Austrian Auxiliary Troops 1792–1816

Austrian Auxiliary Troops 1792–1816

Book £9.99
Email me when back in stock
*Users in the USA and Canada please select your location at the top of this page to see prices in your currency. Users in the UK and the Rest of the World will be billed in UK£
Author: David Hollins
Illustrator: Bill Younghusband
About this book
To support her regular troops, Austria made extensive use of auxiliary forces during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. The Balkan Grenzers performed a mix of Military Frontier guard, field army and light roles, and were separated into the National Grenz regiments in 1798. French émigrés, Belgian and Polish volunteers, German Jäger and Balkan refugees formed volunteer units in the 1790s, which were mostly regularised into Light Battalions (1798-1801).The militia garrison troops of 1800 were developed into the conscript Landwehr of 1808, although volunteers (Freiwillige) joined the field army in 1809. Hungary and Croatia provided traditional Insurrection militias that fought at Raab in 1809. This title examines the different histories, organisation and colourful uniforms of these multi-national troops.
Contents
Introduction · The Grenzers · The Freikorps · Cavalry · The Landwehr · The Insurrections · The Plates
Paperback; October 1996; 48 pages; ISBN: 9781855326200


Related Books