3]

A cockade was pinned on the side of a man's tricorne or cocked hat, or on his lapel. Women could also wear it on their hat or in their hair.

In pre-revolutionary France, the cockade of the Bourbon dynasty was all white.[4][5][6] In the Kingdom of Great Britain supporters of a Jacobite restoration wore white cockades, while the recently established Hanoverian monarchy used a black cockade.[7][8][9][10] The Hanoverians also accorded the right to all German nobility to wear the black cockade in the United Kingdom.

During the 1780 Gordon Riots in London, the blue cockade became a symbol of anti-government feelings and was worn by most of the rioters.[11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18]

During the American Revolution, the Continental Army initially wore cockades of various colors as an ad hoc form of rank insignia, as General George Washington wrote:

As the Continental Army has unfortunately no uniforms, and consequently many inconveniences must arise from not being able to distinguish the commissioned officers from the privates, it is desired that some badge of distinction be immediately provided; for instance that the field officers may have red or pink colored cockades in their hats, the captains yellow or buff, and the subalterns green.[19][20]

Before long however, the Continental Army reverted to wearing the black cockade they inherited from the British. Later, when France became an ally of the United States, the Continental Army pinned the white cockade of the French Ancien Régime onto their old black cockade; the French reciprocally pinned the black cockade onto their white cockade, as a mark of the French-American alliance. The black-and-white cockade thus became known as the "Union Cockade".[21][22][23][24][25]

In the Storming of the Bastille, Camille Desmoulins initially encouraged the revolutionary crowd to wear green. This colour was later rejected as it was associated with the Count of Artois. Instead, revolutionaries would wear cockades with the traditional colours of the arms of Paris: red and blue. Later, the Bourbon white was added to this cockade, thus producing the original cockade of France.[24] Later, distinctive colours and styles of cockade would indicate the wearer's faction; although the meanings of the various styles were not entirely consistent, and they varied somewhat by region and period.

European military

 
John VI of Portugal wearing the blue-and-red cockade of Portugal on a military cocked hat
 
A metal cockade on the swivel of a Pickelhaube helmet.

From the 15th century, various European monarchy realms used cockades to denote the nationalities of their militaries.[26][27] Their origin reverts to the distinctive colored band or ribbon worn by late medieval armies or jousting knights on their arms or headgear to distinguish friend from foe in the field of battle. Ribbon-style cockades were worn later upon helmets and brimmed hats or tricornes and bicornes just as the French did, and also on cocked hats and shakoes. Coloured metal cockades were worn at the right side of helmets; while small button-type cockades were worn at the front of kepis and peaked caps.[28][29] In addition to the significance of these symbols in denoting loyalty to a particular monarch, the coloured cockade served to provide a common and economical field sign at a time when the colours of uniform coats might vary widely between regiments in a single army.[30]

During the Napoleonic wars, the armies of France and Russia, had the imperial French cockade or the larger cockade of St. George pinned on the front of their shakos.[31]

The Second German Empire (1870–1918) used two cockades on each army headgear: one (black-white-red) for the empire; the other for one of the monarchies the empire was composed of, which had used their own colors long before. The only exceptions were the Kingdoms of Bavaria and Württemberg, having preserved the right to keep their own armed forces which were not integrated in the Imperial Army. Their only cockades were either white-blue-white (Bavaria) or black-red-black (Württemberg).[32][1][33]

The Weimar Republic (1919–1933) removed these, as they might promote separatism which would lead to the dissolution of the German nation-state into regional countries again.[34] When the Nazis came to power, they rejected the democratic German colours of black-red-gold used by the Weimar Republic. Nazis reintroduced the imperial colours (in German: die kaiserlichen Farben or Reichsfarben) of black on the outside, white next, and a red center. The Nazi government used black-white-red on all army caps.[35] These colours represented the biggest and the smallest countries of the Reich: large Prussia (black and white) and the tiny Hanseatic League city states of Hamburg, Bremen and Lübeck (white and red).

France began the first Air Service in 1909 and soon picked the traditional French cockade as the first national emblem, now usually termed a roundel, on military aircraft. During World War I, other countries adopted national cockades and used these coloured emblems as roundels on their military aircraft. These designs often bear an additional central device or emblem to further identify national aircraft, those from the French navy bearing a black anchor within the French cockade.[36]

Hungarian revolutionaries wore cockades during the Hungarian revolution of 1848 and during the 1956 revolution. Because of this, Hungarians traditionally wear cockades on 15 March.[37][38]

Confederate States

Echoing their use when Americans rebelled against Britain, cockades – usually made with blue ribbons and worn on clothing or hats – were widespread tokens of Southern support for secession preceding the American Civil War of 1861–1865.[39]

List of national cockades

 
Cockade on the caps of certified persons serving in the pilot service of Finland, 1913.

