fbpx
Wikipedia

Tirailleur

A tirailleur (French: [tiʁajœʁ]), in the Napoleonic era, was a type of light infantry trained to skirmish ahead of the main columns. Later, the term "tirailleur" was used by the French Army as a designation for indigenous infantry recruited in the French colonial territories during the 19th and 20th centuries, or for metropolitan units serving in a light infantry role.

Soldiers of the 1st Tirailleur Regiment of Épinal displaying late 19th- to early 20th-century uniforms for Bastille Day festivities.
Tunisian lieutenant and tirailleur from the 4th RTA during the First World War (1917) - Both of them are highly decorated (Legion of Honour, Médaille militaire, Croix de guerre with palm)

The French army currently maintains one tirailleur regiment, the 1st Tirailleur Regiment. This regiment was known as the 170th Infantry Regiment between 1964 and 1994. Prior to 1964, it was known as the 7th Algerian Tirailleur Regiment, but changed its name after it moved to France as a result of Algerian independence.

History edit

Napoleonic period edit

 
A tirailleur (left) and a voltigeur of the Young Guard.

In the wars of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic periods, the designation "tirailleur" was a French military term used at first to refer generically to light infantry skirmishers.[1] The first regiments of Tirailleurs so called were part of the Imperial Guard of Napoleon I. By the fall of the Empire, some 16 regiments had been created. The Guard Tirailleurs were usually grouped as part of the Young Guard, along with their sister Voltigeur regiments.

The Guard Tirailleur regiments were disbanded during the reorganization of the French Army in 1814 by the new royal government. On 28 March 1815, during Napoleon I's short-lived return to power (the Hundred Days), Regiments 1-8 of the Guard Tirailleurs were officially re-raised. Only the 1st and 3rd Regiments actually took the field for the Waterloo campaign. All regiments of Imperial Guard Tirailleurs (along with the rest of the Guard) were disbanded following the Emperor's second abdication.

In addition to the regiments within the Imperial Guard, several foreign battalions of tirailleurs were raised, included the Italian Tirailleurs du Po and Corsican Tirailleurs Corses.[2]

Colonial period edit

Origins edit

The first tirailleurs employed in French North Africa were a metropolitan light infantry unit — the 1er bataillon de tirailleurs de Vincennes which disembarked in Algiers in early 1840. This unit subsequently became the chasseurs d'Orléans but the title of tirailleurs was allocated the next year to newly raised regiments of indigenous Algerian infantry recruited from the Arab and Berber communities.[3]

Algerian, Tunisian and Moroccan tirailleurs edit

The tirailleurs from Algeria subsequently served in the Crimean War, the Second Italian War of Independence, the French intervention in Mexico and the Franco-Prussian War (1870), as well as in French colonial campaigns in Tunisia, Indochina, Morocco, Madagascar and Algeria itself. During the Crimean War the Algerian tirailleurs acquired the nickname of "Turcos" (Turks) by which they were widely known over the next hundred years. The name reportedly arose from comparisons between the Algerian troops and the Turkish allies serving alongside the French and British forces at the siege of Sevastopol.[4]

First raised in 1841 as battalions of tirailleurs indigenes, the locally recruited Algerian infantry were organised into three regiments of Algerian Tirailleurs by a decree dated 10 October 1855.[5] The number of such units fluctuated over the next hundred years until in the early 1960s eight regiments of tirailleurs plus a number of independent battalions remained in French service. Two battalions of Algerian Tirailleurs formed the bulk of the Détachement Français de Palestine et de Syrie that participated in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign from 1917 onwards.

 
Algerian tirailleurs in France in 1914

In 1884, the 4th Regiment of Tirailleurs was created in Tunisia. Except for minor distinctions of insignia and uniform (their numbering was based on the figure "4" and its multiples, plus light blue tombeaus or false pockets on their full dress zouave jackets) the Tunisian tirailleurs regiments had the same appearance as their Algerian counterparts.[6] It was only in 1921 that the French government decided to name them officially "Tunisian Tirailleurs Regiments".

In 1914, during World War I, the 1st Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs was created. At the end of the period of French rule in 1956 six regiments of Moroccan tirailleurs were still in existence.

The recruitment of Muslim tirailleurs was mainly voluntary with enlistment for three year periods (five for NCOs), although a limited form of conscription by ballot was introduced in Algeria in 1913 and continued until the end of French rule in North Africa.[7] Prior to 1939 up to 90% of the rank and file of each battalion had been indigenous. The proportion of French European (both metropolitan and pied-noir settlers) to Maghrébin (North African) personnel had however increased to about 30% by the end of World War II, as the tirailleur units became increasingly mechanized.

 
Vietnamese "Tirailleur" soldiers of Lord Nguyễn Phúc Ánh (Emperor Gia Long), circa 1800.

