Wearing the right hat is as important in warfare and parades as Ladies Day at Ascot - whether for different reasons is moot. There are those bearskin big jobs and of course nifty colour coded berets. I am always amused by the large dinner plate style Russia uses - but will admit that for drone landing, become most suitable. Then there are the assorted tin cans of old and very fancy spiked jobs still worn. I'm not sure what those are about. However daft now, some must have once had practical reason and someone here will know - or where to look for it. And why did the Royal Navy opt for teaplates?
PaulRyckier Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Sat 29 Apr 2017, 21:20
Priscilla wrote:
Wearing the right hat is as important in warfare and parades as Ladies Day at Ascot - whether for different reasons is moot. There are those bearskin big jobs and of course nifty colour coded berets. I am always amused by the large dinner plate style Russia uses - but will admit that for drone landing, become most suitable. Then there are the assorted tin cans of old and very fancy spiked jobs still worn. I'm not sure what those are about. However daft now, some must have once had practical reason and someone here will know - or where to look for it. And why did the Royal Navy opt for teaplates?
Priscilla,
I have once done some in depth research, I think it was for the BBC messageboards. About for instance the British helmets and the Germans ones in WWII and their wanted protection. And I think the American helmets of today are the best studied solution of the problems learned from WWII. Need some time to seek it all back. If others have some comments? While we are at warfare, the French entering WWI hadn't too much camouflage with their red throusers...BTW: the berets that you mention were more for the 18th, 19th century cavalery i think? And of course remained perhaps for the ceremonies?
Kind regards, your friend Paul.
Priscilla Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Sat 29 Apr 2017, 23:17
Not a subject I know much about - hence opening the thread, but berets of assorted colours seem to go with select groups, Marines, Commandos and so..... my knowledge comes mainly from watching war movies apart from a Marine I met on huge RFA vessel - at sea, even - who wore a red beret. In action is one thing parade dress is altogether different - and the hats really fancy. Life Guards in UK even when not on horses, when lining the corridors and stairs at the Palace for formal occasions, they wear the helmets with blond ponytail extensions. But what of those huge dish jobs of some armies? Is it just to be bigger than another army's? I recall that my father went to war in a cap and returned 5 years later in a round hat - and not through promotion.
Meles meles Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Sun 30 Apr 2017, 11:33
I think the original point of big hats for soldiers - at least once uniforms started to be adopted in the early 18th century - was to make them look as tall and imposing as possible. Grenadier regiments, at least as originally conceived as shock troops armed with primitive hand-grenades, were usually selected from the tallest recruits and then to make them appear even taller traditionally wore a tall conical hat like a bishop's mitre.
Then of course the Napoleonic wars prompted a veritable riot of martial millinery, adorned with crests, tassles, plumes and pom-poms:
Last edited by Meles meles on Mon 18 Sep 2017, 22:18; edited 1 time in total
PaulRyckier Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Sun 30 Apr 2017, 21:42
Meles meles wrote:
I think the original point of big hats for soldiers - at least once uniforms started to be adopted in the early 18th century - was to make them look as tall and imposing as possible. Grenadier regiments, at least as originally conceived as shock troops armed with primitive hand-grenades, were usually selected from the tallest recruits and then to make them appear even taller traditionally wore a tall conical hat like a bishop's mitre.
