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Encyclopedia > Regimental Colour

A Queen's Colour is a flag carried or maintained by British Army and Commonwealth infantry regiments or battalions to: The British Army is the land armed forces branch of the British Armed Forces. ... The Commonwealth of Nations (CN), usually known as The Commonwealth, is a voluntary association of 53 independent sovereign states all of which are former colonies of the United Kingdom, except for Mozambique and the United Kingdom itself. ... Infantry of the Royal Irish Rifles during the Battle of the Somme in World War I. Infantry are soldiers who fight primarily on foot with small arms in organized military units, though they may be transported to the battlefield by horses, ships, automobiles, skis, or other means. ... A regiment is a military unit, larger than a company and smaller than a division. ... In military terminology, a battalion consists of two to six companies typically commanded by a lieutenant colonel. ...

  • Distinguish one regiment or battalion from another
  • Be used as a rallying point for the regiment's/battalion's soldiers while in garrison or in battle. (This tradition is no longer in use in modern warfare)
  • Display the regiment's/battalion's battle honours or military accomplishments to members of the public

In British Army and Commonwealth tradition, only infantry or line regiments carry Regimental Colours. Armoured regiments carry an equivalent item known as the Regimental Guidon. The Royal Artillery's guns are its Colours (and as such it is the only regiment which still takes its Colours into battle). Other arms and services such as the Royal Army Medical Corps or the Royal Engineers do not carry Colours at all.[citation needed]. A battle honour is a military tradition practiced in the Commonwealth countries of the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand and is an official acknowledgement rewarded to military units for their achievements in specific wars or operations of a military campaign. ... A guidon is a military standard that company-sized elements carry to signify their unit designation and corps affiliation. ... RGA redirects here. ... The Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) is a specialist corps in the British Army which provides medical services to all British Army personnel and their families in war and in peace. ... The Corps of Royal Engineers, usually just called the Royal Engineers (RE), and commonly known as the Sappers, is one of the corps of the British Army. ...


Apart from the Regimental Colour, a Regiment or a battalion would also carry a King's or Queen's Colour. Together, these two Colours constitute the regiment's "stand of Colours." However, several infantry regiments carry a third colour that is permitted to be paraded on special occasions. In the days when battle was conducted at close quarters, it was necessary for soldiers to be able to determine where, during the heat of battle, their regiment was. ...


The term Regimental Colour was first mentioned in historical military document in ca. 1747. According to a document known as the "Regulations for the Uniform Clothing of the Marching Regiments of Foot, Their Colours, Drums, Bells of Arms, and Camp Colours, 1747", a Regimental Colour is:

  • Also called the Second Colour of a regiment or battalion as it is second in seniority to the King's or Queen's Colour
  • Its appearance should be constituted of the colour of regiment's facings with a Union Flag on its top left hand corner
  • In the centre of the Colour is a stylized version of the regiment's crest with its ranking number in Roman numbers

The practice of adding a regiment's or a battalion's battle honours onto its Regimental Colours came into existence in ca. 1784. At the time it was a way to show a regiment's military accomplishments to its enemies and thus intimidate them. Since nowadays regiments no longer carry their colours to battles this tradition has become a means for the regiments to show off their past military achievements to its own members, the public as well as other regiments. Flag Ratio: 1:2 The Union Flag (more commonly known as the Union Jack) is the national flag of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. ... The system of Roman numerals is a numeral system originating in ancient Rome, and was adapted from Etruscan numerals. ... A battle honour is a military tradition practiced in the Commonwealth countries of the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand and is an official acknowledgement rewarded to military units for their achievements in specific wars or operations of a military campaign. ...


In general British and Commonwealth infantry or line regiments have battle honours only on their Regimental Colours. Exception is made to regiments of the Foot Guards where battle honours can be seen on both their Regimental and King's or Queen's Colours. Foot guards is a term used to describe elite infantry regiments. ...


A Regiment Colour, like the King's or Queen's Colour, is a highly revered object in the military. Any military personnel who comes across a Regimental or King's or Queen's Colour must salute to it. This is a tribute paid not only to the Royal monarch's authority but also to the regiment's past accomplishments as well as those who have died for them.


A Regimental Colour is normally presented to a regiment or a battalion by the British sovereign or an agent (e.g. a Governor-General) in a high-profile military parade ceremony. The presentation of a new Regimental Colour and King's or Queen's Colour is normally performed in a regiment once every few decades, and the old or retired Colours are safe-kept in the regiment's church or chapel for public display. An old Colour is never destroyed because of its historical value and the Royal Authority that it represents. Governor-General (or Governor General) is a term used both historically and currently to designate the appointed representative of a head of state or their government for a particular territory, historically in a colonial context, but no longer necessarily in that form. ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
The Colours (967 words)
The second was the Regimental Colour, which identified the unit and generally carried emblazoned on it the battles it had fought and won distinction in.
When the Regimental Colour was stolen in 1960, the Commanding Officer at the time, LCol Angus Duffy, removed his cap badge in disgrace vowing never to wear it again until the Colours were returned.
Colours are always paid compliments on parade and are never dipped except in the presence of the Sovereign.
Colours (2267 words)
The use of Colours in the British Army extends to well before the mid 1700s, yet it was the "Regulations for the uniform Clothing of the Marching Regiments of Foot, their Colours, Drums, Bells of Arms, and Camp Colours" published in 1747 that marked their use in the modern sense.
Each colour was to be decorated with Roman numerals in gold, either painted or embroidered, indicating the Rank of the Regiment, within a wreath of Roses and Thistles on the same stalk (representing the Union of Scotland and England) on a scarlet field.
On 26 April 1953, the new stand of Colours was officially deposited at Knox Church, in a ceremony involving 62 veterans of the Tenth Battalion accompanied by the Regimental Pipes and Drums of The Calgary Highlanders.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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