British fife and drum: full of grace, order, self assurance and pride German fife and drum: crisply shining with order and discipline Russian fife and drum: optimistic and full of faith and military pride American fife and drum: bold, energetic and full of faith in the cause Spanish fife and drum: so monarchist it almost makes the battlefield sound like king of Spain's court and everybody on it - his servants French fife and drum: *telling an entire baroque drama with orchestral quality and richness*
Helas, it is an illusion as we know we don't know _Nous disposons de très peu d’informations sur l’usage du tambour et du fifre dans les régiments, pas plus que sur le répertoire des signaux employés_
The French Royal Army was the first military force to reach Roman Empire numbers in Europe ( more than 400.000 men ). Vive la France, royale et Catholique.
@@labaguette3740: I mostly see Pre-Napoleonic France underrated. We often see NAPOLEON! In bold letters, (figure of speech) with regards to the age of linear warfare. Then the rest would be“oh they participated in World War One, THEN THE AMERICANS ARRIVE!”. Then World War Two which stereotyped France constantly surrendering in Wars. Often fueled by Colonial Victories in the French and Indian War. I honestly wish European events were more focused in American schools prior to our intervention and installment as a Republic. Much is shortened to the point where misinterpretations of history has become all too common. Along with neglecting minor and some major details alike. It is also hardly mentioned that France was an ally during the Revolution, along with Spain, and minor connections with the Dutch. Perhaps once is it, but extremely briefly, less then a minute or two. Then the rest would be “Oh, and we inspired their Revolution”. Then the reign of Terror is often the main highlight of any foreign history we learn. The rest being summarized until World War Two, much history being again.. skimmed or missed entirely due to “time constraints at school”. Several years over have I missed World War One and repeated lectures to hear what happened in World War Two and so on. The same case for American Revolution which I learned over and over for six years before moving on to government, (but after six years we already learn the first three months worth of American Government). Edit: My apologies, I began to go on a rant toward the end. Main point is, we hardly learn of the 18th Century other then skimming French and Indian War and highlighting the American Revolution. Mostly “British bad, King bad, Taxes and Oppression and we use imported boom sticks to fight in trees as ignorant British March in columns”. Which after learning in history embarrass me that we even teach it in a way where it is more propaganda then history! Especially how they say the British was the finest army of that time, which honestly was not the case. They were second rate at best (excluding their artillery which was considered separate from the army and received special training), and of course the Royal Navy is hardly mentioned as being the Crown Jewel in the British Military during this era. Which arguably was the best navy at this time. With French ships being particularly faster then their British counterparts, which isn’t often mentioned either.
Anyways it's a pride for a soldier to have white clothes maculated with mud or blood. You know why the English soldiers used to wear red jackets and the German brown pants?
@@darkstaff75018 Red was the colour chosen by our Chief of Men, Oliver Cromwell, for the New Model Army. Units including of the English Royalist army had worn undyed wool tunics but he wanted a common colour for the whole army. Napolean apparently abandoned the use of white in the early 1800s after he saw how wounds and of course the effects of being stood next to someone who was shot looked on the uniform. German units didnt wear brown trousers anymore than anyone else did on campaign. And as the Germans of the KGL showed at Waterloo where they were the main troops to have held Hougoumont and La Haye Sainte for much of the day against massive odds, they had balls of steel
Yea but after louis XIV came to power we lost all the liberty kings like henry IV( he is a gigachad ) gave us after essentially getting rid of the "seigneur" and we had to support the economical strain of almost constent warfare. When the revolution started people where just desperate to live.
@@arthurnarse9275If you mean the title, sure, but Napoleon was a much better leader than the previous French monarchs. Call him whatever you want, but France prospered under him.
An ancestor of mine stood with the Marquis de Montcalm de Sainte-Veran on the Plains of Abraham. The plethora of material on the French army of the Ancien Regime in this video is astonishing.
Been a while since my family participated in wars, I think the earliest I can trace back is my Great-great-great-great grandfather was a German mercenary who fought on the British side of the war of 1812 and stayed in Québec. Rest of my ancestors are a mix of working class French Canadian labourers on my father's side and still French Canadian, but more burgher professional types on my mother's. We could trace back my mother's lineage to the first apothecary in New France, for example. I have, however, no idea if any of them fought in the wars in America, it's probable, but I have no idea.
For anyone asking, the book that has the uniforms and flags is called “les régiments sous louis xv, by lucien mouillard, 1882” After researching this archived book, I tried to read it on all the websites that had it but alas, were not available.