Meles meles,
you are right Priscilla is rather looking for the 18th century army hats. i with my war helmets am a some two centuries later... And yes I found the same as you. Thinking first of all at the tall soldiers from Frederick The Great: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potsdam_Giants And yes especially the Prussian grenadiers with the mitre... And yes to look taller and more impressionant on the battle field... And also the shako https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shako And to confirm your mentioning Meles meles: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grenadier Headgear[edit] 18th century Prussian grenadier caps (Grenadiermütze). As noted above, grenadiers were distinguished by their head-gear from the ordinary musketeers (or Hatmen) who made up the bulk of each regiment of foot. While there were some exceptions, the most typical grenadier headdress was either the mitre cap or the bearskin. Both began to appear in various armies during the second half of the 17th century because grenadiers were impeded by the wide brimmed infantry hats of the period when throwing grenades. The cloth caps worn by the original grenadiers in European armies during the 17th century were frequently trimmed with fur.[7] The practice fell into disuse until the second half of the 18th century when grenadiers in the British, Spanish and French armies began wearing high fur hats with cloth tops and, sometimes, ornamental front plates. The purpose appears to have been to add to the apparent height and impressive appearance of these troops both on the parade ground and the battlefield.[8] The mitre cap, whether in stiffened cloth or metal, had become the distinguishing feature of the grenadier in the armies of Britain, Russia, Prussia and most German states during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Spanish, Austrian and French grenadiers favoured high fur hats with long coloured cloth hoods ("bags") to them. The mitre was gradually replaced by bearskin hats in other armies and by 1914 it only survived in three regiments of the Prussian and Russian Imperial Guards. Russian grenadiers had worn their brass fronted mitre hats on active service until 1809 and some of these preserved for parade wear by the Pavlovsky Guards until 1914 still had dents or holes from musket balls. Some have survived for display in modern museums and collections.
"The purpose appears to have been to add to the apparent height and impressive appearance of these troops both on the parade ground and the battlefield.[8] The mitre cap, whether in stiffened cloth or metal, had become the distinguishing feature of the grenadier in the armies of Britain, Russia, Prussia and most German states during the late 17th and early 18th centuries."
And if you want it all, Priscilla ...the internet and Google what a mighty machines (if you use it correctly and I always think that I am correct ) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_headgear
Kind regards to you both, Paul.
Anglo-Norman Consulatus
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Mon 08 May 2017, 23:39
Apparently, British grenadiers and fusiliers (who also wore the bearskin) around the time of the American War of Independence tended to leave their bearskins in storage and just wear more practical hats in the field, which seems quite sensible. The Tarleton helmet, with its prominent fore-and-aft fur comb, was worn by the Royal Horse Artillery and by some cavalry regiments from the late 18th century into the middle of the Napoleonic Wars, when it was abandoned by the cavalry in favour of Continental-style shakos which widened towards the top. Wellington, never a fan of his cavalry in any case, was not impressed as their silhouette was no longer easily distinguishable from the French. Likewise he disapproved of replacing the simple, cylindrical 'stovepipe' shako of the infantry with the higher, false-fronted 'Belgic' shako as again he felt the troops lost their recognisably British silhouette.
As I understand it, although the shako replaced the bearskin in the field for grenadier companies, it continued to be worn by the Foot Guards on ceremonial duty. After the First Foot Guards defeating the bearskin-capped Grenadiers of the Old Guard at Waterloo (or thought they did - it was actually the similarly uniformed Chasseurs a Pied) the Prince Regent dubbed them the Grenadier Guards and ordered they should all wear the bearskin cap. I'm sure the soldiers were delighted... It was subsequently extended to all the Guards. The Grenadier Guards have white hackles (the plumes on the side), the Coldstreamers red, the Scots none, the Irish blue (blue being the Irish royal colour), the Welsh green over white. Confusingly, the Grenadiers use red cap bands on their forage caps, and the Coldstreamers white.
The current helmets of the Household cavalry are the brainchild/fault of Prince Albert (indeed, they are known as the 'Albert Pattern'). Remove the plume and it reveals a spike sticking up - very Germanic. Whether they were an improvement on the previous, pseudo-classical form, with enormous crests curling up from behind, is a moot point. Having tried one on, I can assure you all that it is not a comfortable thing to wear! I believe it was also Albert who reintroduced body armour for the cavalry, which had been abandoned (if memory serves) with the 1768 uniform reforms - although, seemingly for one parade only in 1814, the Royal Horse Guards (Blue) wore black cuirasses.
Light Infantry, when introduced in the mid-18th century, wore a variety of caps. In the 1750s it was a peaked cap with fold down flaps to cover the ears, not dissimilar to a deer-stalker (without the rear peak). The 1768 pattern uniform introduced a bowl-shaped hat with a turned up flap at the front bearing the Royal Cipher and/or regimental insignia. However, it was not popular and several regiments adopted their own patterns, models including something akin to the older model, and a light leather peaked 'helmet'. A round-brimmed hat, and slouched-hats (broad-brimmed hats with one side turned up) were also seen.
