the coatees of the lifeguards were so tight that the men were unable to perform their sword exercise, and their crested helmet, surmounted by a “sausage” ornament, was so high that the sword could not be raised for a downward blow. The total height of the lancer cap with its plume (Plate I., line 3, No. 1) was about an arm’s length, and prints exist showing British lancers in a cap of which the square top is very nearly as broad as the wearer’s shoulders. The hussar furred pelisse, originally worn over a jacket (Plate I., line 1, fig. 4), and so worn by the Austrians to-day, had become a magnificently embroidered and laced garment, always slung and never worn, and the old plain under-jacket had been loaded with buttons and lace, and differed from the pelisse only in the absence of fur. It was the Restoration era, too, that delighted to decorate uniforms with sewn-down imitations of the skirt pockets, turn-back cuffs, &c., of the old coat. This was, in short, the epoch of pure dandyism, and although some of its wilder extravagances were abolished between 1830 and 1850, enough still remained when the British army took the field in the Crimea to bring about a sudden and violent reaction, in which the slovenliest dress was accounted the best. The dress regulations of 1855 introduced the low “Albert” shako and the tunic, abolished the epaulette—an ornament which had grown in the 18th century out of a shoulder cord that kept the belts in place and was decorated at the outer end with a few loose strands or tassels of embroidery—and made other changes which, without bringing back uniform to its original roominess and comfort, destroyed not only the dandyism of George IV.’s time, but also the chastened finery of the Early Victorian uniforms (Plate I., line 3, No. 7).
The tunic, accompanied by a spiked helmet of burgonet shape, had been introduced in Prussia and Russia about 1835. Russia was too poor to allow extravagance in dress, and Russians, clothed as they generally were in their great coats, had little incentive to aim at futile splendour. Both countries, however, and France and Austria likewise, passed through a period of tight, if unadorned, uniforms, before Algeria, Italy, and similar experiences brought about the abandonment of the swallow-tailed coatee. The French adopted the tunic in 1853, the Austrians in 1856, and in both countries the shako became smaller and lighter. From about 1880, when the spiked helmet replaced the low shako in England, no radical changes were made in full dress uniforms, except that the Russian army, abandoning the German pattern uniforms formerly in vogue, adopted a national uniform which is simple, roomy, and exceedingly plain, even in full dress. In 1906–1909, however, this attempt to combine handsomeness and comfort was given up, full dresses being made more decorative, and light green-grey service dresses being introduced. Lastly, since the South African War and the development of infantry fire, the attempt to wear full dress uniform on active service has been practically given up. Great Britain first of all adopted the Indian khaki, and then a drab mixture for “service dress” and returned, after 150 years, to the civilian style of field dress, adopting the “Norfolk jacket” or shooting coat with spinal pleat and roomy pockets. Germany, Italy, the United States and other countries have followed suit, though each has chosen its own shade, and the shades vary from light grey blue in Italy to deep olive drab in the United States. The details of the present-day uniforms in the principal states are given below. It might be stated, as a summary of modern uniforms, that Great Britain has most completely divorced service and full dress, and that in consequence her full dress is handsomer and her service dress plainer than those of any other country. Whether, for European war at any rate, the obliteration of regimental distinctions has not been carried too far, is open to question. The method adopted for the Italian infantry would seem to give enough means of identification, without increasing visibility, and as this method was used by the British in the South African War, it will probably be revived in future wars.
Great Britain
The full dress uniforms of the British service in 1910 had not undergone any radical change since the army reorganization of 1881. Many regiments had, however, resumed their original facings instead of the White common to all non-royal English regiments in the last twenty years of the 19th century. But the Scottish regiments maintained their yellow or yellow-buff facings, and the single Irish regiment which is not “royal” (the Connaught Rangers) its green. Rifle regiments had astrakhan busbies, resembling in shape enlarged “glengarry” caps, with plume and lines. Details in all corps have been changed, rendering the uniforms more handsome. In September 1910 it was announced that the cloth helmet would be replaced by a shako.
Tunic. | Facings. | Helmet. | Plume. | |
1st Life Guards | Scarlet | Blue | Steel | White |
2nd ,, ,, | ,, | ,, | ,, | ,, |
Royal Horse Guards (Blues) | Blue | Red | ,, | Red |
1st Dragoon Guards (King’s) | Scarlet | Black | Brass | ,, |
2nd ,, ,, | ,, | White | ,, | Black |
3rd ,, ,, | ,, | Yellow | ,, | Black and red |
4th ,, ,, | ,, | Blue | ,, | White |
5th ,, ,, | ,, | Dark Green | ,, | Red and white |
6th ,, ,, (Carabineers) | Blue | White | ,, | White |
7th ,, ,, | Scarlet | Black | ,, | Black and white |
1st Royal Dragoons | ,, | Blue | Steel | Black |
2nd Dragoons (Scots Greys) | ,, | ,, | (Bearskin cap) | White |
6th Inniskilling Dragoons | ,, | Primrose | Steel | ,, |
Czapka top. | ||||
5th Lancers | Blue | Scarlet | Scarlet | Green |
9th ,, | ,, | ,, | Black | Black and white |
12th ,, | ,, | ,, | Scarlet | Scarlet |
16th ,, | Scarlet | Blue | Blue | Black |
17th ,, | Blue | White | White | White |
21st ,, | ,, | Light blue | Light blue | ,, |
Busby-bag. | ||||
3rd Hussars | Blue | Nil | Garter blue | White |
4th ,, | ,, | ,, | Yellow | Scarlet |
7th ,, | ,, | ,, | Scarlet | White |
8th ,, | ,, | ,, | ,, | White over red |
10th ,, | ,, | ,, | ,, | White over black |
11th ,, | ,, | ,, | Crimson | White over crimson |
13th ,, | ,, | ,, | White | White |
14th ,, | ,, | ,, | Yellow | ,, |
15th ,, | ,, | ,, | Scarlet | Scarlet |
18th ,, | ,, | ,, | Blue | White over red |
19th ,, | ,, | ,, | White | White |
20th ,, | ,, | ,, | Crimson | Yellow |
Cavalry.—Household cavalry and dragoons wear single-breasted tunics with gold buttons, cuffs pointed with Austrian knot collars and shoulder-straps of the facings colour and white piping on the front and the skirt-flaps. The household cavalry wear steel cuirasses in review order, and in undress tight-fitting jackets and blue red-striped overalls. All wear steel or brass helmets, with drooping horsehair plumes, except the Scots Greys (2nd Dragoons). who have a grenadier bearskin with feather plume. All wear blue pantaloons and jack boots, except the household cavalry, who in full dress wear white leather breeches and high jack boots reaching above the knee. The stripes on the pantaloons are yellow, (white in 2nd and 6th Dragoon Guards), white belts[1] and slings. See Plate II., line 1, figs. 4 and 9.
Lancers (Plate II. line 1. No. 2) wear double-breasted tunics with gold buttons, and the front or “plastron,” the peculiar mark of the lancer, varies in colour with the facings of the regiment. Lancers wear lancer caps (the Polish czapka) with drooping plumes. Pantaloons are blue. with yellow stripes (white in 17th), boots as in the dragoons. Round the waist is a girdle of yellow and red, and the cap is secured to the collar of the tunic by yellow lines.
- ↑ The 1st Life Guards have a red line, the 2nd a blue line, in the pouch belt.