Below is a list of national cockades (colors listed from center to ring):[40][41]

Country
and date
Description Image
  Albania red-black-red  
  Argentina sky blue-white-sky blue  
  Armenia orange-blue-red  
  Austria
before 1918
black-gold  
  Austria
since 1918
red-white-red  
  Azerbaijan green-red-light blue  
  Belgium black-yellow-red  
  Bolivia
(1825-1826)
green-red-green (with a white 5 pointed star in the center)  
  Bolivia
(1826-1851)
green-yellow-red  
  Bolivia green-yellow-red  
  Bulgaria red-green-white  
  Brazil blue-yellow-green  
  Chile blue-white-red (with a white 5 pointed star in the blue portion)  
  Colombia yellow-blue-red  
  Croatia red-white-blue  
  Czechoslovakia
(1920-1993)
white-red-blue  
  Czech Republic white-red-blue  
  Denmark
(early 19th century)
black
  Denmark red-white-red  
  Egypt
(1922-1953)
green-white-green  
  Egypt black-white-red  
  Ethiopia
(until 1936)
green-yellow-red  
  Ethiopia red-yellow-green  
  Ecuador red-blue-yellow  
  Estonia white-black-blue  
  Finland white-blue-white  
  France
(1794–1814, 1815 and current since 1830)
blue-white-red  
  France
(before 1794, 1814–1815 and 1815–1830)
white
  Gabon green-yellow-light blue  
  Germany
(1918–1932 and since 1945)
black-red-gold  
  Germany
(1871–1918 and 1932–1945)
red-white-black  
  German Confederation
(1848–1871)
gold-red-black
  East Germany
(1949-1990)
gold-red-black
  Georgia
(1990–2004)
black-white-wine red  
  Ghana green-yellow-red  
  Greece
(1822)
white-blue-white  
  Greece
(1833)
blue-white  
  Greece blue-white  
  Hungary green-white-red  
  Iceland blue-white-red-white-blue  
  India green-white-saffron  
  Iran red-white-green  
  Ireland
(until 1922)
green or sky blue  
  Ireland
(since 1922)
green-white-orange  
  Italy
(before 1848)
savoy blue  
  Italy
(since 1848)
green-white-red  
  Japan red-white  
  Kenya green-white-red-white-black  
  Mexico green-white-red  
  Lithuania red-green-yellow  
  Latvia carmine-white-carmine  
  Monaco white-red-white  
  Netherlands orange  
  Nigeria green-white-green  
  Norway red-white-blue-white  
  Pakistan white-green-yellow  
  Paraguay blue-white-red  
  Peru red-white-red  
  Philippines
(1898–1901)
red-blue-silver  
  Poland red-white  
  Portugal
(1797–1820 and 1823-1830)
blue-red  
  Portugal
(1821–1823 and 1830–1910)
blue-white  
  Portugal green-red  
  Romania blue-yellow-red  
  Russia
(until 1917)
black-orange-black-orange-white  
  Russia black-orange-black-orange  
  San Marino white-blue  
  Serbia red-blue-white  
  Seychelles
(1978-1996)
green-white-red  
  Sierra Leone light blue-white-green  
  Slovenia red-blue-white  
  South Africa green-red-white-blue  
  Spain
(until 1843 and 1844–1871)
red  
  Spain
(1843–1844 and current since 1871)
red-yellow-red  
  Sweden
(military)
yellow  
  Sweden
(civilian)
blue-yellow  
  Thailand red-white-blue-white-red  
  Turkey red-white-red  
  Ukraine light blue-yellow  
  United Kingdom white (Stuart dynasty), black (Hanoverian dynasty), red-white-blue  
  United States
(War of Independence)
black-white-black  
  United States
(19th century)
blue with an eagle in the centre  
  United States white-blue-red  
  Uruguay
(1828-1916)
sky blue  
  Uruguay
(civilian)
blue-white-blue-white-blue-white-blue-white  
  Uruguay
(military)
blue-white-blue with a red diagonal line  
  Uruguay
(police)
red-white-blue  
  Venezuela red-blue-yellow  
  Yugoslavia blue-white-red  