Going right back to the British Civil Wars, ordinary soldiers rarely wore the broad-brimmed hat as it was quite an expensive piece of headgear. Some would have worn Montero caps, a peaked hat with a folded band of fabric around it which could be rolled down to form a sort of balaclava in bad weather On the rare occasions where hats were uniforms issue, these were sometimes provided as they could match the regiment coat. Both Sir Thomas Fairfax and Prince Rupert wore red Monteros at the Battle of Naseby in 1645, which caused some confusion when Rupert attempted to raid the New Model Army's baggage train. Again, however, they were a bit pricey and most soldiers probably stuck to the 'Monmouth cap', a simple round knitted cap.
Posts : 5120 Join date : 2011-12-30 Location : Pyrénées-Orientales, France
Subject: Re: Military Headgear Tue 09 May 2017, 21:36
Anglo-Norman wrote:
The current helmets of the Household cavalry are the brainchild/fault of Prince Albert (indeed, they are known as the 'Albert Pattern'). Remove the plume and it reveals a spike sticking up - very Germanic. Whether they were an improvement on the previous, pseudo-classical form, with enormous crests curling up from behind, is a moot point. Having tried one on, I can assure you all that it is not a comfortable thing to wear!
The Household cavalry however never had to wear either the cuirasse or the Albert Pattern helmet in earnest: the only action they ever saw between Waterloo and the First World War, was at the battle of Tel El Kebir in 1882. Indeed the short Egypt campaign was the one and only time in 100 years that the Household Division was posted away from its London barracks, and so - however did they manage? - away from all the familiar comforts of their regimental mess and bar, the Army & Navy Stores, Selfridges and Harrods, and their wives and/or mistresses.
In Egypt in 1882 they still wore their usual scarlet or blue uniforms, but without the steel breastplates or plumed helmets. Like most of the regular British army of the time they wore the standard 'sun helmet' otherwise known as a pith helmet, and described at the time as being "of a beautiful shape, but of rather an ugly muddy Indian colour".
Here's the household cavalry, in red tunics and pith helmets, charging at Kassasin, the night engagement before the main battle of Tel el Kebir:
French heavy cavalry however kept their steel breastplates and helmets, even on active service, until the first months of the Great War. Here's a French curassier on guard in Northern France, photographed on 18 August 1914, and looking almost identical to his forebears who'd fought at Waterloo a century earlier.
Last edited by Meles meles on Mon 18 Sep 2017, 21:06; edited 2 times in total
Anglo-Norman Consulatus
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Tue 09 May 2017, 21:51
Extraordinary! The French approach to uniforms in the First World War was eccentric, to say they least. When most countries had long since adopted various shades of green, grey and brown for their combat uniforms, their infantry still went into battle with blue frock-coats and bright red trousers; even when they reformed the uniform they chose sky-blue. Their rifle was almost as long as a musket.
Deviating from uniforms for a moment, one Waterloo-era survivor made it into action with the Germans. The Model 1811 Sabre, affectionately known as the 'Blücher Sword' and based on the British 1796 Pattern Light Cavalry Sabre, last saw action in the First World War.
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 10 May 2017, 10:20
If I remember correctly, British Forces in the Falklands War, wore their Regimental berets in preference to steel helmets for easy identification of friend and foe:
Scots Guards on Tumbledown, wearing a variety of headgear:
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 10 May 2017, 15:25
One of most famous types of military helmet, the German "coal scuttle" Stahlhelm, introduced during the First World War to provide protection from shell fragments and shrapnel, it carried on through WW2 into the present day;
wiki: The design of the Stahlhelm was carried out by Dr. Friedrich Schwerd of the Technical Institute of Hanover. In early 1915, Schwerd had carried out a study of head wounds suffered during trench warfare and submitted a recommendation for steel helmets, shortly after which he was ordered to Berlin. Schwerd then undertook the task of designing and producing a suitable helmet, broadly based on the 15th century sallet, which provided good protection for the head and neck.
