CHASSEUR


Meaning of CHASSEUR in English

(French: hunter), member of an armoured unit of the French army. Originally (1743) chasseurs, or chasseurs pied (on foot), were light-infantry regiments. By the outbreak of World War I there were 30 battalions of chasseurs of which 12 were known as chasseurs alpinsunits specially trained for mountain warfare. After World War II, chasseurs were formed as independent battalions for administrative purposes but were grouped into demibrigades of three battalions for war. Just prior to World War II a few battalions were integrated into armoured divisions as motorized infantry called chasseurs ports. The light-cavalry (chasseurs cheval) regiments were first instituted in 1779. They performed notable service in the European campaigns of the Second Empire. At the close of World War I they were represented by five regiments of chasseurs d'Afrique, originally recruited in 1831 for service in Algeria. The number of such cavalry units was increased after World War I, and they were progressively reorganized into light-armoured battalions. In the process, the term chasseurs de chars was added to distinguish units specifically designed as tank-destroyer units.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.