Gosh, it’s SO HARD to get my hands on this book online to read it! I just wind up in auction sites, or hard-to-get e-libraries that DON’T EVEN HAVE IT IN THE FIRST PLACE!
Great content. Im french and one of my ancestor, actually the oldest I have found from my father side of the family, was a dragoon in the french army in the early 1740's. I have little infos about him, but he was garrisoned at Mariembourg, and could have participated at the austrian war of succession, and maybe the siege of Prague, 1742.
@@Unpseudopascommelesautres Oui ça me rend fier, j'en sais peu sur lui, j'ai une date de naissance approximative mais pas sa date de décès, je connais juste sa profession grâce a un document d'époque. Il serait vraisemblablement né dans les années 1710, il se serait enrôlé approximativement peu de temps avant la guerre de succession d'Autriche, a partir de l'année 1743. Il aurait fait un enfant a une veuve de soldat avec promesse de mariage ( un soldat dans le régiment de Hainault, compagnie Deleseme, mort en 42 pendant le siège de Prague. ). De ce que je sais, il y a eu un changement de nom de famille ( le mien ) avec cette enfant car enfant né hors mariage. Je n'en sais pas plus malheureusement impossible de trouver de nouvelles informations sur lui, ni dans les registres de la province de Namur, aucuns documents militaires hormis un seul avec une signature sans aucunes autres informations, je ne trouve vraisemblablement rien pour le moment sur tous les sites de recensement militaire et sites de généalogie. ( hormis une note sur mémoire des hommes mémoire des hommes et un acte de )
Salut. Ce document, c’est une sorte de livret militaire de l’epoque? Tu l’as trouvé comment, par hasard ou en consultant un site quelconque ? Mon experience de recherche généalogique m’a appris que c’est super dur de trouver qq chose de militaire au delà de la premiere guerre mondiale.
@@belis35 Hello, oui c'est un papier d'époque, le papier est issu des archives du régiment disponible sur le site mémoire des hommes. J'ai aussi coïncidé cette information avec l'acte de baptême de son fils qui fait mention de sa profession, que j'ai trouvé sur généanet via l'arbre généalogique de quelqu'un d'autre, source vérifiée et disponible aussi sur le site de Couvin Bibliotheca. Malheureusement pour moi, c'est les seuls preuves tangibles de l'existence de mon ancetre, je n'ai pu trouvé sa date ni lieu de naissance; ni ses parents; contrairement a sa femme/conjointe ou j'ai pu remonté avec très peu de preuves par contre jusqu'au début du 17ème siècle. Arrivé aussi loin il est vrai que c'est extremement difficile de trouvé une info ou une preuve viable !
One of the most underappreciated military forces of our world. Arguably the most powerful in Europe from the 17th century to this very day. Once an army for kings and empires, now a stalwart defender of everything we stand for in the West. A history to be proud of indeed. Best wishes from your ally to the north🇳🇱
"now a stalwart defender of everything we stand for in the West" you stand for colonialism? Because that's what French army does even today. They are the guarantor of French influence in Africa.
@@kagtkalem7115 France freed the algerian people from the ottoman empire, same as people from Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Israël, Jordania and Syria. What about your people, what did your ancestors do ? Where are you from by the way ?
@@kagtkalem7115 How intelligent to hate on France under French patriotic marches. Plus these marches are from the Ancien Regime, at this time France hadn't even put a feet on Africa.
I think it's probably a modern arrangement, the rhythm and layering in the cadence is a bit much for a military band from the 1700s. Nevertheless, it's still really good.
@@captainmilkman I wouldn't put it past the French composers of the age. Both Lully and Rameau composed some incredibly modern works involving multiple timpanists and drummers so it wouldn't be out of the ordinary for such cadences to exist. Lest we forget this was the Baroque era, probably the most unique epoque in all of Western Music.
what is sad is that nowadays to here this music, I have to rely on UA-cam and a british orchestra. That is not tragic in itself, thank you to them. No one is playing this in France anymore, and that, is sad, indeed.
You’re referring the French Monarchy. It’s no longer exist. The French kept overthrowing their King and Queen of France multiple times centuries ago Le Château de Versailles chould have been resided by now by it’s decendants Now, completly bismerched
I've been a fan of Napoleon because, imagine winning a 50+ war and even Brits and other countries feared him. When the trailer of Napoleon came out it was an Absolute best.
@@sauronmordor7494 can't disagree. Bonaparte's France lacks the legitimacy of Royal France but, pragmatically speaking, it had much that the "rusty" royalty & nobility should've had to be better; more meritocracy and competence, for instance.
