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List of regiments of foot

This is a list of numbered regiments of foot of the British Army from the mid-18th century until 1881, when numbering was abandoned. Foot was the contemporary term for infantry.

Introduction

Rank and numbering

Establishment of precedence

The rank of regiments of the English Army was first fixed during the Nine Years' War. Doubts as to the respective rank of regiments fighting in the Spanish Netherlands led William III to command a Board of General Officers meeting on 10 June 1694 to establish the order of precedence of the various units.[1]

With the union of the kingdoms of England and Scotland to form the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707 the British Army came into existence (see Creation of British Army). The order of seniority for the most senior line regiments in the British Army is based on the order of seniority in the English army. Scottish and Irish regiments were only allowed to take a rank in the English army from the date of their arrival in England or the date when they were first placed on the English establishment.[2]

The rank or precedence of regiments was fixed by the following criteria:

  • English regiments, raised in England, should rank from their date of raising
  • English, Scots and Irish regiments, raised for service of a foreign power, should rank from the date that they came onto the English establishment[3]

This led to anomalies, such as the Royal Irish Regiment, raised in 1684, being ranked as the 18th of the line, junior to eleven regiments raised between 1685 and 1688.[3] Similarly, the Coldstream Guards is the oldest continuously serving regular regiment in the British Army.[4] However, this regiment was placed as the second senior regiment as it entered the service of the Crown after the 1st Regiment of Foot Guards. (The Coldstream answered by adopting the motto Nulli SecundusSecond to None.)

Numbering

While regiments were known by the name of their colonel, or by their royal title, the number of their rank was increasingly used. Thus, in the Cloathing Book of 1742, which illustrated the patterns of uniforms worn by the King's forces, the regiments of foot are designated simply by numbers.[5]

The substitution of numbers for names was completed by a clothing regulation of 1747 and a royal warrant of 1751. The 1747 document, which used numbers for the regiments throughout, decreed that no colonel was "to put his Arms, Crest, Device or Livery on any part of the Appointments of the Regiment under his command." Furthermore, in the centre of the regiment's colours was to be "painted or embroidered in gold Roman characters the number of the Rank of the Regiment".[6] The warrant, dated 1 July 1751, repeated the instructions of the 1747 regulation and provided that regiments should in future be known by their numbers only.[7]

As the size of the army expanded and contracted during the various conflicts of the 18th and 19th centuries, junior regiments were raised and disbanded. Accordingly, there were often a number of different regiments that bore the same number at different periods. Additionally, there were occasional partial renumberings. For instance, in 1816 the 95th (Rifle) Regiment of Foot was renamed the "Rifle Brigade", without a number. The existing 96th–103rd regiments were redesignated as the 95th–102nd.[8]

Childers reforms

With modifications the numbers existed until 1881, when the Childers Reforms introduced "territorialisation". From 1 July 1881 the United Kingdom was divided into regimental districts, each allocated a two-battalion regiment, usually bearing a "county" title. Regimental numbers were abandoned: the 1st to 25th foot, which already had two battalions adopted new titles. The remaining regiments were paired to become the 1st or 2nd battalions of the new regiments.[9] Two rifle regiments: the King's Royal Rifle Corps (ex 60th Foot) and the Rifle Brigade, who had four battalions each, recruited nationally.

Although the numbers were officially abolished in 1881, in some cases they continued to be used informally within the regiments. The regimental system introduced in 1881 was to last for more than seventy years. When new regiments were formed by amalgamation from 1958 onwards, the old regimental numbers were sometimes reintroduced into their titles. Examples are the 3rd East Anglian Regiment (16th/44th Foot), Worcestershire and Sherwood Foresters Regiment (29th/45th Foot).

Royal and subsidiary titles

The 1751 warrant confirmed the royal titles or other special designations of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 7th, 8th, 18th, 21st, 23rd, 27th and 41st regiments.[7] In later years, other regiments were allowed to bear the names of the monarch or other members of the Royal family. Only one regiment, the 33rd Foot, was allowed to bear the name of a person other than Royalty when it became the "Duke of Wellington's" in 1853, the year after the death of the First Duke, who had served as a subaltern in the regiment.[10]

County affiliations

On 21 August 1782, the Commander-in-Chief of the Forces, Henry Seymour Conway, issued a regulation giving an English county designation to each regiment of foot other than those with a royal title or highland regiments. The intention was to improve recruitment during the unpopular American War of Independence, and the Home Secretary, Thomas Townshend issued a circular letter to the lieutenants of each county in England in the following terms:

My Lord,
The very great deficiency of men in the regiments of infantry being so very detrimental to the public service, the king has thought proper to give the names of the different counties to the old corps, in hopes that, by the zeal and activity of the principal nobility and gentry in the several counties, some considerable assistance may be given towards recruiting these regiments".[11]

