Role during the Revolution National Guard escorting royalist rebels in
Brittany (1792). Painting by
Jules Girardet. The formation of the National Guard can be seen as a response to public demand for maintaining order, while at the same time reducing or ending its dependence on the monarchy. The former
Guet royal had held responsibility for the maintenance of law and order in Paris from 1254 to 1791, when the National Guard took over this role. In fact, the last commander of the Guet royal (), de La Rothière, was elected to head the National Guard in 1791. In the summer of 1792, the fundamental character of the guard changed. The
fédérés were admitted to the guard and the subsequent takeover of the guard by
Antoine Joseph Santerre when
Mandat was murdered in the first hours of the
insurrection of 10 August placed a radical revolutionary at the head of the Guard. After the abolition of the monarchy (21 September 1792), the National Guard fought for the Revolution and it had an important role in forcing the wishes of the capital on the
French National Assembly which was obliged to give way in front of the force of the "patriotic" bayonets. The
Insurrection of 31 May started after
François Henriot was chosen by the Commune to lead the Paris Guards. After
9 Thermidor, year II (27 July 1794), the new government of the
Thermidorian Reaction placed the National Guard under the control of more conservative leadership. Part of the National Guard then attempted to overthrow the
Directory during the royalist insurrection on the 13 Vendémiaire, year IV (5 October 1795), but was defeated by forces led by
Napoleon Bonaparte in the
Battle of 13 Vendémiaire. The Paris National Guard thereafter ceased to play a significant political role.
First Empire , (1785–1867), French painter, in his National Guard uniform. By
Horace Vernet (1789–1863) Napoleon did not believe that the middle-class National Guard would be able to maintain order and suppress riots. Therefore, he created a
Municipal Guard of Paris, a full-time
gendarmerie which was strongly militarized. However, he did not abolish the National Guard but was content to partially disarm it. He kept the force in reserve and mobilised it for the defence of French territory in 1809 and 1814. In Paris during this period the National Guard comprised twelve thousand bourgeois property owners, serving part-time and equipped at their own expense, whose prime function was to guard public buildings on a roster basis. Between 1811 and 1812 the National Guard was organized in "cohorts" to distinguish it from the regular army, and for home defence
only. By a skilful appeal to patriotism, and judicious pressure applied through the
prefects, it became a useful reservoir of half-trained men for new battalions of the active army. After the disastrous campaign in Russia in 1812, dozens of National Guard cohorts were called up for field duty the next year; four cohorts being combined to form one line infantry regiment. The 135ème to 156ème ''Régiments d'Infanterie de Ligne'' were thus formed. Many of these fought in the campaigns in Germany in 1813 and the
invasion of north-east France by Coalition forces in 1814. Existing National Guard units, such as those of Paris, were deployed as defence corps in their areas of recruitment. Mass conscription was extended to age groups previously exempt from military service, to provide more manpower for the expanded National Guard. Students and volunteers from gamekeepers and other professional groups formed separate units within the National Guard. Clothing and equipment were often in short supply and even the Paris National Guard was obliged to provide pikes as substitute weapons for some of its new recruits. These field and regional units were disbanded in 1814 after the abdication of Napoleon I. in 1814 Six thousand national guardsmen took part in the
Battle of Paris in 1814. Following the occupation of Paris by the allied armies, the National Guard was expanded to 35,000 men and became the primary force for maintaining order within the city.
The Restoration Under the
Restoration in 1814, the National Guard was maintained by
Louis XVIII. Initially, the Guard, purged of its Napoleonic leadership, maintained good relations with the restored monarchy. The future
Charles X served as its Colonel-General, reviewed the force regularly and intervened to veto its proposed disbandment on the grounds of economy by the
Conseil. However, by 1827, the middle-class men who still composed the Guard had come to feel a degree of hostility towards the reactionary monarchy. Following hostile cries, at a review on 29 April Charles X dissolved the Guard the following day, on the grounds of offensive behaviour towards the crown. He neglected to disarm the disbanded force, and its muskets resurfaced in 1830 during the
July Revolution. ==National Guard from 1831 to 1872==