Senegalese tirailleurs edit

 
French Congo. A Senegalese tirailleur of the French colonial army. c. 1905. The uniform is the hot-weather light khaki with yellow braiding.

France made extensive use of tirailleurs in its colonial campaigns. The most numerous of these, after the "tirailleurs algériens" noted above, were the "tirailleurs sénégalais" (who were recruited from all of the French possessions in West and Central Africa). Both played an important role in the occupation of Morocco (1908–14) as well as in the Rif War of the 1920s.[8][page needed]

 
Algerian riflemen in Tonkin, 1884
 
Tonkinese riflemen in Tonkin, 1884

Tirailleur regiments from other French possessions edit

Before and during World War II (1939–45), tirailleurs were recruited from the Maghreb (Algerian, Moroccans, and Tunisians), from French West Africa and Madagascar (Tirailleurs malgaches).

Tirailleurs Indochinois edit

Regiments were recruited from the regions of French Indochina: Annam, Tonkin, and Cambodia. The regiments were named after the territory in which they were recruited. Thus "tirailleurs Annamites", "tirailleurs Tonkinois" and "tirailleurs Cambodgiens".[9]

World War I edit

During World War I (1914–18) tirailleurs from North African territories served on the Western Front, Salonika and in the Levant, incurring heavy losses. In spite of its title, the Moroccan Division (France) which fought on the Western Front contained Tirailleur battalions from all North African regions. The Great Mosque of Paris was constructed afterwards in honour of the Muslim tirailleurs who had fought for France.

World War II and subsequent campaigns edit

Tirailleurs from North and Central Africa fought with distinction in Europe during World War II, notably in the Italian campaign. The Indo-Chinese tirailleur regiments were destroyed or disbanded following the Japanese coups against the French colonial administration in March 1945.[10] Algerian, Moroccan and Senegalese tirailleurs served in Indo-China until the fall of Dien Bien Phu and subsequently as part of the French forces during the Algerian War of Independence (1954–62). Even after the French withdrawal from Indochina, a unit of mostly Vietnamese tirailleurs ("le Commando d'Extreme Orient Dam San") continued to serve with the French Army in Algeria until 1960.[11]

Disbanding tirailleur regiments edit

Most tirailleur regiments were disbanded as French colonies and protectorates achieved independence between 1956 and 1962. In Morocco, Tunisia and the new African states most serving tirailleurs transferred directly from the French armed forces to the new national armies. In Algeria locally recruited tirailleurs who remained loyal to France were given an option to transfer to units in France, or join a transitional force locale at the end of the Algerian War in 1962. The six remaining Algerian tirailleur regiments (RTA) were disbanded or transformed into metropolitan infantry units between 1962 and 1964.[12] The last Moroccan regiment in the French Army was the 5th RTM (Regiment de Tirailleurs Marocain), stationed at Dijon until it disbanded in 1965.[13]

The modern French Army still has one tirailleur regiment,[14] descended from the Algerian tirailleurs. While these troops are now all French, items of the traditional North African uniform are still worn on ceremonial occasions to commemorate the Algerian "Turcos" who served France for over 130 years. The traditions of the tirailleurs Senegalais are maintained by the 21eme Regiment d'infanterie de marine stationed in Fréjus, via the 4e Régiment de Tirailleurs Sénégalais of the Second World War.[15]

Uniforms edit

Until 1914 the Algerian and Tunisian tirailleurs wore zouave style uniforms of light blue with yellow braiding (see photographs on this page). White turbans (for parade), red fezzes and sashes were worn with this "tenue orientale".[16] A white field dress of similar loose cut was worn for North African campaigning and in France during the early months of World War I.[17] They adopted a more practical khaki uniform from 1915 onwards, in common with the other units of the (North African) 19th Military District.[18][19] The West African and Madagascan tirailleurs wore a dark blue parade dress with red sash and fez while the Indochinese regiments wore an indigenous style of blue, white or khaki uniform with a flat "salacco" headdress.[20] Khaki had been widely worn as a hot-weather field dress in Indo-China and Africa during the years before the outbreak of World War I and thereafter became the norm. The North African tirailleurs however resumed their colourful full dress uniforms between 1927 and 1939 to assist recruitment. After World War II they were retained until the present day for wear by the noubas (regimental bands). [21]

 
Algerian tirailleurs at Magic-City, Paris, 1913.

Decorations edit

In France, citations made during World War I, World War II or colonial conflicts were accompanied with awards of a Croix de Guerre (Cross of War) with attachments on the ribbon depending on the degree of citation: the lowest being represented by a bronze star (for those who had been cited at the regiment or brigade level) while the highest degree is represented by a bronze palm (for those who had been cited at the army level). A unit can be mentioned in Despatches. Its flag is then decorated with the corresponding Croix. After two citations in Army Orders, the men of the unit concerned are all entitled to wear a fourragère.