Component states of the German Empire (1871–1918)

 
Cockades of the German Empire

The German Empire had, besides the national cockade, also cockades for several of its states,[42] seen in the following table:

State Description
Anhalt green
Baden yellow-red-yellow
Bavaria white-sky blue-white
Brunswick blue-yellow-blue
Hanseatic cities (Bremen, Hamburg, Lübeck) white with a red cross
Hesse white-red-white-red-white
Lippe yellow-red-yellow
Mecklenburg-Schwerin and -Streliz red-yellow-blue
Oldenburg blue-red-blue
Prussia black-white-black
Reuss-Gera and -Greiz black-red-yellow
Saxe-Altenburg, -Coburg and Gotha and -Meiningen green-white-green
Saxe-Weimar black-yellow-green
Saxony white-green-white
Schaumburg-Lippe blue-red-white
Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt blue-white-blue
Schwarzburg-Sonderhausen white-blue-white
Waldeck black-red-yellow
Württemberg black-red-black

See also

References

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  40. ^ "Tableau comparatif de la superficie, population totale et pop. par m. géogr. de tous les Etats du monde, avec les cocardes et pavillons les plus connus / dressé d'après Malte-Brun, Hassel, Balbi et autres sources authentiques par C. Desjardins ; A. Haas, script" (in French). Gallica. 1833. Retrieved 2017-03-05 – via gallica.bnf.fr.
  41. ^ "Tableau comparatif de la superficie et de la population absolue et relative de tous les Etats du monde avec leurs pavillons et cocardes / dressé d'après les documens les plus récens par Ct. Desjardins,... ; Lith. de Mantoux,..." (in French). Gallica. 1842. Retrieved 2017-03-05 – via gallica.bnf.fr.
  42. ^ Hein. Das kleine Buch vom Deutschen Heere 1901.