Royal Bourbonnais & co. Every province had its regiment. Actually that was a pretty big army, so many regiments. Each of them could be like 2.500 strong.
Indeed. Our country France 🟦⬜🟥 has actually and currently the most military victories in History. Here's the Number down below : 🇫🇷 : 1115 🇬🇧 : 1105 🇺🇸 : 833 🇷🇺 : 491 🇩🇪 : 425 🇪🇦 : 387
According to Wikipedia This recording prooves nothing: Many suitmish were reporteds as "victory" for Napoleon's Grande Armée, at the same time many succesfull squitmish for other countries were not recorded... And look closer to this ridiculous recording: France as only 10 victories more than UK ??? France continental power at war a longer time than UK naval power has only 10 vitories more ? It's not a significant advance...
Wow super cool, i found it pretty hard for some reason to find anything on the French Royal Army of the 17th while there is so much info about red coats or prussian military of the time, really sad. En tout cas merci :)
I agree. I would just love to get my hands on a book about the French navy during the 1600's-1800's. And on the land forces as well. The victors write the history, and it seems like the USA had been pro-British in all it's smattering of histories about the period. Even a French work translated into English would be super as I do not know how to speak, read or write in French.; I am terribly interested in the time though!
It's kind of amazing that europeans made their soldiers listening to music to give them courage and hope because they knew they were canon fodder... it's kind of crazy that some people thought of it as enlightening and yet in the end it was just slaughter.
I served as staff sergeant in the Navarre regiment.. .the 5th infantry regiment called Navarre or Navarricum (latin name)... funny to see its initial colours and uniforms. Navarre firstly commanded by the Knight Bayard, le Chevalier sans peur et sans reproche, the Knight without Fear nor Reproach... Then commanded by Henri de Navarre (Henri the 4th, King of France and Navarre) :) created in 1494 from the french bands of Guyenne and Navarre... 1st RI = Picardie, 3rd RI = Piémont, 5th RI = Navarre and 7th = Champagne... and their respective reserves 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th RI... the 7th RI was defintively removed from the french army in 1917 for complete insubordination and full mutiny, replaced by its reserve then... The 5th was retired from the french order of battle in 1997 after 503 years of existence... Piémont was retired few years before... Still exist 1st infantry regiment, elite mechanised infantry regiment and 8th motorised infantry regiment.
The sound of the French drums sounding the advance used to be enough to rout demoralized armies. For a while the French attack by column was considered irresistible, you had no chance of winning, and the men in the line knew it. So when they heard the sound of the drums advancing (which is how they communicated orders back then) they would get shaky, or even break and flee before the attack even reached them.
@@FieldMarshalYT I found some, but they were only orders and calls, I could not find any ceremonial marches and the ones I found were very computer/robotic and of poor quality
in some way it was better, the bonapartist empire made way for napoleon III taking position as emperor, who lay the foundations for a modern city of paris, later resulting in the construction of the eiffel tower, so you must think, if they was no revolution, paris would be totally different
Superbe travail d’archives et très belles iconographies ,mais oú trouver le dvd ? Est ce une musique Philidor?
3 роки тому+3
Non Philippe, ce ne sont pas des musiques de Philidor. Il s'agit d'airs français joués par un groupe de haut niveau de fifres et tambours américains: les "Middlesex County Volunteers Fife and drum Corps" et essentiellement extraits de 2 de leurs albums: "Lafayette's Ghost" et "Age of reason".
@ le concept de F&I Drum Corps arrive très tard dans le 18e siècle, particulièrement avec la grosse caisse (bass drum). Par exemple, la présence d'un joueur de fifre n'est relevé que pour la compagnie colonnelle d'un régiment (comme un régiment compte 2 à 4 bataillons avant les années 1770, c'est donc un joueur de fifre pour la compagnie colonnelle alors que le reste des compagnies comptent normalement de un à deux tambours chaque). Ce genre d'orchestration est donc ravissant mais très théorique.
Pitched battle sounds silly to someone whose notions of war are defined by modern technology, but it was appropriate for the conditions of the time. It wasn't certain death either, you're just as likely to die now by wounds in combat in your trench or dug in position. It's just more likely to come from an artillery shell or airstrike from an enemy whose whites of his eyes you'll never see. The problem before the twentieth century was disease.
