Bigeard cap

The Bigeard cap (Fr:casquette Bigeard) is a field cap worn by the French Army and several others. It was allegedly invented by French General Marcel Bigeard [1][2]to replace the colorful and less practical colored headgear worn by the French Army in its war in Indochina.

French Commandos de Chasse wearing Bigeard caps.
Olive Bigeard.

The Bigeard is a cloth field cap with a short cloth peak. Originally produced in lizard, [3][4] it was later produced in olive green and various camouflage patterns to include [5] , forest [6], and desert[6]. The cap is more of a peaked sidecap and is available with or without neck flaps for sun protection[6].

Users

Portuguese "Quico" variant

Several armies have copied the design, Rhodesian army as the "swallowtail cap" [7] in English or "Quico" (pronounced kiko) in Portuguese vertical lizard[6][8]

gollark: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Ale32bit-CC/Node.lua/master/node.lua
gollark: NodeLuaBestOS
gollark: Yes, they can fly, using the `launch` function.
gollark: Choose carefully and remember the flying dogs.
gollark: If it has a kinetic augment, I can have the dog fly.

See also

  • Sen bou The former Imperial Japanese Army's field cap with which the Bigeard is similar too in form and function.
  • patrol cap

References

  1. "LA CASQUETTE BIGEARD" (PDF). www.fondation-general-bigeard.com. Retrieved 2019-08-18.
  2. DENYS, Hubert. "04- L'origine de la casquette BIGEARD". episodes-histoire.
  3. "Sales site". fr.shopping.rakuten.com. Retrieved 2019-08-18.
  4. "Photo" (JPG). pmcdn.priceminister.com. Retrieved 2019-08-18.
  5. ""BIGEARD " CAP". Doursoux.
  6. "French F2 "Bigeard" cap, surplus". Varusteleka.com.
  7. Modern African Wars (1) 1965-80 : Rhodesia, Men at Arms Series 183, Copyright June 15, 1986, by Peter Abbott and Philip Botham (Author), ISBN 978-0850457285
  8. Modern African Wars (2) Angola and Moazambique 1961 - 74, Peter Abbot & Manuel Rodriques Osprey Men-at-Arms 202, 1988Copywrite, ISBN 978-0850458435
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.