The names of the counties were added to the regimental titles in parentheses, ranging from the 3rd (Buffs – East Kent) Regiment of Foot to the 70th (Surrey) Regiment of Foot. In some cases more than one regiment was allocated to a county, for example, the 38th (1st Staffordshire) Regiment of Foot and 64th (2nd Staffordshire) Regiment of Foot.[12] The attempt to link regimental areas to specific counties was found to be impractical, with regiments preferring to recruit from major centres of population.[13] By June 1783 each regiment was again recruiting throughout the country, although the county names were to remain.[14] In a few cases, affiliations were altered: for example the 14th and 16th Foot "exchanged" counties in 1809.[15]

Fusiliers, light infantry and rifles

  • Fusiliers: The 7th, 21st and 23rd foot had borne the title of fusiliers for some time before 1751. These regiments had originally been armed with flintlocks (or fusils, from the French), rather than matchlocks. Later, the "fusilier" title was granted as a purely honorary distinction to the 87th Foot in 1827 and to the 5th Foot in 1836.[16][17] The 101st to 104th Fusiliers joined the British Army from the Honourable East India Company (HEIC) in 1861.[18]
  • Light infantry: During the Napoleonic Wars it was decided to convert a number of line regiments to light infantry, and in 1803 the 43rd and 52nd foot were accordingly redesignated as the 43rd (Monmouthshire Light Infantry) Regiment of Foot and 52nd (Oxfordshire Light Infantry) Regiment of Foot.[19][20] In the next few years the 13th, 51st, 68th, 85th and 90th foot were converted to light infantry. By the middle of the 19th century the title of "light infantry" was largely an honorary one, reflected by the "elevation" of the 32nd Foot to light infantry in 1858 to recognise their gallantry in the Siege of Lucknow.[21] Two more light infantry regiments subsequently joined the British Army, as the 105th and 106th regiments, transferred from the HEIC in 1861.[18]
  • Rifle regiments: An experimental corps of riflemen, equipped with Baker rifles and clothed in rifle green uniforms, was formed in 1800, and numbered as the 95th foot in 1802.[22] The 60th Foot, which had some rifle battalions, was converted to rifles in 1824.[23]

List of regiments of foot

1st–10th foot

Number Titles Date of raising or coming onto establishment Fate Successor 2023
1 1st (Royal) Regiment of Foot 1751–1812

1st Regiment of Foot (Royal Scots) 1812–1821
1st or the Royal Regiment of Foot 1821–1871
1st or the Royal Scots Regiment 1871–1881[24]

1661
Raised 28 March 1633, in Scotland for French service.
Was on English establishment in 1661 and in 1666–67; permanently from 1678.[24]
1881: Lothian Regiment (Royal Scots) Royal Regiment of Scotland
2 2nd (Queen's Royal) Regiment of Foot[25] 1661
Raised 1 October 1661, as the Tangier Regiment[25]
1881: The Queen's (Royal West Surrey Regiment) Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment
3 3rd (or the Buffs) Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

3rd (East Kent – the Buffs) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[26]

1665
Raised 1572 for service in Holland.

Came onto the English establishment in 1665 as the Holland Regiment.[26]

1881: The Buffs (East Kent Regiment)
4 4th (The King's Own) Regiment of Foot 1751–1867

4th (The King's Own Royal) Regiment of Foot 1867–1881[27]

1680
Raised 13 July 1680, as the 2nd Tangier Regiment.[26]
1881: The King's Own Royal Regiment (Lancaster) Duke of Lancaster's Regiment
5 5th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

5th (Northumberland) Regiment of Foot 1782–1836
5th (Northumberland) (Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot 1836–1881[17][28]

1685
Raised 8 August 1674, as the Irish Regiment for Dutch service.

Came onto the English establishment in 1685.[28]

1881: The Northumberland Fusiliers Royal Regiment of Fusiliers
6 6th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

6th (1st Warwickshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1832
6th (Royal 1st Warwickshire) Regiment of Foot 1832–1881[29][30]

1685
Raised 12 December 1673, in Ireland for Dutch service.

Came onto the English establishment temporarily in 1685 and permanently in 1688.[30]

1881: The Royal Warwickshire Regiment
7 7th (Royal Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot 1751–1881[31] 1685
Raised 11 June 1685, as the Ordnance Regiment, an escort to the artillery train.
Became the Royal Regiment of Fuzileers in 1689.[31]
1881: The Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment)
8 8th (The King's) Regiment of Foot 1751–1881[32] 1685
Raised 19 June 1685, as Princess Anne of Denmark's Regiment of Foot.[32]
1881: The King's (Liverpool Regiment) Duke of Lancaster's Regiment
9 9th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