Absolutely not. Those Military Marches were from the France Royalist which means the "French Monarchy ⚜️" Napoleon Bonaparte was during the "French Empire 🦅"
British fife and drum: full of grace, order, self assurance and pride
German fife and drum: crisply shining with order and discipline
Russian fife and drum: optimistic and full of faith and military pride
American fife and drum: bold, energetic and full of faith in the cause
Spanish fife and drum: so monarchist it almost makes the battlefield sound like king of Spain's court and everybody on it - his servants
French fife and drum: *telling an entire baroque drama with orchestral quality and richness*
Helas, it is an illusion as we know we don't know _Nous disposons de très peu d’informations sur l’usage du tambour et du fifre dans les régiments, pas plus que sur le répertoire des signaux employés_
"Royal" French fife and drum
now I want to hear a playlist with all those listed ^^
@@ttaibe I’ll link you when I make it, but you can find it yourself on UA-cam
@@Paul_Sergeyev i have, ty
The French Royal Army was the first military force to reach Roman Empire numbers in Europe ( more than 400.000 men ). Vive la France, royale et Catholique.
Generals: "So how Intense the drums should be for our march?"
French army: "Oui"
This french beat hits hard
"I would rather die with style than live without !"
drums scare your enemies and the drums make the music more powerful
Modern beatings
The drums for marche pour le Regiment Zurlauben could make it to indoor percussion.
French army and history are underated
Salut :D
@@viscount_of_troyes Bv ça 😂
@@labaguette3740 yo
@@labaguette3740: I mostly see Pre-Napoleonic France underrated. We often see NAPOLEON! In bold letters, (figure of speech) with regards to the age of linear warfare. Then the rest would be“oh they participated in World War One, THEN THE AMERICANS ARRIVE!”. Then World War Two which stereotyped France constantly surrendering in Wars. Often fueled by Colonial Victories in the French and Indian War. I honestly wish European events were more focused in American schools prior to our intervention and installment as a Republic. Much is shortened to the point where misinterpretations of history has become all too common. Along with neglecting minor and some major details alike. It is also hardly mentioned that France was an ally during the Revolution, along with Spain, and minor connections with the Dutch. Perhaps once is it, but extremely briefly, less then a minute or two. Then the rest would be “Oh, and we inspired their Revolution”. Then the reign of Terror is often the main highlight of any foreign history we learn. The rest being summarized until World War Two, much history being again.. skimmed or missed entirely due to “time constraints at school”. Several years over have I missed World War One and repeated lectures to hear what happened in World War Two and so on. The same case for American Revolution which I learned over and over for six years before moving on to government, (but after six years we already learn the first three months worth of American Government).
Edit: My apologies, I began to go on a rant toward the end. Main point is, we hardly learn of the 18th Century other then skimming French and Indian War and highlighting the American Revolution. Mostly “British bad, King bad, Taxes and Oppression and we use imported boom sticks to fight in trees as ignorant British March in columns”. Which after learning in history embarrass me that we even teach it in a way where it is more propaganda then history! Especially how they say the British was the finest army of that time, which honestly was not the case. They were second rate at best (excluding their artillery which was considered separate from the army and received special training), and of course the Royal Navy is hardly mentioned as being the Crown Jewel in the British Military during this era. Which arguably was the best navy at this time. With French ships being particularly faster then their British counterparts, which isn’t often mentioned either.
@@adrianh.3102 Thank you.
Mud: Exist
Royal French uniforms: **crying**
cries, rip royal family
Anyways it's a pride for a soldier to have white clothes maculated with mud or blood.
You know why the English soldiers used to wear red jackets and the German brown pants?
@@darkstaff75018 LMAO
@@darkstaff75018 Saxons wore red..Danes white or red
@@darkstaff75018 Red was the colour chosen by our Chief of Men, Oliver Cromwell, for the New Model Army. Units including of the English Royalist army had worn undyed wool tunics but he wanted a common colour for the whole army. Napolean apparently abandoned the use of white in the early 1800s after he saw how wounds and of course the effects of being stood next to someone who was shot looked on the uniform. German units didnt wear brown trousers anymore than anyone else did on campaign. And as the Germans of the KGL showed at Waterloo where they were the main troops to have held Hougoumont and La Haye Sainte for much of the day against massive odds, they had balls of steel
Royaume France really was something else. From the tunes to their power and culture, truly the heart of a continent in a way few countries can be
They turned even greater under Napoleon
Fr
@@AlxzAlecNapoleon was a republican and a tyrant( emperor is more absolute than a king )
Yea but after louis XIV came to power we lost all the liberty kings like henry IV( he is a gigachad ) gave us after essentially getting rid of the "seigneur" and we had to support the economical strain of almost constent warfare.
When the revolution started people where just desperate to live.