Regiments of North African Tirailleurs were, together with regiments of Zouaves, amongst the most decorated units in the French Army, ranking after only the Colonial Infantry Regiment of Morocco and the Foreign Legion March Regiment.[22]

Médaille militaire edit

As for the Légion d'honneur, this unit award should not be confused with the fourragère in the colors of the Médaille militaire. It is one of the rarest unit awards in the French military.

  • 2nd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (1919)

Légion d'honneur edit

The Order is the highest decoration in France. In the case of a regiment, its flag is decorated with the insignia of a knight, which is a different award than the fourragère in the colors of the Légion d'honneur. Only 34 French Infantry Regiments were decorated with the Légion d'honneur including seven Regiment of North-African Tirailleurs.[23]

  • 1st Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (1948)
  • 2nd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (1902)
  • 3rd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (1863)
  • 4th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (1919)
  • 7th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (1919)
  • 4th Regiment of Zouaves and Tirailleurs (1919)
  • 1st Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs (1949)
  • 1st Regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs (1913)

Fourragère edit

World War I edit

Among the 17 French regiments that won the Fourragère in the colors of the Légion d'honneur (at least six citations in Army Orders), nine of them were from the Army of Africa including four regiments of North African Tirailleurs (2nd, 4th, 7th Tirailleurs and 4th Zouaves and Tirailleurs).[24]

By the end of the war, all the 16 North African Tirailleur regiments existing as of August 1918 (12 Algerian/Tunisian, 2 Moroccan and 2 Zouaves and Tirailleurs), were awarded a Fourragère (at least 2 citations in Army Orders). Only one regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs were awarded a Fourragère in 1919.[25]

 
 
Certificates awarded to a corporal in the tirailleurs algériens for participation in the Battle of Verdun
  • Fourragère in the colors of the Légion d'honneur (6 citations in Army Orders)
    • 2nd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 4th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (4th Regiment of Tunisian Tirailleurs in 1921)
    • 7th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 4th Regiment of Zouaves and Tirailleurs (16th Regiment of Tunisian Tirailleurs in 1921)
  • Fourragère in the colors of the Médaille militaire (4-5 citations in Army Orders)
    • 1st Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs
    • 1st Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 1st Regiment of Zouaves and Tirailleurs (43rd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs in 1919)
    • 8th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (8th Regiment of Tunisian Tirailleurs in 1921)
    • 13th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 1st Regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs (from the 43rd battalion)
  • Fourragère in the colors of the Croix de Guerre (2-3 citations in Army Orders)
    • 2nd Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs
    • 3rd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 5th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 6th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 9th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 10th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 11th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs

World War II edit

  • Fourragère in the colors of the Médaille militaire (4-5 citations in Army Orders)
    • 3rd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 4th Regiment of Tunisian Tirailleurs
  • Fourragère in the colors of the Croix de Guerre (2-3 citations in Army Orders)
    • 7th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs
    • 1st Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs
    • 2nd Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs
    • 4th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs
    • 5th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs
    • 6th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs
    • 7th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs
    • 8th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs

Thiaroye incident and compensation controversy edit

As colonial subjects, tirailleurs were not awarded the same pensions as their French (European) counterparts after World War II. The discrimination led to a mutiny of Senegalese tirailleurs in Dakar at Camp Tiaroye in December 1944. The tirailleurs involved were former prisoners of war who had been repatriated to West Africa and placed in a holding camp awaiting discharge. They demonstrated in protest against the failure of the French authorities to pay salary arrears and discharge allowances. French soldiers guarding the camp opened fire killing between thirty-five and seventy African soldiers.[26] The provisional government of Charles de Gaulle, concerned at the impact of the Tiaroye incident on serving tirailleurs, acted quickly to ensure that claims for back pay and other money owed were settled.[27]

When France's African colonies achieved independence between 1956 and the early 1960s, the military pensions of veterans who became citizens of the new nations were frozen. By contrast their French counterparts, who might have served in the same units and fought in the same battles, received pensions that were adjusted for inflation in France itself.

While the imbalanced situation was widely deplored, successive French governments did not act on the complaints of former French Army soldiers. One rationale for the freezing of the pensions was that increased levels would have created an income gap between the former soldiers and the rest of the populations in African countries where the cost of living was significantly lower than in France.

It was only in 2006 that President Jacques Chirac, reportedly moved by Rachid Bouchareb's movie Indigènes, gave instructions to increase the pensions of former colonial soldiers.[28] However, more than forty years after the colonies had gained independence and sixty years after World War II had ended, many of the veterans had already died.

Spanish Tiradores edit

The Spanish Army of Africa included an indigenous light infantry force under European officers, designated as the Tiradores de Ifni. In existence from 1934 to 1969, this corps was modelled on the North African tirailleurs of the French Army.