Further reading

  • Prussian Staff & Specialist Troops 1791-1815, book

External links

  •   Media related to Cockades at Wikimedia Commons

cockade, cockade, knot, ribbons, other, circular, oval, shaped, symbol, distinctive, colours, which, usually, worn, woman, fastening, white, cockade, polish, insurgent, square, shaped, rogatywka, during, january, uprising, 1863, charles, edward, stuart, wearin. A cockade is a knot of ribbons or other circular or oval shaped symbol of distinctive colours which is usually worn on a hat or cap A woman fastening a red and white cockade to a Polish insurgent s square shaped rogatywka cap during the January Uprising of 1863 64 Charles Edward Stuart wearing a hat with a white Jacobite cockade John of Austria wearing as a brassard the red cockade of the Spanish armies Contents 1 Eighteenth century 2 European military 3 Confederate States 4 List of national cockades 4 1 Component states of the German Empire 1871 1918 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEighteenth century Edit General Andre Massena of the French Revolutionary Army wearing a bicorne with a tricolor cockade In the 18th and 19th centuries coloured cockades were used in Europe to show the allegiance of their wearers to some political faction or to show their rank or to indicate a servant s livery 1 2 Because individual armies might wear a variety of differing regimental uniforms cockades were used as an effective and economical means of national identification 3 A cockade was pinned on the side of a man s tricorne or cocked hat or on his lapel Women could also wear it on their hat or in their hair In pre revolutionary France the cockade of the Bourbon dynasty was all white 4 5 6 In the Kingdom of Great Britain supporters of a Jacobite restoration wore white cockades while the recently established Hanoverian monarchy used a black cockade 7 8 9 10 The Hanoverians also accorded the right to all German nobility to wear the black cockade in the United Kingdom During the 1780 Gordon Riots in London the blue cockade became a symbol of anti government feelings and was worn by most of the rioters 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 During the American Revolution the Continental Army initially wore cockades of various colors as an ad hoc form of rank insignia as General George Washington wrote As the Continental Army has unfortunately no uniforms and consequently many inconveniences must arise from not being able to distinguish the commissioned officers from the privates it is desired that some badge of distinction be immediately provided for instance that the field officers may have red or pink colored cockades in their hats the captains yellow or buff and the subalterns green 19 20 Before long however the Continental Army reverted to wearing the black cockade they inherited from the British Later when France became an ally of the United States the Continental Army pinned the white cockade of the French Ancien Regime onto their old black cockade the French reciprocally pinned the black cockade onto their white cockade as a mark of the French American alliance The black and white cockade thus became known as the Union Cockade 21 22 23 24 25 In the Storming of the Bastille Camille Desmoulins initially encouraged the revolutionary crowd to wear green This colour was later rejected as it was associated with the Count of Artois Instead revolutionaries would wear cockades with the traditional colours of the arms of Paris red and blue Later the Bourbon white was added to this cockade thus producing the original cockade of France 24 Later distinctive colours and styles of cockade would indicate the wearer s faction although the meanings of the various styles were not entirely consistent and they varied somewhat by region and period European military Edit John VI of Portugal wearing the blue and red cockade of Portugal on a military cocked hat A metal cockade on the swivel of a Pickelhaube helmet From the 15th century various European monarchy realms used cockades to denote the nationalities of their militaries 26 27 Their origin reverts to the distinctive colored band or ribbon worn by late medieval armies or jousting knights on their arms or headgear to distinguish friend from foe in the field of battle Ribbon style cockades were worn later upon helmets and brimmed hats or tricornes and bicornes just as the French did and also on cocked hats and shakoes Coloured metal cockades were worn at the right side of helmets while small button type cockades were worn at the front of kepis and peaked caps 28 29 In addition to the significance of these symbols in denoting loyalty to a particular monarch the coloured cockade served to provide a common and economical field sign at a time when the colours of uniform coats might vary widely between regiments in a single army 30 During the Napoleonic wars the armies of France and Russia had the imperial French cockade or the larger cockade of St George pinned on the front of their shakos 31 The Second German Empire 1870 1918 used two cockades on each army headgear one black white red for the empire the other for one of the monarchies the empire was composed of which had used their own colors long before The only exceptions were the Kingdoms of Bavaria and Wurttemberg having preserved the right to keep their own armed forces which were not integrated in the Imperial Army Their only cockades were either white blue white Bavaria or black red black Wurttemberg 32 1 33 The Weimar Republic 1919 1933 removed these as they might promote separatism which would lead to the dissolution of the German nation state into regional countries again 34 When the Nazis came to power they rejected the democratic German colours of black red gold used by the Weimar Republic Nazis reintroduced the imperial colours in German die kaiserlichen Farben or Reichsfarben of black on the outside white next and a red center The Nazi government used black white red on all army caps 35 These colours represented the biggest and the smallest countries of the Reich large Prussia black and white and the tiny Hanseatic League city states of