Georgian 14th Grenadier Regiment |
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Грузинский 14-й гренадерский полк |
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Active | 1700 – 1918 |
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Country | Russian Empire |
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Branch | Russian Imperial Army |
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Role | Infantry (grenadier) |
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Garrison/HQ | Tiflis Governorate |
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Anniversaries | May 9 |
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Engagements | |
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Military unit
The 14th Grenadier Georgian Heir-Tsarevich's Regiment (Russian: 14-й гренадерский Грузинский наследника цесаревича полк) was an infantry unit of the Russian Imperial Army. Tracing its history to a regiment originally established in 1700 and formally organized in 1784 as the Caucasus Infantry Regiment, it had taken part in wars against Persia and Turkey during the 19th century. During World War I it was part of the Caucasus Grenadier Division.
History
The regiment was formally organized in 1784 as the Caucasus Infantry Regiment, although the formations from which it was originally established dated back to 1700 (founding of the Astrakhan Infantry Regiment). It was mostly stationed in the Caucasus and took part in the Russo-Persian War of 1826–1828, the Russo-Turkish War of 1828–1829, as well as the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, for all of which the regiment was awarded multiple decorations.[1] The regiment was stationed in the Tiflis Governorate and had received the name "14th Georgian" on 25 March 1864, along with the title of "His Imperial Highness Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolaevich's." On 25 March 1891 the name of one of its former commanders, General Pyotr Kotlyarevsky, was added to its name, which it kept until 30 July 1912 when it became the 14th Georgian His Imperial Majesty Heir-Tsarevich's Regiment. During World War I, the regiment was part of the Caucasus Grenadier Division of the 2nd Caucasus Army Corps.[2]
Notes
- ^ Грузинский 14-й гренадерский полк. "Georgian 14th grenadier regiment" (in Russian). Dic.akademik.ru. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ 14-й гренадерский Грузинский полк. 14th Grenadier Georgian Regiment (in Russian). ria1914.info, Russian military records. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
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Grenadiers |
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1st – 9th | 1st Yekatorinoslav 2nd Rostov 3rd Pernovsky 4th Nesvizhsky 5th Kiev 6th Tavrichesky 7th Samogitsky 8th Moscow 9th Siberian |
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10th – 19th | - 10th Malorussian
- 11th Fanagoriysky
- 12th Astrakhan
- 13th Yerevan
- 14th Georgian
- 15th Tiflis
- 16th Mingrelian
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