Films edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hawthornthwaite, Philip (1983). Napoleon's Light Infantry. p. 6. ISBN 0-85045-521-9.
  2. ^ Hawthornthwaite, Philip (1983). Napoleon's Light Infantry. p. 25. ISBN 0-85045-521-9.
  3. ^ Huré, page 51 L'Armee d' Afrique 1830-1962, Paris 1977
  4. ^ Pierre Dufour, 1er Regiment de Tirailleurs, ISBN 2-7025-0439-6
  5. ^ Huré 1977, p. 51.
  6. ^ Liliane et Fred Funcken, L'Uniforme et les Armes des Soldats de la Guerre 1939-35, Casterman 1972
  7. ^ Montagnon, Pierre (2012). L'Armee d' Afrique. p. 41. ISBN 978-2-7564-0574-2.
  8. ^ Charles Lavauzelle, Les troupes de marine 1622-1984, ISBN 2-7025-0142-7
  9. ^ Rives, Maurice (1999). Les Linh Tap. pp. 12 & 22. ISBN 2-7025-0436-1.
  10. ^ Rives, Maurice (1999). Les Linh Tap. pp. 97–99. ISBN 2-7025-0436-1.
  11. ^ Rives, Maurice (1999). Les Linh Tap. p. 125. ISBN 2-7025-0436-1.
  12. ^ Montagnon, Pierre (2012). L'Armee d' Afrique. p. 426. ISBN 978-2-7564-0574-2.
  13. ^ Dufour, Pierre (1999). 1er Regiment de Tirailleurs. p. 146. ISBN 2-7025-0439-6.
  14. ^ Montagnon, Pierre (2012). L'Armee d' Afrique. p. 431. ISBN 978-2-7564-0574-2.
  15. ^ [1] 21eme Régiment d'Infanterie de Marine website
  16. ^ Mirouze 2007, pp. 204–205.
  17. ^ Mirouze 2007, pp. 210–211.
  18. ^ Jouineau 2009b, p. 53.
  19. ^ "Notice descriptive des nouveaux uniformes. (Décision ministérielle du 9 décembre 1914 mise à jour avec le modificatif du 28 janvier 1915)" (in French). Paris: Ministère de la Guerre. 1915. Retrieved 2021-07-30 – via Bibliothèque Nationale de France.
  20. ^ Jouineau 2009b, p. 63.
  21. ^ Dufour, Pierre (1999). 1er Regiment de Tirailleurs. p. 146 & 149. ISBN 2-7025-0439-6.
  22. ^ Les Fourragères 2010-03-15 at the Wayback Machine, france-phaleristique.com
  23. ^ Légion d'honneur 2010-01-05 at the Wayback Machine, france-phaleristique.com
  24. ^ Huré 1977, p. 298.
  25. ^ 9 battalions out of 89 were awarded a Fourragère. In 1919 decorations of the 43rd battalion were transferred to the 1st Regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs
  26. ^ Mabon, Armelle (2002). "La tragédie de Thiaroye, symbole du déni d'égalité". Hommes et Migrations (in French). 1235 (1): 86–95. doi:10.3406/homig.2002.3780. ISSN 1142-852X.
  27. ^ Tony Chafer, page 35 "History Today" November 2008
  28. ^ Lichfield, John (2006-09-26). . The Independent. London. Archived from the original on February 2, 2009. Retrieved 2008-08-24.

Further reading edit

  • Dufour, Pierre (1999). Le 1er régiment de tirailleurs: tirailleurs de l'armée d'Afrique, les oubliés de l'histoire (in French). Panazol: Lavauzelle Graphic. ISBN 2-7025-0439-6.
  • Huré, Robert, ed. (1977). L'Armée d'Afrique : 1830-1962 (in French). Paris: Charles-Lavauzelle. OCLC 757208988.
  • Jouineau, André (2009a) [2008]. Officiers et soldats de l'armée française Tome 1 : 1914 [Officers and Soldiers of the French Army Volume I: 1914]. Officers and Soldiers #11. Translated by McKay, Alan. Paris: Histoire & Collections. ISBN 978-2-35250-104-6.
  • Jouineau, André (2009b) [2009]. Officiers et soldats de l'armée française Tome 2 : 1915-1918 [Officers and Soldiers of the French Army Volume II: 1915-18]. Officers and Soldiers #12. Translated by McKay, Alan. Paris: Histoire & Collections. ISBN 978-2-35250-105-3.
  • Mirouze, Laurent, ed. (2007). The French Army in the First World War Volume I - to battle 1914. Vienna: Verlag Militaria. ISBN 978-2-9515171-0-3.
  • Mirouze, Laurent, ed. (2008). The French Army in the First World War Volume II - 1914 to 1918 Uniforms - Equipment - Armament. Vienna: Verlag Militaria. ISBN 978-3-90-252620-5.
  • Digby Smith. Napoleon's Regiments: Battle histories of the Regiments of the French Army, 1792-1815. London: Greenhill Books and Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, 2000. ISBN 1-85367-413-3.