@@arthurnarse9275If you mean the title, sure, but Napoleon was a much better leader than the previous French monarchs. Call him whatever you want, but France prospered under him.
An ancestor of mine stood with the Marquis de Montcalm de Sainte-Veran on the Plains of Abraham. The plethora of material on the French army of the Ancien Regime in this video is astonishing.
Not sure about during the Ancien Régime, but I have at least two that fought for Napoleon.
Been a while since my family participated in wars, I think the earliest I can trace back is my Great-great-great-great grandfather was a German mercenary who fought on the British side of the war of 1812 and stayed in Québec. Rest of my ancestors are a mix of working class French Canadian labourers on my father's side and still French Canadian, but more burgher professional types on my mother's. We could trace back my mother's lineage to the first apothecary in New France, for example. I have, however, no idea if any of them fought in the wars in America, it's probable, but I have no idea.
@@kinggeorgeiii7515 Ah the Seven Years War
Hello, guys. Just wanted to drop in to say I am Napoleon. Good day.
@@baldomaz1125 No, I am Napoleon.
Glory to France - the heart and soul of Europe, from Lithuania
Long Live Lithuania! Best wishes from France
Cringe…
@@magusscythian How so
@@magusscythian British detected
@@magusscythian Protestant detected
one thing that we all can agree on the military in the 1700 and 1800 had some good marching music .
And nice hats :)
For anyone asking, the book that has the uniforms and flags is called “les régiments sous louis xv, by lucien mouillard, 1882” After researching this archived book, I tried to read it on all the websites that had it but alas, were not available.
Gosh, it’s SO HARD to get my hands on this book online to read it! I just wind up in auction sites, or hard-to-get e-libraries that DON’T EVEN HAVE IT IN THE FIRST PLACE!
@@valentinagjidoda1022 Lol. Even here in France it must be hard to get it
@@Raisonnance. Nvm found it on Praetiri Fides
Royal France had the freshest beats
Great content.
Im french and one of my ancestor, actually the oldest I have found from my father side of the family, was a dragoon in the french army in the early 1740's.
I have little infos about him, but he was garrisoned at Mariembourg, and could have participated at the austrian war of succession, and maybe the siege of Prague, 1742.
Ca c'est super stylé du cul par contre. Les miens n'ont pas été dans de telles batailles.
@@Unpseudopascommelesautres Oui ça me rend fier, j'en sais peu sur lui, j'ai une date de naissance approximative mais pas sa date de décès, je connais juste sa profession grâce a un document d'époque.
Il serait vraisemblablement né dans les années 1710, il se serait enrôlé approximativement peu de temps avant la guerre de succession d'Autriche, a partir de l'année 1743.
Il aurait fait un enfant a une veuve de soldat avec promesse de mariage ( un soldat dans le régiment de Hainault, compagnie Deleseme, mort en 42 pendant le siège de Prague. ). De ce que je sais, il y a eu un changement de nom de famille ( le mien ) avec cette enfant car enfant né hors mariage.
Je n'en sais pas plus malheureusement impossible de trouver de nouvelles informations sur lui, ni dans les registres de la province de Namur, aucuns documents militaires hormis un seul avec une signature sans aucunes autres informations, je ne trouve vraisemblablement rien pour le moment sur tous les sites de recensement militaire et sites de généalogie. ( hormis une note sur mémoire des hommes mémoire des hommes et un acte de )
Salut. Ce document, c’est une sorte de livret militaire de l’epoque? Tu l’as trouvé comment, par hasard ou en consultant un site quelconque ? Mon experience de recherche généalogique m’a appris que c’est super dur de trouver qq chose de militaire au delà de la premiere guerre mondiale.
@@belis35 Hello, oui c'est un papier d'époque, le papier est issu des archives du régiment disponible sur le site mémoire des hommes. J'ai aussi coïncidé cette information avec l'acte de baptême de son fils qui fait mention de sa profession, que j'ai trouvé sur généanet via l'arbre généalogique de quelqu'un d'autre, source vérifiée et disponible aussi sur le site de Couvin Bibliotheca.
Malheureusement pour moi, c'est les seuls preuves tangibles de l'existence de mon ancetre, je n'ai pu trouvé sa date ni lieu de naissance; ni ses parents; contrairement a sa femme/conjointe ou j'ai pu remonté avec très peu de preuves par contre jusqu'au début du 17ème siècle.
Arrivé aussi loin il est vrai que c'est extremement difficile de trouvé une info ou une preuve viable !
You are lucky. I almost have no information of my Grandparents.
Gloire et Honneur à nos armées et à nos Rois !
Vive le roi!
