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El Ejército de Maximiliano III Joseph
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| Bavarian Army Command of the Seven Years’ War | |||||
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| Generales Bávaros, 1756–1763 | General Staff | Army Commissariat | |||
| Regimiento | Coat | Facings | Buttons | Vest | Breeches |
| Leib-Regiment Kurfürst in Bayern |
corn-flower blue | white | white | white | white |
| Until 1760, tamborileros wore reversed colours with black & blue checked diagonal lace. The Leib-Regiment adopted black facings with white lace in 1760. The tamborileros wore this new uniform as well, not reversed, but with the same lace as before. The Füsiliers of the Leib-Regiment had grenadier-style brass grenade badges on their cartridge boxes. Garrisoned at Munich, the II. and III. Battalion of the Leib-Regiment served in the Auxiliar-Korps of the Austrian army. | |||||
| Infanterie-Regiment Kurprinz in Bayern |
corn-flower blue | white | yellow | white | white |
| Tamborileros wore corn-flower blue uniform, except that their horizontal lace stripes were black & blue checked. Garrisoned at Amberg i. d. Oberpfalz (I. Btl.) and Rottenburg a. d. Laaber (II. Btl.) in 1756, Straubing (1757), Ingolstadt (1758), and Amberg (1759), the II. Battalion served in the Auxiliar-Korps of the Austrian army. The unit formed a combined regiment with I. Battalion IR von Preysing, known as Infanterie-Regiment Kurprinz/Preysing. | |||||
| Infanterie-Regiment Herzog Clemens in Bayern |
corn-flower blue | red | yellow | white | white |
| Garrisoned at Straubing, the regiment served in the Auxiliar-Korps of the Austrian army. | |||||
| Infanterie-Regiment Graf von Minucci Oberst von La Rosee (59) |
corn-flower blue | yellow | white | yellow or red? | yellow |
| Ownership of the regiment changed in 1759. The redesignated Infanterie-Regiment von La Rosee received permission to clothe its tamborileros in reversed colours, with corn-flower blue waistcoats. Garrisoned at Braunau am Inn, the regiment served in the Auxiliar-Korps of the Austrian army. | |||||
| Infanterie-Regiment Freiherr von Morawitzky |
corn-flower blue | straw | white | straw | straw |
| Garrisoned at Munich (1756) and Ingolstadt (1759), the regiment served in the Auxiliar-Korps of the Austrian army. | |||||
| Infanterie-Regiment Graf von Preysing |
corn-flower blue | red | white | straw | straw |
| Musicians wore the livery of the Inhaber, yellow coats with red lapels, red vests, and white breeches. Garrisoned at Ingolstadt, the I. Battalion formed a combined regiment with II. Battalion IR Kurprinz in Bayern, which served in the Auxiliar-Korps of the Austrian army. | |||||
| Infanterie-Regiment Freiherr von Pechmann Freiherr von Meinders (59) Freiherr von Herold (61) |
corn-flower blue | straw | yellow | white? | white? |
| Garrisoned at Neumarkt i. d. Oberpfalz (1757), and Rottenburg a. d. Laaber (1761), the regiment was combined with I. Battalion IR von Holnstein to form the 1. Bayerische Kreis-Regiment (IR Kurbayern). The unit served with the Reichsarmee at Weissenfels (1757), Sebastiansberg and Sonnenstein (1758), Dresden, Meissen and Dippoldiswalde (1759), Strehla, Torgau and Wittenberg (1760), Plauen (1761), and Freiberg (1762). | |||||
| Infanterie-Regiment von Holnstein |
corn-flower blue, with straw lining |
red | yellow | straw | straw |
| The straw lining of the coat would show on the turnbacks; the collar, cuffs and lapels were faced red. The I. Battalion and 1. Grenadier Company IR von Holnstein formed the 1. Bayerische Kreis-Regiment (IR Kurbayern) together with 1. Grenadier Company, I. and II. Battalion IR von Pechmann. The unit missed the Battle of Rossbach in 1757, because it was on detached duty at Freiberg, Saxony. | |||||
| Regimiento | Coat | Facings | Buttons | Vest | Breeches |
| Kürassier-Regiment Fürst Taxis |
white | med. blue | white | - | straw |
| Cuirasses were blackened. Shabraques and pistol covers were red with white trim. The service record of the unit is not known. | |||||
| Dragoner-Regiment Hohenzollern |
red | straw | white | straw | straw |
| Shabraques and pistol covers were straw coloured with black? trim. The service record of the unit is not known. | |||||
| Artillerie Brigade | light grey | med. blue | yellow | straw | straw |
| Garrisoned at Ingolstadt and Rottenburg a. d. Laaber, the artillery served alongside the Bavarian army in all of the above engagements. Each infantry battalion had two guns which were served by artillerists and infantry Handlanger. Artillery officers wore silver hat lace. Gun carriages were painted blue-grey with black fittings. However, in 1760 Infanterie-Regiment Salzburg (2. Bayerisches Kreis-Regiment) received battalion guns with red carriages. Bavarian ammunition wagons and carts were painted red. Packhorses had red saddle cloth. The artillery brigade was responsible for 34 battalion guns, one division of 6 field guns and 2 howitzers, attendant field forges, ammunition and supply wagons which took the field during the Seven Years’ War. | |||||
It is important to remember that rivers present a serious obstacle to civilian, commercial, and military traffic. Historically, small groups of travellers crossed major rivers by boat or ferry, known as a flying bridge (fliegende Brücke), but large military formations needed regular bridges to cross a river with minimal delay. Permanent bridges are expensive, they take a long time to build, and require regular maintainance, only major population centers could afford them. To protect their investment, these cities were heavily fortified.
Major waterways like the Rhine river had no permanent bridges at all, not since Roman times. There were four boat-bridges (Schiffsbrücken) on the Rhine at Basel, Straßburg, Mainz-Kastel (1661) and Cologne; a fifth was built at Koblenz in 1819. Boat-bridges were a heavier civilian type of pontoon-bridge, using river barges instead of small military pontoons. Other strategic crossing points along the Rhine had fortified bridgeheads which could be connected by pontoon-bridges. The Bavarian army maintained fortified bridgeheads on the Rhine and Danube:
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Figuras de la Guerra de los Siete Años