Life guard (military)
Leibgarde (also life-guard, or household troops[1]) has been, since the 15th century, the designation for the military security guards who protected Fürsten (royals and nobles) — usually members of the highest nobility who ruled over states of the Holy Roman Empire and later its former territory — from danger. The Leibgarde should not be mixed up with bodyguard (Leibwächter), which may refer also to a single private individual.[2]
In the Kingdom of France, the Garde du Corps was established (with reference to the sergents d'armes) in 1440. It was abolished after the French Revolution, re-established in 1815 after the Bourbon Restoration, and finally dissolved in 1830 after the July Revolution. In addition, Napoleon III set up the Cent-gardes for his own protection.
Lifeguard elite units
- Germany:
- Kingdom of Bavaria: Royal Bavarian Infantry Lifeguards Regiment - part of the Bavarian Army
- Kingdom of Prussia: Prussian Life Guards - part of the Guards Corps of the Prussian Army
- Nazi Germany: 1st SS Panzer Division "Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler" - incorporated into the Waffen-SS during World War 2
- Kingdom of France: French Life Guards - part of the Maison Militaire du Roi de France of the French Royal Army
- Imperial Russia: Imperial Guard (Leibgarde) – regiments of lifeguards that evolved into many elite combat units in the Imperial Russian Army
- United Kingdom: Life Guards – part of the British Army
- Sweden: Life Guards – part of the Swedish Army
- Denmark: Royal Life Guards – part of the Danish Army
- United States: Washington's Life Guard - part of the Continental Army
See also
References
- ^ Langenscheidt's Encyclopaedic Dictionary of the English and German language: "Der Große Muret-Sander", Part I German-English, First Volume A–K, 9th edition 2002, p. 1006 – «de: Leibgarde / en: mil. especially – lifeguard, Br. life-guard»
- ^ Dictionary to the German Military History, 1st edition (Liz.5, P189/84, LSV:0547, B-Nr. 746 635 0), military publishing house of the GDR (VEB) – Berlin, 1985, Volume 1, page 223, definition: Garde, Leibgarde.