A '''Chasseur''' (a
French term for "hunter") is the designation given to certain regiments of
French light
infantry (''Chasseurs-à-Pied'') or
light cavalry (''Chasseurs-à-Cheval'') troops, trained for rapid action. The name was originally used for infantry units in the French Army recruited from hunters or
woodsmen. Recognized for their marksmanship and skirmishing skills, the chasseurs were comparable to the German
Jäger or the British Rifles. The Chasseurs-à-Pied, as the
Marksmen of the French army, were regarded as elite light companies and
regiments. The Chasseurs-à-Cheval, however, were generally not held in as high esteem as their infantry counterparts, or the identically armed light cavalry units of
Hussars. During the French occupation of Algeria regiments of
Chasseurs d'Afrique were raised. These were light cavalry recruited originally from French volunteers and subsequently from the French settlers in North Africa doing their military service. As such they were the mounted equivalent of the
Zouaves.
Modern French Army
The modern French Army comprises bataillons of ''Chasseurs-à-Pied'' (mechanized infantry : 16e BC),''Chasseurs-Alpins'' (mountain troops : 7e, 13e, 27e BCA) and regiments of ''Chasseurs-à-Cheval'' (1er-2e RCh and 4e RCh : light armored regiments). In addition one regiment of ''Chasseurs d'Afrique'' (training unit : 1er RCA) has been re-raised to commemorate this branch of the French cavalry. Since May 1943 there has been a "Régiment de Chasseurs Parachutistes" (1er RCP).
All of these units have different traditions :
★ ''Bataillons de Chasseurs'' are light infantry units created after
1838. Some of these battalions were converted to specialized mountain units as ''Bataillons de Chasseurs Alpins'' in
1888, as an answer to the Italian Alpine (''
Alpini'') regiments stationed along the Alpine frontier.
★ ''Régiments de Chasseurs'' are units of the "Arme Blindée Cavalerie" : armoured units. The basic organic unit is called regiment and not bataillon to avoid confusing cavalry and infantry chasseurs.
★ The airborne infantry units called ''Régiments de Chasseurs Parachutistes'' were created in 1943 with airborne troops from the French Airforce (GIA or ''
Groupe d'Infanterie de l'Air''), who were transferred into the Army.
Although the traditions of these different branches of the French Army are very different, there is still a tendency to confuse one with the other. For example when World War I veteran
Léon Weil died, the AFP press agency stated that he was a member of the 5th "Regiment de Chasseurs Alpins". It was in fact the 5th Bataillon.
See also
★
Light infantry
★
Chasseurs d'Afrique
★
Jäger
External links
★
Chasseurs alpins
★
Chasseur from the french forces in Germany