After lengthy development work, which included testing a selection of German and Allied headgear, the first Stahlhelms were tested in November 1915 at the Kummersdorf Proving Ground and then field tested by the 1st Assault Battalion. Thirty thousand examples were ordered, but it was not approved for general issue until New Years 1916, hence it is most usually referred to as the "Model 1916". In February 1916 it was distributed to troops at Verdun, following which the incidence of serious head injuries fell dramatically. The first German troops who had to use this helmet had been the stormtroopers of the Sturm-Bataillon Nr. 5 (Rohr) which had been commanded by captain Willy Rohr.
Last edited by Triceratops on Wed 10 May 2017, 15:50; edited 1 time in total
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 10 May 2017, 15:32
The PASGT Helmet, introduced by the US Army in the 1980s ( and now superceded ) was nicknamed the Fritz Helmet due to its' resemblance to the Stahlhelm:
Anglo-Norman Consulatus
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 10 May 2017, 19:20
Triceratops wrote:
One of most famous types of military helmet, the German "coal scuttle" Stahlhelm, introduced during the First World War to provide protection from shell fragments and shrapnel, it carried on through WW2 into the present day;
The traditional style 'coalscuttle' helmet was abandoned in 1956, replaced by the East German M-56 (which had a more Soviet look, although to my eyes it looks like someone took a Wehrmacht helmet and sat on it) and the West German M-56, which was a copy of the US M1. Ironically the current German helmet, the Gefechtshelm is something of a return to the style of the old Stahlhelm because it was based on the American PASGT!
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Thu 11 May 2017, 11:29
Use of the Stahlhelm was fairly widespread. A Chinese Nationalist soldier wearing the 1935 Model;
Anglo-Norman Consulatus
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Sat 20 May 2017, 22:48
A selection of British Army headgear from a display at the National Army Museum, which I visited today:
Top row: Dragoon Guard helmet, c.1812 Light Dragoon Lancer chapka, c.1834 Gurkha shako, c.1828 Bengal Horse Artillery helmet, c.1835 Gold Coast Artillery shako, c.1860 East India Company shako, c.1800 Pioneer fur mitre cap, c.1768
Second row: Engineer cocked hat, c.1820 Indian Sepoy turban-shako, c.1840 Drummer mitre cap, c.1750 Dragon helmet (possibly Welsh Yeomanry?), c.1830 Grenadier cap of an artillery company, c.1708 Hot weather cover for West Indies service, c.1855 Surgeon cocked hat, c.1812
I must admit I had no idea sappers were still wearing heavy helmets in 1750!
Meles meles Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Mon 22 May 2017, 08:35
Anglo-Norman wrote:
I must admit I had no idea sappers were still wearing heavy helmets in 1750!
French sappers were still wearing heavy helmets with side face-guards, and both back and breast plates, until at least the Franco-Prussian war.
Here's a Napoleonic sapper with almost medieval-looking armour - at least waist upwards - especially the slightly pointy helmet, which frankly is quite redolent of the 14th or 15th century, with the side plates and face bars being more typical perhaps of the 17th century:
... and not much had changed by the early 1870s:
Although with his rounded, almost stahlhelm-type helmet and close-fitting body armour, he doesn't actually look that much different from some of the police and soldiers currently patrolling France's streets.
Last edited by Meles meles on Mon 18 Sep 2017, 21:42; edited 1 time in total
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Tue 23 May 2017, 13:04
The Delaware Regiment at the Battle of Long Island, wearing tricorn(e) hats as part of their uniform:
Tricorns, called "cocked hats" at the time, were a popular hat both civil and military in the 18th century.
Chelsea Pensioners today:
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Tue 23 May 2017, 13:44
More tricorns, Prussian infantry in the Seven Years War:
Anglo-Norman Consulatus
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Tue 23 May 2017, 14:24
Triceratops wrote:
The Delaware Regiment at the Battle of Long Island, wearing tricorn(e) hats as part of their uniform:
Interesting; the officer - and possibly some of the soldiers? - is wearing a slouched hat. I wonder if that was official. It was a popular choice of headgear amongst the British (especially light troops) in the American War of Independence, though not - to the best of my knowledge - officially approved. The British Army could be surprisingly relaxed about uniform regulations on campaign.
