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The Italian 3rd Line Infantry Regiment was routed, losing 60 killed, 200 wounded, 600 prisoners, two colors, two guns, and three caissons. The prisoners included Bellotti and the colonel of the regiment. Austrian losses were only five killed, 14 wounded, and five missing. [23]
The infantry of the Austrian army were divided into 3 types, the Line (subdivided into German or Hungarian on a geographical basis), Grenzer and Jäger. The largest of the three was the Line which in 1836 stood at 58 regiments.
Charge of the 19th Hungarian infantry regiment in the Battle of Leipzig. The Imperial-Royal or Imperial Austrian Army (German: Kaiserlich-königliche Armee, abbreviated k.k. Armee) was the armed force of the Habsburg monarchy under its last monarch, the Habsburg Emperor Francis II, composed of the Emperor's army.
The Feldjäger were established in 1808 as Jäger infantry in the Empire of Austria and later formed part of the regular infantry of the Common Army, only their peacetime uniform distinguishing them. The designation Jäger for the soldiers and Feldjäger for their units had purely historical reasons, as light infantry and skirmisher units had ...
The Army of Bohemia was a coalition field army during the War of the Sixth Coalition in 1813–1814. It was under the command of the Austrian field marshal Karl Philipp zu Schwarzenberg. In addition to commanding the field army, Schwarzenberg was also the supreme allied commander and the commander of the Austrian army in Bohemia. [1]
Regiments of the common army were "Imperial and Royal" - kaiserlich und königlich (k.u.k.) The Austrian Landwehr regiments were "Imperial Royal" - kaiserlich-königlich (k.k.). The Hungarian Honvéd regiments were "Royal Hungarian" - königlich ungarisch (k.u.) The Austro-Hungarian Navy was the naval force of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Obverse of the k.k. Landwehr's regimental colours Reverse of the k.k. Landwehr's regimental colours. The Imperial-Royal Landwehr (German: kaiserlich-königliche Landwehr or k.k. Landwehr), also called the Austrian Landwehr, was the territorial army of the Cisleithanian or Austrian half of the Austro-Hungarian Empire from 1869 to 1918.
In 1911, the fifth regiment followed: the 27th Imperial-Royal Landwehr Infantry (Laibach). [1] The area of the Carnic ridge in Carinthia and the Julian Alps was assigned to the 4th Landwehr Infantry and the 27th Landwehr Infantry . These two, hitherto standard infantry regiments were given the new uniform of the mountain troops.