Hamburg Bremen and Lubeck white and red France began the first Air Service in 1909 and soon picked the traditional French cockade as the first national emblem now usually termed a roundel on military aircraft During World War I other countries adopted national cockades and used these coloured emblems as roundels on their military aircraft These designs often bear an additional central device or emblem to further identify national aircraft those from the French navy bearing a black anchor within the French cockade 36 Hungarian revolutionaries wore cockades during the Hungarian revolution of 1848 and during the 1956 revolution Because of this Hungarians traditionally wear cockades on 15 March 37 38 Confederate States EditEchoing their use when Americans rebelled against Britain cockades usually made with blue ribbons and worn on clothing or hats were widespread tokens of Southern support for secession preceding the American Civil War of 1861 1865 39 List of national cockades Edit Cockade on the caps of certified persons serving in the pilot service of Finland 1913 See also Military aircraft insignia Below is a list of national cockades colors listed from center to ring 40 41 Countryand date Description Image Albania red black red Argentina sky blue white sky blue Armenia orange blue red Austriabefore 1918 black gold Austriasince 1918 red white red Azerbaijan green red light blue Belgium black yellow red Bolivia 1825 1826 green red green with a white 5 pointed star in the center Bolivia 1826 1851 green yellow red Bolivia green yellow red Bulgaria red green white Brazil blue yellow green Chile blue white red with a white 5 pointed star in the blue portion Colombia yellow blue red Croatia red white blue Czechoslovakia 1920 1993 white red blue Czech Republic white red blue Denmark early 19th century black Denmark red white red Egypt 1922 1953 green white green Egypt black white red Ethiopia until 1936 green yellow red Ethiopia red yellow green Ecuador red blue yellow Estonia white black blue Finland white blue white France 1794 1814 1815 and current since 1830 blue white red France before 1794 1814 1815 and 1815 1830 white Gabon green yellow light blue Germany 1918 1932 and since 1945 black red gold Germany 1871 1918 and 1932 1945 red white black German Confederation 1848 1871 gold red black East Germany 1949 1990 gold red black Georgia 1990 2004 black white wine red Ghana green yellow red Greece 1822 white blue white Greece 1833 blue white Greece blue white Hungary green white red Iceland blue white red white blue India green white saffron Iran red white green Ireland until 1922 green or sky blue Ireland since 1922 green white orange Italy before 1848 savoy blue Italy since 1848 green white red Japan red white Kenya green white red white black Mexico green white red Lithuania red green yellow Latvia carmine white carmine Monaco white red white Netherlands orange Nigeria green white green Norway red white blue white Pakistan white green yellow Paraguay blue white red Peru red white red Philippines 1898 1901 red blue silver Poland red white Portugal 1797 1820 and 1823 1830 blue red Portugal 1821 1823 and 1830 1910 blue white Portugal green red Romania blue yellow red Russia until 1917 black orange black orange white Russia black orange black orange San Marino white blue Serbia red blue white Seychelles 1978 1996 green white red Sierra Leone light blue white green Slovenia red blue white South Africa green red white blue Spain until 1843 and 1844 1871 red Spain 1843 1844 and current since 1871 red yellow red Sweden military yellow Sweden civilian blue yellow Thailand red white blue white red Turkey red white red Ukraine light blue yellow United Kingdom white Stuart dynasty black Hanoverian dynasty red white blue United States War of Independence black white black United States 19th century blue with an eagle in the centre United States white blue red Uruguay 1828 1916 sky blue Uruguay civilian blue white blue white blue white blue white Uruguay military blue white blue with a red diagonal line Uruguay police red white blue Venezuela red blue yellow Yugoslavia blue white red Component states of the German Empire 1871 1918 Edit Cockades of the German Empire The German Empire had besides the national cockade also cockades for several of its states 42 seen in the following table State DescriptionAnhalt greenBaden yellow red yellowBavaria white sky blue whiteBrunswick blue yellow blueHanseatic cities Bremen Hamburg Lubeck white with a red crossHesse white red white red whiteLippe yellow red yellowMecklenburg Schwerin and Streliz red yellow blueOldenburg blue red bluePrussia black white blackReuss Gera and Greiz black red yellowSaxe Altenburg Coburg and Gotha and Meiningen green white greenSaxe Weimar black yellow greenSaxony white green whiteSchaumburg Lippe blue red whiteSchwarzburg Rudolstadt blue white blueSchwarzburg Sonderhausen white blue whiteWaldeck black red yellowWurttemberg black red blackSee also EditCap badge Rosette politics RoundelReferences Edit a b Maxwell A 2014 Patriots Against Fashion Clothing and Nationalism in Europe s Age of Revolutions Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 9781137277145 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Newman S P 2010 Parades and the Politics of the Street Festive Culture in the Early American Republic University of Pennsylvania Press Incorporated p 161 ISBN 9780812200478 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Mollo John 1972 Military Fashion p 22 ISBN 0 214 65349 8 The White Cockade Or Bourbon Songster Being a Patriotic Collection of Songs on the Downfall of Tyranny and Restoration of Louis XVIII Etc A Chap book J Evans amp Son 1814 p 2 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Cobbett W 1814 Cobbett s Political Register Vol 25 William Cobbett Retrieved 2017 03 05 Jones C 2006 Paris Biography of a City Penguin Books Limited ISBN 9780141941912 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Cormack W S 2002 Revolution and Political Conflict in the French Navy 1789 1794 Cambridge University Press p 65 ISBN 9780521893756 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Hofschroer