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Military General Service 1793-1814, 2 clasps, Fuentes D’Onor, Salamanca (Fredk. Kellermann, Serjt. Brunswick Oels Lt. Infantry) edge bruising and contact marks, otherwise nearly very fine £1200-1400
Ex Juman Sale 1891.
The Brunswick Oels Light Infantry was formed from the remnants of a volunteer army which, led by the hard-fighting Frederick William, Duke of Brunswick and nephew of George III, cut its way through French dominated Westphalia to Brake on the Frisian coast and thence by ship to England. Reformed as rifle and hussar regiments whose black uniforms earned them the nickname ‘Black Brunswickers’, the units were taken into British service and landed at Lisbon on 8 October 1810. However, as the war continued, the black-clad ranks were filled by deserters of all nationalities and their early promise faded. Professor Oman in Wellington's Army writes, ‘They were a motley crew much given to desertion.... One great Court-Martial in 1811 sat on ten Brunswick Oels deserters in a body, and ordered four to be shot and the rest to be flogged.’ But he also adds, ‘the regiment was full of good shots and bold adventurers.’
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