External links edit

  • régiments de tirailleurs algériens, tunisiens et marocains, de 1842 à 1962
  • Armée d'Afrique

tirailleur, tirailleur, french, tiʁajœʁ, napoleonic, type, light, infantry, trained, skirmish, ahead, main, columns, later, term, tirailleur, used, french, army, designation, indigenous, infantry, recruited, french, colonial, territories, during, 19th, 20th, c. A tirailleur French tiʁajœʁ in the Napoleonic era was a type of light infantry trained to skirmish ahead of the main columns Later the term tirailleur was used by the French Army as a designation for indigenous infantry recruited in the French colonial territories during the 19th and 20th centuries or for metropolitan units serving in a light infantry role Soldiers of the 1st Tirailleur Regiment of Epinal displaying late 19th to early 20th century uniforms for Bastille Day festivities Tunisian lieutenant and tirailleur from the 4th RTA during the First World War 1917 Both of them are highly decorated Legion of Honour Medaille militaire Croix de guerre with palm The French army currently maintains one tirailleur regiment the 1st Tirailleur Regiment This regiment was known as the 170th Infantry Regiment between 1964 and 1994 Prior to 1964 it was known as the 7th Algerian Tirailleur Regiment but changed its name after it moved to France as a result of Algerian independence Contents 1 History 1 1 Napoleonic period 1 2 Colonial period 1 2 1 Origins 1 2 2 Algerian Tunisian and Moroccan tirailleurs 1 2 3 Senegalese tirailleurs 1 2 4 Tirailleur regiments from other French possessions 1 2 5 Tirailleurs Indochinois 1 2 6 World War I 1 2 7 World War II and subsequent campaigns 1 2 8 Disbanding tirailleur regiments 2 Uniforms 3 Decorations 3 1 Medaille militaire 3 2 Legion d honneur 3 3 Fourragere 3 3 1 World War I 3 3 2 World War II 4 Thiaroye incident and compensation controversy 5 Spanish Tiradores 6 Films 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editNapoleonic period edit nbsp A tirailleur left and a voltigeur of the Young Guard In the wars of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic periods the designation tirailleur was a French military term used at first to refer generically to light infantry skirmishers 1 The first regiments of Tirailleurs so called were part of the Imperial Guard of Napoleon I By the fall of the Empire some 16 regiments had been created The Guard Tirailleurs were usually grouped as part of the Young Guard along with their sister Voltigeur regiments The Guard Tirailleur regiments were disbanded during the reorganization of the French Army in 1814 by the new royal government On 28 March 1815 during Napoleon I s short lived return to power the Hundred Days Regiments 1 8 of the Guard Tirailleurs were officially re raised Only the 1st and 3rd Regiments actually took the field for the Waterloo campaign All regiments of Imperial Guard Tirailleurs along with the rest of the Guard were disbanded following the Emperor s second abdication In addition to the regiments within the Imperial Guard several foreign battalions of tirailleurs were raised included the Italian Tirailleurs du Po and Corsican Tirailleurs Corses 2 Colonial period edit Origins edit The first tirailleurs employed in French North Africa were a metropolitan light infantry unit the 1er bataillon de tirailleurs de Vincennes which disembarked in Algiers in early 1840 This unit subsequently became the chasseurs d Orleans but the title of tirailleurs was allocated the next year to newly raised regiments of indigenous Algerian infantry recruited from the Arab and Berber communities 3 Algerian Tunisian and Moroccan tirailleurs edit The tirailleurs from Algeria subsequently served in the Crimean War the Second Italian War of Independence the French intervention in Mexico and the Franco Prussian War 1870 as well as in French colonial campaigns in Tunisia Indochina Morocco Madagascar and Algeria itself During the Crimean War the Algerian tirailleurs acquired the nickname of Turcos Turks by which they were widely known over the next hundred years The name reportedly arose from comparisons between the Algerian troops and the Turkish allies serving alongside the French and British forces at the siege of Sevastopol 4 First raised in 1841 as battalions of tirailleurs indigenes the locally recruited Algerian infantry were organised into three regiments of Algerian Tirailleurs by a decree dated 10 October 1855 5 The number of such units fluctuated over the next hundred years until in the early 1960s eight regiments of tirailleurs plus a number of independent battalions remained in French service Two battalions of Algerian Tirailleurs formed the bulk of the Detachement Francais de Palestine et de Syrie that participated in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign from 1917 onwards nbsp Algerian tirailleurs in France in 1914 In 1884 the 4th Regiment of Tirailleurs was created in Tunisia Except for minor distinctions of insignia and uniform their numbering was based on the figure 4 and its multiples plus light blue tombeaus or false pockets on their full dress zouave jackets the Tunisian tirailleurs regiments had the same appearance as their Algerian counterparts 6 It was only in 1921 that the French government decided to name them officially Tunisian Tirailleurs Regiments In 1914 during World War I the 1st Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs was created At the end of the period of French rule in 1956 six regiments of Moroccan tirailleurs were still