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Tue 23 May 2017, 14:49
Yes, this illustration from the Osprey book Philadelphia 1777 shows British troops wearing slouch hats, pinned back on one side;
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Tue 23 May 2017, 15:45
Slouch hat of the Scottish Horse, Second Boer War 1899-1902;
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Tue 23 May 2017, 15:57
Abu Klea, 1885, during the Gordon Relief Expedition. Pith helmets were standard dress of the time;
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 10:18
The Pith Helmet was originally made from the pith of the Sola plant.
Sola topee 1858 design for British Indian Army;
Meles meles Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 10:26
That's interesting Trike ... I'd always assumed the sola topee had been written 'solar' and so meant basically 'sun' helmet.
One learns something new everyday.
Nielsen Triumviratus Rei Publicae Constituendae
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 10:54
Triceratops wrote:
The Pith Helmet was originally made from the pith of the Sola plant.
Sola topee 1858 design for British Indian Army;
Trike,
As a tangent on your use of the term British Indian Army From a wiki article, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Indian_Army "The term "Indian Army" appears to have been first used informally, as a collective description of the Presidency armies (the Bengal Army, the Madras Army and the Bombay Army) of the Presidencies of British India, particularly after the Indian Rebellion. The first army officially called the "Indian Army" was raised by the government of India in 1895, existing alongside the three long-established presidency armies. However, in 1903 the Indian Army absorbed these three armies. The Indian Army should not be confused with the "Army of India" (1903–1947) which was the Indian Army itself plus the "British Army in India" (British units sent to India)."
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 11:01
Correct Nielsen, I was being lazy.
Meles, cork became the most common material for pith helmets as the century progressed.
1883 helmet of the Volunteer battalion of the Northumberland Fusiliers, the grey colour indicates Home Service. The spike was influenced by the German pickelhaube. Obviously putting a spike in the helmet would give the British Army the efficiency of the Prussians.
Nielsen Triumviratus Rei Publicae Constituendae
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 11:09
No, not lazy just a bit hurried.
Regarding your sentence "... efficiency of the Prussians", would that be why this model is still retained by at least the bands of the (British) Royal Marines?
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 11:44
The assumption is that the Prussian spike was copied after the Franco-Prussian War as Germanic military was seen as better than French military.
This may not actually be the case as the Russians (Crimean War) were using spiked helmets before the Prussians. Article about it here, and sun helmets in general:
Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 14:07
I have read that the pattern of pith helmet issued to the Afrika Korps was not popular, and that where possible Italian ones were acquired instead (although overall it was used only for formal dress and field caps preferred in combat). On a tangent, they also didn't like their shorts and procured British ones when they could.
Here is an article on berets from the Army Rumour Service: https://www.arrse.co.uk/wiki/Beret It's about as respectful and politically correct as you'd expect from something largely written by British squaddies, and not to be taken entirely seriously, but enlightening none-the-less.
nordmann Nobiles Barbariæ
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 14:19
ARSSEPedia wrote:
Caubeen A totally ridiculous item of head wear invented by the Irish. Wearers might as well sport a sandbag with a small tree stuck in it.
Meles meles Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 15:53
Not half as ridiculous as the headgear worn by Scottish pipers ... the so-called 'feather bonnet' which to me always looks like a manky, partly-disbowelled, dead ostrich.
Dead ostriches were of course at one time standard issue amongst all highland regiments ... and they must have been almost insufferable in the Crimean summer heat:
Last edited by Meles meles on Mon 18 Sep 2017, 21:53; edited 1 time in total
Anglo-Norman Consulatus
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 21:10
The wire stiffening could apparently offer stout protection against a sword blow, however.
The Chasseurs Alpins' beret is certainly, er... distinctive:
Meles meles Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 24 May 2017, 21:28
Their whole uniform is quite distinctive and does rather make them look like boy scouts...