Vive le Roi
Vive la France éternelle.
Régiment Royale Deux-Ponts (Zweibrucken en l'Allemagne)
French Whitecoats is soo unique, i naver seen any military uniform like this before. Good video, keep it up
@D Anemon wow, that is cool!
austria
hungary
spain
piedmontese
saxony
napoleonic french (some regiments did look it up)
napoleonic polish (some regiments)
batavian republic
lippe
waldeck
berg
wurzberg
kingdom of italy
And Saxony
@@kwantungempire3767 although it changed depending on time period and regiment the Austrian troops usually wore pearl grey.
@@kwantungempire3767 Yeah the Danes used white sometimes by the way.
One of the most underappreciated military forces of our world. Arguably the most powerful in Europe from the 17th century to this very day.
Once an army for kings and empires, now a stalwart defender of everything we stand for in the West.
A history to be proud of indeed.
Best wishes from your ally to the north🇳🇱
"now a stalwart defender of everything we stand for in the West" you stand for colonialism? Because that's what French army does even today. They are the guarantor of French influence in Africa.
@@kagtkalem7115 France freed the algerian people from the ottoman empire, same as people from Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Israël, Jordania and Syria. What about your people, what did your ancestors do ? Where are you from by the way ?
@@Heimrik01 "Freed" bruh. What a nice way to describe colonialism
@@kagtkalem7115 How intelligent to hate on France under French patriotic marches. Plus these marches are from the Ancien Regime, at this time France hadn't even put a feet on Africa.
Best regards from France my friend!
🇫🇷♥️🇳🇱
Vive la France !
My ancestors brought what beauty and majesty they could through their music to the horror and ugliness of the battlefield. Truly gentlemen all
I love the counterpoint with the drum cadence, they marched with class.
I think it's probably a modern arrangement, the rhythm and layering in the cadence is a bit much for a military band from the 1700s. Nevertheless, it's still really good.
@@captainmilkman I wouldn't put it past the French composers of the age. Both Lully and Rameau composed some incredibly modern works involving multiple timpanists and drummers so it wouldn't be out of the ordinary for such cadences to exist. Lest we forget this was the Baroque era, probably the most unique epoque in all of Western Music.
I have been listening nonstop for 3 days straight now
You have now become french
On es les meilleurs, pour toujours ! 🇫🇷🇫🇷⚜️🫡
Scotland Backs You Up Mate.🏴
I very much appreciate the uniforms in the background
VIVE LA FRANCE, AMOUR POUR NOS ALLIÉS AMÉRINDIENS ET EUROPÉENS 💙💙💙⚜️⚜️⚜️❤️❤️❤️
Délicieux. Un plaisir pour les yeux et les oreilles .
These marches are fantastic and the uniforms are beautiful. Many of my French, Irish and Scottish ancestors have worn these uniforms
wow.
💪🇫🇷🇮🇪🏴👊
Nobody asked if your family went to costume parties across the world
@@aliciarevis5486 Commies go to hell
@@MrSMITCHERS I am so sorry! My cousin commented on my UA-cam account
what is sad is that nowadays to here this music, I have to rely on UA-cam and a british orchestra. That is not tragic in itself, thank you to them. No one is playing this in France anymore, and that, is sad, indeed.
La France t sous la cendre, la république l'a tuée.
Fking Republicanism destroyed the France
"HeHe, FrEnCh WhItE FlAg!!1!"
l'Ancien Régime: Oui
You’re referring the French Monarchy. It’s no longer exist.
The French kept overthrowing their King and Queen of France multiple times centuries ago
Le Château de Versailles chould have been resided by now by it’s decendants
Now, completly bismerched
Vive le roy vive la France
I've been a fan of Napoleon because, imagine winning a 50+ war and even Brits and other countries feared him.
When the trailer of Napoleon came out it was an Absolute best.
This music is for Royal Army of France ( Bourbon ⚜️⚜️⚜️ )
Royal France
Beautiful marches! I also like Dutch and Prussian's drum and flute (your channel). Thanks a lot for sharing such a nice music collection.
Royal France is the true France.
Bonapartiste France is good France to
@@sauronmordor7494 oui mais la vraie, c'est la royale
@@sauronmordor7494 can't disagree. Bonaparte's France lacks the legitimacy of Royal France but, pragmatically speaking, it had much that the "rusty" royalty & nobility should've had to be better; more meritocracy and competence, for instance.
Based
@@sauronmordor7494 No.
Royal Bourbonnais & co. Every province had its regiment. Actually that was a pretty big army, so many regiments. Each of them could be like 2.500 strong.
