Royal guard

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File:Guards at Buckingham Palace (32629261244).jpg
King's Guards at Buckingham Palace

A royal guard (also called a palace guard) is a group of military bodyguards, soldiers, or armed retainers responsible for the protection of a royal family member, such as a king or queen, or prince or princess. They often are an elite unit of the regular armed forces, or are designated as such, and may maintain special rights or privileges.

Institution and tasks

File:Ernst Rudolf The Palace Guard.jpg
The Palace Guard by Ernst Rudolf.

Royal guards have historically comprised both purely ceremonial units serving in close proximity to the monarch, as well as regiments from all arms, forming a designated substantial elite and intended for active service as part of the army. An example of the first category would include the Tropas de la Casa Real of the Spanish monarchy prior to 1930, comprising halberderos and a mounted escort. Examples of the second would include the Imperial Guards of the Russian and German Empires prior to 1917–18.[1]

Monarchs frequently modelled their royal guards upon those of fellow rulers. Thus, Napoleon I's Garde Imperiale was imitated by his opponent Alexander I of Russia, his Bourbon successor Louis XVIII, and his nephew Napoleon III. The modern Garderegiment Grenadiers en Jagers regiment of the Netherlands and the Escorte Royale of Belgium retain features of uniform and other distinctions that can be traced back to Napoleonic influences.[2]

Political importance

Because of their location, status, role and nature, royal guards have frequently been able to play a political role beyond their intended military and social ones. In times of revolution, the continued loyalty or defection of such units has often played a key part in the outcome of wider unrest. Historical examples were England in 1688, Spain in 1808, Sweden in 1809, France in 1789 and again in 1814-15, Russia in 1917 and Persia in 1906 and again in 1953.[3]

List of royal guards

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Past

File:Royal Guards in Baroda.jpg
Royal Guards in Baroda
File:The Battle of Fontenoy.jpg
The French Guards at Fontenoy in 1745.

Present

Similar units

Related units

See also

References

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External links

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  1. José M. Bueno, El Ejército de Alfonso XIII - Tropas de la Casa Real, Template:ISBN
  2. Philip Mason, Pillars of Monarchy, Template:ISBN
  3. Philip Mason, page 167 Pillars of Monarchy, Template:ISBN