in existence The recruitment of Muslim tirailleurs was mainly voluntary with enlistment for three year periods five for NCOs although a limited form of conscription by ballot was introduced in Algeria in 1913 and continued until the end of French rule in North Africa 7 Prior to 1939 up to 90 of the rank and file of each battalion had been indigenous The proportion of French European both metropolitan and pied noir settlers to Maghrebin North African personnel had however increased to about 30 by the end of World War II as the tirailleur units became increasingly mechanized nbsp Vietnamese Tirailleur soldiers of Lord Nguyễn Phuc Anh Emperor Gia Long circa 1800 Senegalese tirailleurs edit Main article Senegalese Tirailleurs nbsp French Congo A Senegalese tirailleur of the French colonial army c 1905 The uniform is the hot weather light khaki with yellow braiding France made extensive use of tirailleurs in its colonial campaigns The most numerous of these after the tirailleurs algeriens noted above were the tirailleurs senegalais who were recruited from all of the French possessions in West and Central Africa Both played an important role in the occupation of Morocco 1908 14 as well as in the Rif War of the 1920s 8 page needed nbsp Algerian riflemen in Tonkin 1884 nbsp Tonkinese riflemen in Tonkin 1884 Tirailleur regiments from other French possessions edit Before and during World War II 1939 45 tirailleurs were recruited from the Maghreb Algerian Moroccans and Tunisians from French West Africa and Madagascar Tirailleurs malgaches Tirailleurs Indochinois edit Main article Tirailleurs indochinois Regiments were recruited from the regions of French Indochina Annam Tonkin and Cambodia The regiments were named after the territory in which they were recruited Thus tirailleurs Annamites tirailleurs Tonkinois and tirailleurs Cambodgiens 9 World War I edit During World War I 1914 18 tirailleurs from North African territories served on the Western Front Salonika and in the Levant incurring heavy losses In spite of its title the Moroccan Division France which fought on the Western Front contained Tirailleur battalions from all North African regions The Great Mosque of Paris was constructed afterwards in honour of the Muslim tirailleurs who had fought for France World War II and subsequent campaigns edit Tirailleurs from North and Central Africa fought with distinction in Europe during World War II notably in the Italian campaign The Indo Chinese tirailleur regiments were destroyed or disbanded following the Japanese coups against the French colonial administration in March 1945 10 Algerian Moroccan and Senegalese tirailleurs served in Indo China until the fall of Dien Bien Phu and subsequently as part of the French forces during the Algerian War of Independence 1954 62 Even after the French withdrawal from Indochina a unit of mostly Vietnamese tirailleurs le Commando d Extreme Orient Dam San continued to serve with the French Army in Algeria until 1960 11 Disbanding tirailleur regiments edit Most tirailleur regiments were disbanded as French colonies and protectorates achieved independence between 1956 and 1962 In Morocco Tunisia and the new African states most serving tirailleurs transferred directly from the French armed forces to the new national armies In Algeria locally recruited tirailleurs who remained loyal to France were given an option to transfer to units in France or join a transitional force locale at the end of the Algerian War in 1962 The six remaining Algerian tirailleur regiments RTA were disbanded or transformed into metropolitan infantry units between 1962 and 1964 12 The last Moroccan regiment in the French Army was the 5th RTM Regiment de Tirailleurs Marocain stationed at Dijon until it disbanded in 1965 13 The modern French Army still has one tirailleur regiment 14 descended from the Algerian tirailleurs While these troops are now all French items of the traditional North African uniform are still worn on ceremonial occasions to commemorate the Algerian Turcos who served France for over 130 years The traditions of the tirailleurs Senegalais are maintained by the 21eme Regiment d infanterie de marine stationed in Frejus via the 4e Regiment de Tirailleurs Senegalais of the Second World War 15 Uniforms editUntil 1914 the Algerian and Tunisian tirailleurs wore zouave style uniforms of light blue with yellow braiding see photographs on this page White turbans for parade red fezzes and sashes were worn with this tenue orientale 16 A white field dress of similar loose cut was worn for North African campaigning and in France during the early months of World War I 17 They adopted a more practical khaki uniform from 1915 onwards in common with the other units of the North African 19th Military District 18 19 The West African and Madagascan tirailleurs wore a dark blue parade dress with red sash and fez while the Indochinese regiments wore an indigenous style of blue white or khaki uniform with a flat salacco headdress 20 Khaki had been widely worn as a hot weather field dress in Indo China and Africa during the years before the outbreak of World War I and thereafter became the norm The North African tirailleurs however resumed their colourful full dress uniforms between 1927 and 1939 to assist recruitment After World War II they were retained until the present day for wear by the noubas regimental bands 21 nbsp Algerian tirailleurs at Magic City Paris 1913 Decorations editIn France citations made during World War I World War II or colonial