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The Independent Companies of Foreigners are widely regarded as the
worst examples of foreign units in the British Army during the
Napoleonic Wars. They were formed, in the last years of these wars,
to receive French deserters who had come over to the British in
Spain. Each company was intended to serve separately in the
garrisons of the West Indies. Instead two of them were used in an
active role on the East Coast of America a " this did not turn out
well. Drawing of British, French and American sources, this book
provides a fuller picture of the men, why the units were formed,
why they were used as they were and what actually happened.
Judgement can then be made whether the bad reputation of the units,
and the soldiers in them, is justified.
The emigres who left, or were driven from, Revolutionary France
included a large part of the officer corps of the former royal
army. Joined by others who wished to fight for the restitution of
the monarchy in their homeland, these officers soon served this
cause in the pay of countries facing the common enemy. With its
origins at the 1793 Siege of Maastricht, one unit of such men, and
one woman, was raised by Etienne de Damas-Crux for the service of
the United Provinces and was to comprise of both infantry and
cavalry. After the United Provinces were defeated and invaded in
1795, the unit transferred to the service of Britain. Its infantry
companies were destroyed in the ill-fated Quiberon expedition while
the cavalry, which grew to a regiment, joined in early 1796 the
last emigre army, that of the Prince de Conde, and served alongside
the Austrians in Southern Germany. Finally, the Damas Hussars
disappeared when the Armee de Conde was reorganised in Russian
service. This is a comprehensive and detailed history of the Legion
de Damas which provides a case study of the French military
emigration and thus an alternative view point of the Revolution
that caused it and the wars that followed. By drawing in particular
on memoirs of members of the unit and contemporary material in
archives across Europe, from Britain to Russia, the story is told
of those who remained steadfast to God and their King.
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