P Fosten B 2012 The Hanoverian Army of the Napoleonic Wars Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781780965178 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Jones G M 1827 Travels in Norway Sweden Finland Russia and Turkey also on the coasts of the sea of Azof and of the Black sea with a review of the trade in those seas and of the systems adopted to man the fleets of the different powers of Europe compared with that of England J Murray p 22 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Franklin C 2012 British Army Uniforms of the American Revolution 1751 1783 Pen amp Sword Books Limited p 111 ISBN 9781848846906 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Babington A 2015 Military Intervention in Britain From the Gordon Riots to the Gibraltar Incident Taylor amp Francis p 21 ISBN 9781317397717 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Stockdale J J 1810 The Covent Garden Journal J J Stockdale p 130 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Livingston D W 1998 Philosophical Melancholy and Delirium Hume s Pathology of Philosophy University of Chicago Press p 275 ISBN 9780226487175 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Popular educator 1767 The popular educator p 254 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Bloom C 2012 Riot City Protest and Rebellion in the Capital Palgrave Macmillan p 147 ISBN 9781137029362 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Walker G Verhoeven W M 2004 The Vagabond Broadview Press p 253 ISBN 9781460404256 Retrieved 2017 03 05 CLIFFORD H Brandon J 1809 Clifford for ever O P and no P B The Trial between H Clifford plaintiff and J Brandon defendant for an assault and false imprisonment etc John Fairburn p 19 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Haywood I Seed J 2012 The Gordon Riots Politics Culture and Insurrection in Late Eighteenth Century Britain Cambridge University Press p 107 ISBN 9780521195423 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Defense gov News Article Insignia The Way You Tell Who s Who in the Military archive defense gov Retrieved 2017 03 05 Force P 1844 American archives Ripol Klassik pp 2 1745 ISBN 9785885286961 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Field R Hook A 2013 LincolnA s 90 Day Volunteers 1861 From Fort Sumter to First Bull Run Bloomsbury Publishing p 47 ISBN 9781782009214 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Richards J H 1997 Early American Drama Penguin Publishing Group p 68 ISBN 9781101177211 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Winkle K J 2013 Lincoln s Citadel The Civil War in Washington DC W W Norton ISBN 9780393240573 Retrieved 2017 03 05 a b Maxwell A 2014 Patriots Against Fashion Clothing and Nationalism in Europe s Age of Revolutions Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 9781137277145 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Fahs A 2010 The Imagined Civil War Popular Literature of the North and South 1861 1865 University of North Carolina Press p 43 ISBN 9780807899298 Retrieved 2017 03 05 ADYE R W 1802 The Little Bombardier and Pocket Gunner By Ralph Willett Adye T Egerton p 271 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Troiani D Kochan J L Coates J Kochan J 1998 Don Troiani s Soldiers in America 1754 1865 Stackpole Books p 99 ISBN 9780811705196 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Stone D 2015 The Kaiser s Army The German Army in World War One Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781844862924 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Kidd R S 2013 MILITARY UNIFORMS IN EUROPE 1900 2000 Volume One LULU Press p 128 ISBN 9781291187441 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Mollo John 1972 Military Fashion pp 30 31 ISBN 0 214 65349 8 Dempsey G 2002 Napoleon s Mercenaries Foreign Units in the French Army Under the Consulate and Empire 1799 1814 Greenhill Books p 267 ISBN 9781853674884 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Kidd R Spencer Military Uniforms in Europe 1900 2000 Vol One p 5 ISBN 978 1 291 18744 1 D D T Z P 2014 Germany at War 400 Years of Military History 4 volumes 400 Years of Military History ABC CLIO p 494 ISBN 9781598849813 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Williamson G Pavlovic D 2012 U Boat Crews 1914 45 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781780967905 Retrieved 2017 03 05 de Quesada A Dale C Walsh S 2013 Imperial German Colonial and Overseas Troops 1885 1918 Bloomsbury Publishing p 47 ISBN 9781780961651 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Cooke J J 1996 The U S Air Service in the Great War 1917 1919 Praeger p 202 ISBN 9780275948627 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Woll A Wydra H 2007 Democracy and Myth in Russia and Eastern Europe Taylor amp Francis p 182 ISBN 9781134089086 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Gyarfasova O Liebhart K 2014 Constructing and Communicating Europe Lit Verlag p 202 ISBN 9783643905154 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Goodheart Adam November 15 2010 Female Partisans blog The New York Times Retrieved October 14 2022 Tableau comparatif de la superficie population totale et pop par m geogr de tous les Etats du monde avec les cocardes et pavillons les plus connus dresse d apres Malte Brun Hassel Balbi et autres sources authentiques par C Desjardins A Haas script in French Gallica 1833 Retrieved 2017 03 05 via gallica bnf fr Tableau comparatif de la superficie et de la population absolue et relative de tous les Etats du monde avec leurs pavillons et cocardes dresse d apres les documens les plus recens par Ct Desjardins Lith de Mantoux in French Gallica 1842 Retrieved 2017 03 05 via gallica bnf fr Hein Das kleine Buch vom Deutschen Heere 1901 Further reading EditPrussian Staff amp Specialist Troops 1791 1815 bookExternal links Edit Media related to Cockades at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cockade amp oldid 1150350773, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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