...or pastry chefs!
... nevertheless I wouldn't want to mess with them seeing as they are elite troops specialised in mountain and arctic warfare.
Last edited by Meles meles on Mon 08 Apr 2019, 12:59; edited 2 times in total
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Thu 25 May 2017, 15:25
Sometimes mistakenly referred to as a bearskin, the busby is a completely different type of head wear altogether:
The Kings Troop of the Royal Horse Artillery wearing their busbys:
Anglo-Norman Consulatus
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Thu 25 May 2017, 21:16
King's Troop's busbys are really quite restrained as far as Hussar-style uniforms go. Apparently the current uniforms were created in 1928, but I'm pretty sure they adopted the Hussar look before that.
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Fri 26 May 2017, 11:22
Young Winston in a (tinted) photograph, wearing the uniform of the 4th Hussars, 1895:
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Fri 26 May 2017, 13:08
The 11th Hussars uniform during the Crimean War; the busby is quite tall.
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Thu 01 Jun 2017, 15:26
Not headgear but so unusual it is worth looking at:
Polish Winged Hussars:
wiki: The Hussars were famous for their huge "wings", a wooden frame carrying eagle, ostrich, swan or goose feathers. In the 16th century, characteristic painted wings or winged claws began to appear on cavalry shields. The most common theory is that the hussars wore the wings because they made a loud, clattering noise which made it seem like the cavalry was much larger than in reality and frightened the enemy's horses. Other possibilities included the wings being made to defend the backs of the men against swords and lassos, or that they were worn to make their own horses deaf to the wooden noise-makers used by the Ottoman and the Crimean Tatars.
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Thu 22 Jun 2017, 19:40
Here are some splendid hats - Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, currently standing guard at Windsor Castle. It's not clear in the photo, but the hat bands are light infantry green.
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 13 Mar 2019, 11:56
Back to The Mons Myth again. The 1914 German Army had battalions of Jagers, Light Infantry attached to the Cavalry who patrolled ahead of the Army to establish the whereabouts of the enemy and prevent the opposition from obtaining intelligence on the German Army. The Jagers wore green uniforms and shakoes, and were often mistaken for British troops by French and Belgian civilians:
Vizzer Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 13 Mar 2019, 20:28
German police were still sporting shakoes up until the 1960s:
West Berlin Police before the Brandenburg Gate after the building of the Berlin Wall in 1961.
Note the carrying of submachine guns (Stens or Sterlings by the looks of them). Nevertheless it's not a look we would recognise as constables of police in England (intentionally unarmed) and so is perhaps appropriate for this thread. The shakoes were phased out a couple of years later in favour of peaked caps. The guns, however, remained.
The famous custodian helmet worn by British and Italian police etc were phased out in Scotland in the 1950s and then across large parts of England & Wales in the 2000s - again in favour of peaked caps. In a handful of forces baseball caps were introduced which prompted public ridicule and the custodian helmet is actually making a comeback. In some cities in Italy the white custodian helmet is still widely used.
PaulRyckier Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Wed 13 Mar 2019, 21:45
Vizzer, may I ask: what are peaked caps?
Kind regards, Paul.
Triceratops Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Thu 14 Mar 2019, 09:36
Paul,
This is a peaked cap:
The black and white chequered dicing is known as "Sillitoe Tartan". Something that I didn't know until now.
PaulRyckier Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Thu 14 Mar 2019, 21:01
Thank you very much Triceratops and kind regards, Paul.
Meles meles Censura
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Subject: Re: Military Headgear Mon 08 Apr 2019, 09:17
We've mentioned both Pickelhaubes and Stahlhelm-type helmets above but I didn't realise (until I'd been lured down a Youtube rabbit hole, as LiR calls it) that both are still in regular use by the Chilean army, albeit only for ceremonial wear, most notably for the parades on 21 May (Día de las Glorias Navales), 18 September (Independence Day) and 19 September (the principal military parade in Santiago, the Gran Parada Militar de Chile). The uniforms of the Military Academy, the 1st Regiment of Cavalry and the 1st Regiment of Artillery almost exactly emulate Prussian uniforms of the late 19th century, while the Non-commissioned Officer's School, with their Stahlhelms and uniforms in feldgrau-colour wear essentially the regular Nazi-era Wehrmacht uniform of the 1930s. Not only the uniforms but the whole drill is in the Prussian style: they even march with the stechschritt (the 'Goose-step'), carry Mauser rifles (1895 model), and have horse-drawn Krupp field artillery dating from about 1890 (note also how artillerymen wear pickelhaubes surmounted by a symbolic cannon-ball rather than the usual spike).
