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FUSILIER , originally (in French about 167o, inSee also: English about 168o) the name of a"soldier armed with a See also: light flintlock musket called the fusil; now a regimental designation
.
Various forms of flintlock small arms had been used in warfare since the middleof the 16th century
.
At the See also: time of the English See also: civil war (1642—1652) the See also: term " firelock " was usually employed to distinguish these weapons from the more See also: common matchlock musket
.
The See also: special value of the firelock in armies of the 17th century See also: lay in the fact that the artillery of the time used open powder barrels for the service of the guns, making it unsafe to allow lighted matches in the muskets of the escort
.
Further, a military escort was required, not only for the See also: protection, but also for the surveillance of the artillerymen of those days
.
Companies of " firelocks " were therefore organized for these duties, and out of these companies See also: grew the " fusiliers " who were employed in the same way in the See also: wars of See also: Louis XIV
.
In the latter
See also: part of the See also: Thirty Years' War (1643) fusiliers were simply mounted troops armed with the fusil, as See also: carabiniers were with the carbine
.
But the escort companies of artillery came to be known by the name shortly afterwards, and the regiment of French Royal Fusiliers, organized in 1671 by See also: Vauban, was considered the See also: model for See also: Europe
.
The general adoption of the flintlock musket and the suppression of the pike in the armies of Europe put an end to the See also: original special duties of fusiliers, and they were subsequently employed to a large extent in light See also: infantry See also: work, perhaps on account of the greater individual aptitude for detached duties naturally shown by soldiers who had never been restricted to a fixed and unchangeable place in the See also: line of See also: battle
.
The See also: senior fusilier regiment in the See also: British service, the (7th) Royal Fusiliers (City of See also: London Regiment), was formed on the French model in 1685; the 5th See also: foot (now See also: Northumberland Fusiliers), senior to the 7th in the army, was not at that time a fusilier regiment
.
The distinctive See also: head-dress of fusiliers in the British service is a fur cap, generally resembling, but smaller than and different in details from, that of the Foot See also: Guards
.
In See also: Germany the name " fusilier " is See also: borne by certain infantry regiments and by one See also: battalion in each See also: grenadier regiment
.
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