9th (East Norfolk) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[33]

1685
Raised 19 June 1685, as Henry Cornewall's Regiment of Foot.[33]
1881: The Norfolk Regiment Royal Anglian Regiment
10 10th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

10th (North Lincoln) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[34]

1685
Raised 20 June 1685, as the Earl of Bath's Regiment of Foot.[34]
1881: The Lincolnshire Regiment

11th–20th foot

Number Titles Date of raising or coming onto establishment Fate Successor 2012
11 11th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

11th (North Devonshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[35]

1685
Raised 20 June 1685 as the Duke of Beaufort's Musketeers.[35]
1881: The Devonshire Regiment The Rifles
12 12th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

12th (East Suffolk) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[36]

1685
Raised 20 June 1685 as the Duke of Norfolk's Regiment of Foot.[36]
1881: The Suffolk Regiment Royal Anglian Regiment
13 13th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

13th (1st Somersetshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1822[37]
13th (1st Somersetshire Light Infantry) Regiment of Foot 1822–1842[37]
13th (1st Somersetshire) (Prince Albert's Light Infantry) Regiment of Foot 1842–1881[37][38]

1685
Raised 20 June 1685 as the Earl of Huntingdon's Regiment of Foot.[37]
1881: Prince Albert's Light Infantry (Somersetshire Regiment) The Rifles
14 14th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

14th (Bedfordshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1809[39]
14th (Buckinghamshire) Regiment of Foot 1809–1876[15][39]
14th (Buckinghamshire – The Prince of Wales's Own) Regiment of Foot 1876–1881[39][40]

1685
Raised 22 June 1685 as Sir Edward Hales's Regiment of Foot.[39]
1881: The Prince of Wales's Own (West Yorkshire Regiment) Royal Yorkshire Regiment
15 15th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

15th (York, East Riding) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[41]

1685
Raised 22 June 1685 as Sir William Clifton's Regiment of Foot.[41]
1881: The East Yorkshire Regiment Royal Yorkshire Regiment
16 16th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

16th (Buckinghamshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1809[42]
16th (Bedfordshire) Regiment of Foot 1809–1881[15][42]

1688
Raised 10 September 1688 as Archibald Douglas's Regiment of Foot.[42]
1881: The Bedfordshire Regiment Royal Anglian Regiment
17 17th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

17th (Leicestershire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[43]

1688
Raised 27 September 1688 as Solomon Richard's Regiment of Foot.[43]
1881: The Leicestershire Regiment
18 18th (The Royal Irish) Regiment of Foot 1751–1881[44] 1688
Raised in Ireland on 1 April 1684 as the Earl of Granard's Regiment of Foot.
Placed on the English establishment in 1688.[3][44]
1881: The Royal Irish Regiment


(disbanded 1922)[44]

19 19th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

19th (1st Yorkshire, North Riding) Regiment of Foot 1782–1875
19th (1st Yorkshire, North Riding – Princess of Wales's Own) Regiment of Foot 1875–1881[45][46]

1688
Raised 20 November 1688 as Francis Lutterell's Regiment of Foot.[46]
1881: The Princess of Wales's Own (Yorkshire Regiment) Royal Yorkshire Regiment
20 20th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

20th (East Devonshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[47]

1688
Raised 20 November 1688 as Sir Richard Peyton's Regiment of Foot.[47]
1881: The Lancashire Fusiliers Royal Regiment of Fusiliers

21st–30th foot

Number Titles Date of raising or coming onto establishment Fate Successor 2012
21 21st (Royal North British Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot 1751–1877

21st (Royal Scots Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot 1877–1881[48][49]

1688
Raised 23 September 1678 as the Earl of Mar's Regiment.[50]
Placed on English establishment in 1688.[49]
1881: The Royal Scots Fusiliers Royal Regiment of Scotland
22 22nd Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

22nd (Cheshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[51]

1689
Raised 8 March 1689 as the Duke of Norfolk's Regiment of Foot.[51]
1881: The Cheshire Regiment Mercian Regiment
23 23rd (Royal Welch Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot 1751–1881[52] 1689
Raised 16 March 1689 as Lord Herbert's Regiment of Foot.[52]
1881: Royal Welsh Fusiliers Royal Welsh
24 24th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

24th (2nd Warwickshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[53]

1689
Raised 8 March 1689 as Sir Edward Dering's Regiment of Foot.[53]
1881: The South Wales Borderers
25 25th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

25th (Sussex) Regiment of Foot 1782–1805[54]
25th (King's Own Borderers) Regiment of Foot 1805–1881[54]