conflicts were accompanied with awards of a Croix de Guerre Cross of War with attachments on the ribbon depending on the degree of citation the lowest being represented by a bronze star for those who had been cited at the regiment or brigade level while the highest degree is represented by a bronze palm for those who had been cited at the army level A unit can be mentioned in Despatches Its flag is then decorated with the corresponding Croix After two citations in Army Orders the men of the unit concerned are all entitled to wear a fourragere Regiments of North African Tirailleurs were together with regiments of Zouaves amongst the most decorated units in the French Army ranking after only the Colonial Infantry Regiment of Morocco and the Foreign Legion March Regiment 22 Medaille militaire edit As for the Legion d honneur this unit award should not be confused with the fourragere in the colors of the Medaille militaire It is one of the rarest unit awards in the French military 2nd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1919 Legion d honneur edit The Order is the highest decoration in France In the case of a regiment its flag is decorated with the insignia of a knight which is a different award than the fourragere in the colors of the Legion d honneur Only 34 French Infantry Regiments were decorated with the Legion d honneur including seven Regiment of North African Tirailleurs 23 1st Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1948 2nd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1902 3rd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1863 4th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1919 7th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1919 4th Regiment of Zouaves and Tirailleurs 1919 1st Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 1949 1st Regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs 1913 Fourragere edit World War I edit Among the 17 French regiments that won the Fourragere in the colors of the Legion d honneur at least six citations in Army Orders nine of them were from the Army of Africa including four regiments of North African Tirailleurs 2nd 4th 7th Tirailleurs and 4th Zouaves and Tirailleurs 24 By the end of the war all the 16 North African Tirailleur regiments existing as of August 1918 12 Algerian Tunisian 2 Moroccan and 2 Zouaves and Tirailleurs were awarded a Fourragere at least 2 citations in Army Orders Only one regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs were awarded a Fourragere in 1919 25 nbsp nbsp Certificates awarded to a corporal in the tirailleurs algeriens for participation in the Battle of Verdun Fourragere in the colors of the Legion d honneur 6 citations in Army Orders 2nd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 4th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 4th Regiment of Tunisian Tirailleurs in 1921 7th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 4th Regiment of Zouaves and Tirailleurs 16th Regiment of Tunisian Tirailleurs in 1921 Fourragere in the colors of the Medaille militaire 4 5 citations in Army Orders 1st Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 1st Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1st Regiment of Zouaves and Tirailleurs 43rd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs in 1919 8th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 8th Regiment of Tunisian Tirailleurs in 1921 13th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1st Regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs from the 43rd battalion Fourragere in the colors of the Croix de Guerre 2 3 citations in Army Orders 2nd Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 3rd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 5th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 6th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 9th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 10th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 11th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs World War II edit Fourragere in the colors of the Medaille militaire 4 5 citations in Army Orders 3rd Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 4th Regiment of Tunisian Tirailleurs Fourragere in the colors of the Croix de Guerre 2 3 citations in Army Orders 7th Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs 1st Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 2nd Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 4th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 5th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 6th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 7th Regiment of Moroccan Tirailleurs 8th Regiment of Moroccan TirailleursThiaroye incident and compensation controversy editMain article Thiaroye Massacre As colonial subjects tirailleurs were not awarded the same pensions as their French European counterparts after World War II The discrimination led to a mutiny of Senegalese tirailleurs in Dakar at Camp Tiaroye in December 1944 The tirailleurs involved were former prisoners of war who had been repatriated to West Africa and placed in a holding camp awaiting discharge They demonstrated in protest against the failure of the French authorities to pay salary arrears and discharge allowances French soldiers guarding the camp opened fire killing between thirty five and seventy African soldiers 26 The provisional government of Charles de Gaulle concerned at the impact of the Tiaroye incident on serving tirailleurs