Apart from the commands being in Spanish, and the insignia, coats-of-arms and flags being those of Chile, one could be in Berlin circa 1900, watching a military review in front of Kaiser Wilhelm II:
... or for a slightly longer clip there's also this one showing uniforms with plumed pickelhaubes (copies of the Prussian 1890s grenadier model) ... note also the high-kicks of the drum-major at around 3:40mins: he could certainly complete with the best of the Tiller Girls!
The reason of course is that in the 1880s, following the War of the Pacific against Peru and Bolivia, Chile's army was completely re-organized and modelled on the Prussian army by Captain Emil Körner, a graduate of the renowned Kriegsakademie in Berlin and a veteran on the Franco-Prussian war, and who brought with him 36 fellow Prussian officers to train officer cadets in the Chilean Military Academy.
There's a fuller explanation here (I've given the url link because I can seem to get the youtube to embed):
The music played is also all in the German martial tradition too, with Preußens Gloria ('Prussia's Glory', composed in 1871 to celebrate the victory over France), the Preussischer Präsentiermarsch (also known as the Friedrich Wilhelm III's Inspection March), the Königgrätzer March (named in commemoration of the 1866 Battle of Königgrätz, the decisive battle of the Austro-Prussian War), the Radetzky March (written to commemorate the Austrian Field-Marshal Radetzky's victory over the Italians at the Battle of Custoza in 1848), and the Panzerleid (a 1933 Wehrmacht marching song).
Last edited by Meles meles on Mon 08 Apr 2019, 18:04; edited 4 times in total
Meles meles Censura
Posts : 5120 Join date : 2011-12-30 Location : Pyrénées-Orientales, France
Subject: Re: Military Headgear Mon 08 Apr 2019, 17:05
Just to show how alike the the modern Chilean and old Prussian parades are, here's some original footage of the Kaiser reviewing his troops.
I'm intrigued by the head-gear of the chap at 0:44, I've not seen one like that before. It looks like a pickelhaube but with a sort of Tellytubbies (Tinky Winky?) T-shaped aerial on top, or maybe its actually flat like a lancer's mortar-board type thing.
EDIT
Ah ha! I think it must be an Uhlan's 'Tschapka'.
PaulRyckier Censura
Posts : 4902 Join date : 2012-01-01 Location : Belgium
Subject: Re: Military Headgear Mon 08 Apr 2019, 23:05
Meles meles,
thank you very much for your interesting message about the Chilean parade. I knew a bit about the army with German helmets. And also in international news you could see South American firefighters wore also the WWII German helmet. I am nearly sure that also the Spanish firefighters had that German helmet after WWII. Did a quick search and found only the sophisticated international (French?) helmet for the Spanish "bomberos" nowadays. We can perhaps ask Comic Monster if he knows something about that "German" helmet....
We had them overhere in WWI. And there was a lot of warpropaganda about them. By all the propaganda, the much "feared" Ulanen, became nearly monsters, spearing the children on their lances. I saw in the time a Belgian propaganda poster of WWI, not spearing the children, but in gallop and with faces of nearly skulls with eyes in it. My grandmother, born 1889, where we my sister and I grew up in childhood, could still tell about it, and although it was in her city relatively calm in WWI contrary to some years later in WWII, she was still terrified, I guess by all this propaganda. Still to us as a deterring "The Prussians are there again". She said still "Prussians" after WWII, while she still lived with the memory of the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, which had, although Belgium was neutral, had overhere also a big response while it was just over the border. Thus can I say that I have already an oral memory of some 150 years ...