1689
Raised 19 March 1689 as The Earl of Leven's or Edinburgh, Regiment of Foot.[54]
1881: The King's Own Borderers Royal Regiment of Scotland
26 26th Regiment of Foot 1751–1786[55]

26th (Cameronian) Regiment of Foot 1809–1881[55]

1689
Raised 14 May 1689 as The Earl of Angus's Regiment of Foot.[55]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Cameronians (Scottish Rifles)
(disbanded 1968)[55]
27 27th (Inniskilling) Regiment of Foot 1751–1881[56] 1689
Raised 26 June 1689 as Zacharaiah Tiffin's Regiment of Foot.[56]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers
Royal Irish Regiment
28 28th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782
28th (North Gloucestershire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[57]
1694
Raised as Sir John Gibson's Regiment of Foot 16 February 1694, disbanded 1697.
Reraised 12 February 1702[57]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Gloucestershire Regiment[57]
The Rifles
29 29th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

29th (Worcestershire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[58]

1694
Raised as Thomas Farrington's Regiment of Foot 16 February 1694, disbanded 1698.
Reraised 12 February 1702[58]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Worcestershire Regiment[58]
Mercian Regiment
30 30th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

30th (Cambridgeshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[59]

1689
Raised 8 March 1689 as Viscount Castleton's Regiment of Foot, later (1694) Thomas Saunderson's Regiment of Foot. Disbanded 1698.
Reraised 12 February 1702 as Thomas Saunderson's Regiment of Marines[59]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The East Lancashire Regiment
Duke of Lancaster's Regiment

31st–40th foot

Number Titles Date of raising or coming onto establishment Fate Successor 2012
31 31st Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

31st (Huntingdonshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[60]

1696

Reraised 14 April 1702 as George Villiers's Regiment of Marines.[61]
Converted to line infantry in 1714.[60]

1881: 1st Battalion,
The East Surrey Regiment[60]
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment
32 32nd Regiment of Foot 1751–1782[62]

32nd (Cornwall) Regiment of Foot 1782–1858[62]
32nd (Cornwall) Light Infantry 1858–1881[21]

1702
Raised 12 February 1702 as Edward Fox's Regiment of Marines.
Converted to line infantry in 1715.[62]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry
The Rifles
33 33rd Regiment of Foot 1751–1782[63]

33rd (1st York, West Riding) Regiment of Foot 1782–1853
33rd (The Duke of Wellington's) Regiment of Foot 1853–1881[10]

1702
Raised 12 February 1702 as The Earl of Huntingdon's Regiment of Foot.[63]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Duke of Wellington's (West Riding Regiment)
Royal Yorkshire Regiment
34 34th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

34th (Cumberland) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[64]

1702
Raised 12 February 1702 as Lord Lucas's Regiment of Foot.[64]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Border Regiment
Duke of Lancaster's Regiment
35 35th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

35th (Dorsetshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1805[65]
35th (Sussex) Regiment of Foot 1805–1832[65]
35th (Royal Sussex) Regiment of Foot 1832–1881[29][65]

1702
Raised 28 June 1701 on the Irish Establishment as The Earl of Donegall's Regiment of Foot, on English Establishment in following year.[65]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Royal Sussex Regiment
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment
36 36th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782[66]

36th (Herefordshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[66]

1702
Raised 10 May 1701 on the Irish Establishment as Viscount Charlemont's Regiment of Foot, on English Establishment in following year.[66]
1881: 2nd Battalion,
The Worcestershire Regiment
Mercian Regiment
37 37th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782[67]

37th (North Hampshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[67]

1702
Raised 13 February 1702 as Thomas Meredyth's Regiment of Foot.[67]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Hampshire Regiment
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment
38 38th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782
38th (1st Staffordshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[68]
1702
Raised 13 February 1702 as Luke Lillingston's Regiment of Foot[68]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The South Staffordshire Regiment[68]
Mercian Regiment
39 39th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

39th (East Middlesex) Regiment of Foot 1782–1807
39th (Dorsetshire) Regiment of Foot 1807–1881[69]

1702
Raised 29 February 1702 as Richard Coote's Regiment of Foot[69]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Dorsetshire Regiment[69]
The Rifles
40 40th Regiment of Foot 1751–1782

40th (2nd Somersetshire) Regiment of Foot 1782–1881[70]

1717
Raised 25 August 1717 as Richard Philipps's Regiment of Foot[70]
1881: 1st Battalion,
The Prince of Wales's Volunteers (South Lancashire Regiment)
Duke of Lancaster's Regiment

41st–50th foot

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=List_of_Regiments_of_Foot
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Number Titles Date of raising or coming onto establishment Fate Successor 2012