:)
@D Anemon Not the biggest but the most trained and experienced army for sure
@D Anemon Yeah i know all of that i am French. I just didnt see the « had » So i thought You were talking about present day. My bad
Still to this day France has the most military victorys according to Google 👍💪♥️🇲🇫
Indeed. Our country France 🟦⬜🟥 has actually and currently the most military victories in History. Here's the Number down below :
🇫🇷 : 1115
🇬🇧 : 1105
🇺🇸 : 833
🇷🇺 : 491
🇩🇪 : 425
🇪🇦 : 387
According to Wikipedia
This recording prooves nothing: Many suitmish were reporteds as "victory" for Napoleon's Grande Armée, at the same time many succesfull squitmish for other countries were not recorded...
And look closer to this ridiculous recording: France as only 10 victories more than UK ???
France continental power at war a longer time than UK naval power has only 10 vitories more ? It's not a significant advance...
@@BFVK Well, as matter of fact, UK and France had fought each other for a Thousand years since the Hundred Years War til the Napoleonic War
@@BFVK sorry the little Island didn't win no tea and crumpets today 🤭😉🇲🇫♥️
@@BFVK It's probably due to the Hundred Years War
Wow super cool, i found it pretty hard for some reason to find anything on the French Royal Army of the 17th while there is so much info about red coats or prussian military of the time, really sad. En tout cas merci :)
I agree. I would just love to get my hands on a book about the French
navy during the 1600's-1800's. And on the land forces as well.
The victors write the history, and it seems like the USA had been pro-British
in all it's smattering of histories about the period. Even a French work translated
into English would be super as I do not know how to speak, read or write in French.;
I am terribly interested in the time though!
@@wesleyhay3881there are a whole series of books on the French army of the Sun King
@@wesleyhay3881 Helion Books Century of the Soldier Series
@@vanpallandt5799 Thanks much! I will look into for sure!!
Kronoskaf has a ton of info but it's only from the 1740s-1760s period.
England's most formidable opponent. Respect.
Gota do Guts & Blackpowder comments in all 1812 related videos
💀
This is from the Seven years war, BTW.
It’s not related to 1812 😂, it’s related to 1760
Vive le Roi!
absolument vrais
3:59 4:01 4:02 4:02 4:03 4:03
1:31 Hot damn! if I ever start a band I want this guy as our drummer.
It's kind of amazing that europeans made their soldiers listening to music to give them courage and hope because they knew they were canon fodder... it's kind of crazy that some people thought of it as enlightening and yet in the end it was just slaughter.
God Save The King. Long Live The King.
Thank god for the loop feature.
I served as staff sergeant in the Navarre regiment.. .the 5th infantry regiment called Navarre or Navarricum (latin name)... funny to see its initial colours and uniforms. Navarre firstly commanded by the Knight Bayard, le Chevalier sans peur et sans reproche, the Knight without Fear nor Reproach... Then commanded by Henri de Navarre (Henri the 4th, King of France and Navarre) :) created in 1494 from the french bands of Guyenne and Navarre... 1st RI = Picardie, 3rd RI = Piémont, 5th RI = Navarre and 7th = Champagne... and their respective reserves 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th RI... the 7th RI was defintively removed from the french army in 1917 for complete insubordination and full mutiny, replaced by its reserve then... The 5th was retired from the french order of battle in 1997 after 503 years of existence... Piémont was retired few years before... Still exist 1st infantry regiment, elite mechanised infantry regiment and 8th motorised infantry regiment.
9:47
les Troupes de Marine !
Marsouin !!!!
They sound good!!!
These tunes and Prussians' are the most lively. I'm gonna start listening to this every morning before work 😂
1:34 THAT SO FIRE🗣🔥🔥🔥
Vive le Roy!
Marche Pour Le Regiment de Saintonge Can't find it on spotify
The sound of the French drums sounding the advance used to be enough to rout demoralized armies. For a while the French attack by column was considered irresistible, you had no chance of winning, and the men in the line knew it. So when they heard the sound of the drums advancing (which is how they communicated orders back then) they would get shaky, or even break and flee before the attack even reached them.
Good stuff.
Everybody gangsta fighting in the sea until the white flagged ships start shooting back
Vive Dieu, Vive le Roi
Magnificapresentacion.
8:48 - this is Handel’s “Harmonious Blacksmith”
My honest reaction to the guy getting mauled by a runner infront of me:
Me trying to get that useless noise:
When france used these fifes and drums to beat the british in fort carrillon:
And we beat the French to their own damned tune. Ca Ira.