acted quickly to ensure that claims for back pay and other money owed were settled 27 When France s African colonies achieved independence between 1956 and the early 1960s the military pensions of veterans who became citizens of the new nations were frozen By contrast their French counterparts who might have served in the same units and fought in the same battles received pensions that were adjusted for inflation in France itself While the imbalanced situation was widely deplored successive French governments did not act on the complaints of former French Army soldiers One rationale for the freezing of the pensions was that increased levels would have created an income gap between the former soldiers and the rest of the populations in African countries where the cost of living was significantly lower than in France It was only in 2006 that President Jacques Chirac reportedly moved by Rachid Bouchareb s movie Indigenes gave instructions to increase the pensions of former colonial soldiers 28 However more than forty years after the colonies had gained independence and sixty years after World War II had ended many of the veterans had already died Spanish Tiradores editThe Spanish Army of Africa included an indigenous light infantry force under European officers designated as the Tiradores de Ifni In existence from 1934 to 1969 this corps was modelled on the North African tirailleurs of the French Army Films editMathieu Vadepied 2022 Father amp Soldier on the Senegalese tirailleurs during World War I Rachid Bouchareb 2006 Indigenes on the Algerian tirailleurs during World War II Ousmane Sembene 1988 Camp de Thiaroye on the Thiaroye insurrection See also editArmy of Africa France Chasseurs d Afrique Colonial troops Colonialism Francais Tirailleur Extinct French based pidgin of West Africa French Colonial Forces French Foreign Legion Goumier Harkis Mehariste Senegalese Tirailleurs Spahi Tonkinese RiflesNotes edit Hawthornthwaite Philip 1983 Napoleon s Light Infantry p 6 ISBN 0 85045 521 9 Hawthornthwaite Philip 1983 Napoleon s Light Infantry p 25 ISBN 0 85045 521 9 Hure page 51 L Armee d Afrique 1830 1962 Paris 1977 Pierre Dufour 1er Regiment de Tirailleurs ISBN 2 7025 0439 6 Hure 1977 p 51 Liliane et Fred Funcken L Uniforme et les Armes des Soldats de la Guerre 1939 35 Casterman 1972 Montagnon Pierre 2012 L Armee d Afrique p 41 ISBN 978 2 7564 0574 2 Charles Lavauzelle Les troupes de marine 1622 1984 ISBN 2 7025 0142 7 Rives Maurice 1999 Les Linh Tap pp 12 amp 22 ISBN 2 7025 0436 1 Rives Maurice 1999 Les Linh Tap pp 97 99 ISBN 2 7025 0436 1 Rives Maurice 1999 Les Linh Tap p 125 ISBN 2 7025 0436 1 Montagnon Pierre 2012 L Armee d Afrique p 426 ISBN 978 2 7564 0574 2 Dufour Pierre 1999 1er Regiment de Tirailleurs p 146 ISBN 2 7025 0439 6 Montagnon Pierre 2012 L Armee d Afrique p 431 ISBN 978 2 7564 0574 2 1 21eme Regiment d Infanterie de Marine website Mirouze 2007 pp 204 205 Mirouze 2007 pp 210 211 Jouineau 2009b p 53 Notice descriptive des nouveaux uniformes Decision ministerielle du 9 decembre 1914 mise a jour avec le modificatif du 28 janvier 1915 in French Paris Ministere de la Guerre 1915 Retrieved 2021 07 30 via Bibliotheque Nationale de France Jouineau 2009b p 63 Dufour Pierre 1999 1er Regiment de Tirailleurs p 146 amp 149 ISBN 2 7025 0439 6 Les Fourrageres Archived 2010 03 15 at the Wayback Machine france phaleristique com Legion d honneur Archived 2010 01 05 at the Wayback Machine france phaleristique com Hure 1977 p 298 9 battalions out of 89 were awarded a Fourragere In 1919 decorations of the 43rd battalion were transferred to the 1st Regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs Mabon Armelle 2002 La tragedie de Thiaroye symbole du deni d egalite Hommes et Migrations in French 1235 1 86 95 doi 10 3406 homig 2002 3780 ISSN 1142 852X Tony Chafer page 35 History Today November 2008 Lichfield John 2006 09 26 Film moves Chirac to back down over war pensions The Independent London Archived from the original on February 2 2009 Retrieved 2008 08 24 Further reading editDufour Pierre 1999 Le 1er regiment de tirailleurs tirailleurs de l armee d Afrique les oublies de l histoire in French Panazol Lavauzelle Graphic ISBN 2 7025 0439 6 Hure Robert ed 1977 L Armee d Afrique 1830 1962 in French Paris Charles Lavauzelle OCLC 757208988 Jouineau Andre 2009a 2008 Officiers et soldats de l armee francaise Tome 1 1914 Officers and Soldiers of the French Army Volume I 1914 Officers and Soldiers 11 Translated by McKay Alan Paris Histoire amp Collections ISBN 978 2 35250 104 6 Jouineau Andre 2009b 2009 Officiers et soldats de l armee francaise Tome 2 1915 1918 Officers and Soldiers of the French Army Volume II 1915 18 Officers and Soldiers 12 Translated by McKay Alan Paris Histoire amp Collections ISBN 978 2 35250 105 3 Mirouze Laurent ed 2007 The French Army in the First World War Volume I to battle 1914 Vienna Verlag Militaria ISBN 978 2 9515171 0 3 Mirouze Laurent ed 2008 The French Army in the First World War Volume II 1914 to 1918 Uniforms Equipment Armament Vienna Verlag Militaria ISBN 978 3 90 252620 5 Digby Smith Napoleon s Regiments Battle histories of the Regiments of the French Army 1792 1815 London Greenhill Books and Mechanicsburg Pennsylvania Stackpole Books 2000 ISBN 1 85367 413 3 External links editregiments de tirailleurs algeriens tunisiens et marocains de 1842 a 1962 Armee d Afrique Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tirailleur amp oldid 1217850384, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.