The military household The military household of the king of France, was the military part of the French royal household or
Maison du Roi. The term only appeared in 1671, though such a gathering of military units pre-dates this. Two large foot regiments of the military household participated in the campaigns of the army; the
French Guards Regiment and the
Swiss Guards. Another well known unit was the
Musketeers of the Guard.
French regiments ;Foot There were 90 French
line infantry regiments in 1690. The companies were not distributed equally between the regiments; the weakest, the Périgueux, had only 15 companies, while the
Picardie had 210. The regimental staff included a colonel and a lieutenant colonel both of which also nominally commanded a
company, and a major without company. A field company had a captain, a lieutenant, a sub-lieutenant (or
ensign in the colonel's company), two sergeants, three corporals, five lance-corporals, 39 private soldiers and a
drummer. A
garrison company had a captain, a lieutenant, two sergeants, a corporal, two lance-corporals, 44 privates and a drummer. A colonel's company in garrison had an additional
ensign, while a
grenadier company in garrison had an additional sub-lieutenant. The tactical formation was the field
battalion of 16 companies with an authorized strength of 800 men. A garrison battalion had a varied number of companies, mostly from different regiments and was commanded by the senior company commander. The French line infantry contained 69 regiments in 1767. The regiments had territorial or otherwise permanent titles. The nineteenth most senior regiments had four battalions, most regiments had two battalions while the junior regiments had one battalion. Each battalion had nine companies, eight of fusiliers and one of grenadiers. The regimental staff included a colonel and a lieutenant-colonel with companies and a major without. Each company had a captain, a lieutenant and a sub-lieutenant and contained four sergeants, one fourier, eight corporals, eight lance-corporals, 40 fusiliers and two drummers. In 1767 the French army also had five mixed legions of light troops. Each legion had eight dragoon companies, eight fusilier companies and a grenadier company. ;Horse In 1690 there were 112
cavalry regiments, including 105 French and seven foreign. There were also 43 independent companies of horse. 27 regiments had two
squadrons and eight companies, and 85 regiments had three squadrons and 12 companies. The regimental staff included a
mestre de camp and a
lieutenant-colonel with company and a major without a company. Each company had a captain, a lieutenant, a
cornet, a quartermaster, two brigadiers, two carabineers and 35 troopers. In addition each regiment had a company of carabineers outside the squadrons, filling the same elite role as the grenadier company of a foot regiment. In 1767 the cavalry contained 35 regiments. One of these was a
carabineer regiment and four were
hussars. All regiments were known by their titles; not by the name of their commanders. Each regiment had four squadrons; each squadron divided into two
troops. The regimental staff included a mestre de camp and a lieutenant-colonel, both of which had troops, and a major without a troop. Each troop had a captain, a lieutenant and a sub-lieutenant, as well as four quartermasters, one fourier, eight brigadiers, eight carabineers, 31 troopers and a
trumpeter. The
carabineer regiment had a different organization. ;Dragoons In 1690 the
dragoons contained 33 regiments, of which two were foreign, as well as 50 independent dragoon companies. Each regiment had three squadrons; each squadron had four companies . The regimental staff included a colonel and a lieutenant-colonel with companies, and a major without company. Each company had a captain, a lieutenant, a cornet, a quartermaster, two brigadiers, 37 dragoons and a drummer. There were 17 dragoon regiments in 1767. The seven oldest were known by their title; the others by the name of their commanders. Each regiment had four squadrons; each squadron had two troops. The regimental staff included a mestre de camp and a lieutenant-colonel with troops, and a major without a troop. Each troop had a captain, a lieutenant and a sub-lieutenant, as well as four quartermasters, one fourier, eight brigadiers, eight lancepessades (lance-corporals), 24 dragoons and a drummer. Of a troops 46 members, 16 served on foot. ;Artillery In 1690 the
artillery consisted of a cadre of gunnery officers stationed at the fortresses. The organization was under the
Grand Master of Artillery and contained two lieutenant-generals of artillery commanding the two most important territorial divisions and during the campaign season also the artillery of the French armies in Germany and Flanders respectively; twelve lieutenants of artillery (rank as colonels of infantry) commanding the other territorial divisions including the
arsenals; a number of provincial commissaries (rank as lieutenant-colonels of infantry) commanding the fortress artillery, and during a campaign the
artillery train and the
siege batteries. Otherwise the gunnery cadre contained a number of ordinary commissaires (captains), extraordinary commissaries (lieutenants) and
officier-pointeurs (sub-lieutenants). At the disposal of the artillery stood in 1690, a
fusilier regiment, a
bombardier regiment, two companies of
miners, three of
galiots and two of boatmen on the
Rhine. The King's Fusiliers contained 88 companies with 272 officers and 4,720 men. There were five battalions and twelve gunnery companies outside the battalions. The 1st and 2nd battalions each had two companies of
artificers, one of grenadiers and twelve of fusiliers. The 3rd and 4th battalions had each a grenadier company and 15 fusilier companies. The 5th battalion had 14 fusilier companies. The King's Bombardiers served the mortars and other heavy siege artillery and formed one battalion containing two bombardier companies and 13 fusilier companies. In 1767 the artillery formed the Royal Corps of Artillery which ranked as the 47th among the foot regiments of the line. It contained seven regiments. Each regiment had five battalions of four companies each, to a total of 20 companies; two of
sappers, four of bombardiers and 14 of gunners. Outside the brigades there was a company of artificers in each regiment. The regimental staff included a colonel, a lieutenant-colonel and five
chef de brigades (majors).
Foreign regiments During the 17th and 18th centuries twelve regiments of
Swiss mercenaries were employed in the French Royal Army, notably the
Swiss Guards. During the
10 August riot of 1792, supporters of the
French Revolution, including members of the radical-leaning
National Guard marched on the
Tuileries Palace. King Louis XVI escaped with his family, but, after fighting broke out in the palace courtyard, the Swiss Guards were massacred by the mob. Some Guards, including the commander, were captured, jailed, and later guillotined. In 1690 there were ten
Swiss line regiments in French service; six with 16 companies each in three field battalions and one garrison battalion, and four with twelve companies each in three field battalions.
Royal-Roussillon was a
Catalonian foreign regiment with 18 companies in two battalions. There were also six German foreign regiments, seven Italian foreign regiments, five
Walloon foreign regiments and three
Irish foreign regiments. There were 23 foreign line regiments in 1767; eleven Swiss, seven German and five Irish. German regiments had permanent titles. The Swiss and Irish regiments were known by the name of their proprietary colonels. The Swiss and German regiments had two battalions, the Irish one. ==Strength==