Hartschier

Hartschiere[1] (singular form: Hartschier) were predominantly members of the Bavarian residence guards before 1918, a historic military branch of the former Duchy and the later Electorate and at last Kingdom of Bavaria.

Uniforms of the Bavarian Hartschiere before 1852

History

According to Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, the Germanized word Hartschier originally derived from the Italian word arciere for archer,[2] but it might also be possible that it has Spanish roots, because the Bavarian Duke William IV received a Spanish archer company (Spanish: arqueros) of Charles I of Spain and added Bavarian court bodyguards with notable roots in the deep Middle Ages. On April 13, 1669, Ferdinand Maria transformed this unit to the Hartschier-Garde.[3] The name of the former Austrian equivalent, the k.u.k. Arcièren-Leibgarde, is similar-sounding.

The Bavarian palace guard troop, later called Königlich-Bayerische Leibgarde der Hartschier (L.G.H.),[4] had only ceremonial and no conventional military functions. Relating to military affairs, the Command of the Leibgarde der Hartschiere was directly subordinated to the Army Ministry. By contrast the Leibgarde der Hartschiere by itself was subordinated, concerning civilian and criminal justiciable affairs, to the General Command in Munich like the other military branches.[5] In addition to the Hartschiere, the kings of Bavaria had a royal house regiment from the end of the Napoleonic Wars until the fall of the kingdom after World War I, the so-called Infantry Lifeguards Regiment.

Entrance to this Guard was only possible for soldiers of impeccable character and conduct. The commander of the Hartschier troop had the title Generalkapitän (see also Captain General), associated with the highest class ranking in the Hofrangordnung (court order of precedence).[6] He was appointed personally by the king.[7]

Uniforms of the Bavarian Hartschiere after 1852

In 1852 the Hartschiere got new uniforms with white supra vests over their jackets and helmets instead of the former caps, made of nickeled tin and gilded cast brass. The golden helmet plate showed the royal coats of arms and on top of the helmet was a standing golden lion figure.[8] The helmet was worn with the lion for normal service, which was replaced by a white horsehair plume on full dress occasions.[7] Older helmets had obviously two-headed eagle figures on top instead of the lion.[9] The embroidered patch on the chest of the Hartschiere showed a large version of the Order of Saint Hubertus (Hubertusorden) with its motto "in trau vast" (means: be firm in fidelity). The Hartschiere were armed with épées and the halberd-like "couse".[3]

On the occasion of the 200th anniversary a commemorative medal (2 Ducats) with a portrait of Ludwig II of Bavaria was given out in 1869.[10]

Notable members

gollark: Declarative macro-y languages could be parallelized quite well through analyzing their dependency trees.
gollark: Lisps and stuff are actually different.
gollark: Those are fairly C-like with the main difference being better memory management and some level of object orientation.
gollark: What languages are you meaning specifically? There are many not-particularly-C-like ones.
gollark: I think making a less efficient Python program (with intensive mathy things done via numpy etc. which use bindings to C) makes a lot more sense than having a possibly-faster C program which takes several times longer to write, in most cases.

References

  1. also findable under Hatschiere
  2. Hartschiere (German), Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon.
  3. Die Pariser Weltausstellung in Wort und Bild (German)
  4. ID card of Vizefeldwebel Adolf Ritter, 1918.
  5. § 69 Das Commando der Leibgarde der Hartschiere (German), in Julius Schmelzing: Staatsrecht des Königreich Baierns, 1821, pp. 223, 522.
  6. Hofrangordnung (German), Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon.
  7. Bavarian Hartscherie M.1852 helmet with lion top.
  8. Photo of the Generalkapitän's helmet: , around 1900.
  9. "Photo of a Hartschier helmet around 1852". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
  10. No. 185, in Günter Schön / Jean-François Cartier: Weltmünzkatalog 19. Jahrhundert, 2004, p. 318.
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