@@zenafisher6681 La cédille ça fait pas de mal
I would love to see one of Spain or Portugal
I made one of Spain on my channel already.
@@jumpinthefire23 ok, I will visit it right now
Come to think of it, does anyone know of any Portuguese marches in this time period?
@@FieldMarshalYT I found some, but they were only orders and calls, I could not find any ceremonial marches and the ones I found were very computer/robotic and of poor quality
@@juancarlosdegoya2757 I found one video, but they seem robotic/computer like as you described. Would you like me to link it?
Très bien!
Tres bon! What's the source of the images of uniforms and flags that you used in this video?
Google and mostly Kronoskaf.
❤️🇫🇷
Then when Napoleon came in. Totally different now.
Under Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, France was boosting up
in some way it was better, the bonapartist empire made way for napoleon III taking position as emperor, who lay the foundations for a modern city of paris, later resulting in the construction of the eiffel tower, so you must think, if they was no revolution, paris would be totally different
Honestly, more complex and fast melodies than songs of the French Republic aka Empire.
Vive la partie
top
I hear Colonial Williamsburg F&D’s. Who are the others?
french fife and drum feels like you're in an american football league
3:17 this part make me dance
Superbe travail d’archives et très belles iconographies ,mais oú trouver le dvd ? Est ce une musique Philidor?
Non Philippe, ce ne sont pas des musiques de Philidor. Il s'agit d'airs français joués par un groupe de haut niveau de fifres et tambours américains: les "Middlesex County Volunteers Fife and drum Corps" et essentiellement extraits de 2 de leurs albums: "Lafayette's Ghost" et "Age of reason".
@ le concept de F&I Drum Corps arrive très tard dans le 18e siècle, particulièrement avec la grosse caisse (bass drum). Par exemple, la présence d'un joueur de fifre n'est relevé que pour la compagnie colonnelle d'un régiment (comme un régiment compte 2 à 4 bataillons avant les années 1770, c'est donc un joueur de fifre pour la compagnie colonnelle alors que le reste des compagnies comptent normalement de un à deux tambours chaque). Ce genre d'orchestration est donc ravissant mais très théorique.
Do you have the source for the uniform images from the beginning of the video until about 6:22?
Everybody's gangsta until an angry mob with pitchforks start storming the Bastille.
Dosent matter if it was France with a diffrent ideology, France is France. 🇲🇫
Let's march in suicidal formation to certain death on some nice music.
Pitched battle sounds silly to someone whose notions of war are defined by modern technology, but it was appropriate for the conditions of the time. It wasn't certain death either, you're just as likely to die now by wounds in combat in your trench or dug in position. It's just more likely to come from an artillery shell or airstrike from an enemy whose whites of his eyes you'll never see. The problem before the twentieth century was disease.
"Lets show these scalywags who's the boss
For our majesty me lads"
-Officier that will probably dies 7 minutes after the fight begins
Can you make a british/prussia/russia/us version? these military musics are perfect!
Non. Toujours pas.
14:36 - I guess the flag of the province of Quebec was inspired by that one !?
Fleur de Lys
Well done with these marches. Do you have something Austrian or Russian from the Napoleonic Wars?
Non plus.
Vive le roi
This English guy likes your music!
4:35
2:03 cruz de borgoña 🇪🇸
^^
Awesome man
May I ask where did you find the marvelous pictures?
What is the source of the regimental uniform plates?
As far as I know, it's from a book called "Les regiments du roi Louis XV"
This was a banger 16:05
8:48
이런 거나 연주하고 듣고 앉았으니 허구헌날 지고 다니지
All this marches sound like counter dances.
MUST have been added to Napoleon: Total War
Absolutely not. Those Military Marches were from the France Royalist which means the "French Monarchy ⚜️"
Napoleon Bonaparte was during the "French Empire 🦅"
you should check out empire total war
Who played these tunes. I think I heard Colonial Williamsburg in there!
White uniforme sordier and camptain red,blue,cross bell Golden
Good Morning! I've been making a UA-cam video about French Foreign Legion in Carlist War, could i use this video?
Bourbon France was best France ⚜️🏳️
May I ask what source you found these images with the Regiment Standards and their uniforms? They seem like they come from Kronoskaft.
They seem to come from old historical books from the 70s presenting the Royal French Army. At least the police and agencement look like it.
chance we can get timestamps for the pieces in this?
Yup, just did it my friend. Enjoy.
0.75 is best
Now were marching in style!
Je suis un lasserie
I'm listening to this while refusing to sell my onions to Austrian guy 😊🧅