List of military legions

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Army units and organization
Subordinated
element
  • Fireteam / Crew  Ø 
  • Squad  ● 
  • Section / Patrol  ●●
  • Platoon / Troop / Flight ●●● 
  • Staffel / Echelon  ●●●● 
Unit
  • Company / Battery / Squadron  
  • Battalion / Squadron / Cohort ❘ ❘ 
  • Regiment / Group  ❘ ❘ ❘  
Formation
  • Brigade / Group / Wing  
  • Division / Legion ☓☓ 
  • Corps ☓☓☓ 
Command
  • Field army / Command ☓☓☓☓ 
  • Army group / Front ☓☓☓☓☓ 
  • Region / Theater ☓☓☓☓☓☓ 
Temporary

This list of military legions is in chronological order where possible. In modern times, most units using the name "military legions" were composed of soldiers from a specific ethnic, national, religious or ideological background, and that background is often specified in the legion's name. Since the Napoleonic Wars, many countries have used the term "legionnaire" to refer to recruits who are neither citizens nor imperial subjects of the government whose military they enter.[1] These governments often, but do not always, group these foreign recruits into specific units that bear the name "legion."

Ancient Rome

18th century

  • Western Legion and Eastern Legion, Greek rebel forces under Russian command in the Orlov Revolt (1770)
  • Lee's Legion (1776–83), an infantry and cavalry unit of the American Continental Army
  • Armand's Legion (1778–83), an American dragoon unit
  • British Legion (American Revolution) (1778–83), made up of Loyalist American infantry and cavalry
  • Lauzun's Legion (1778–82), a composite corps of the French Army comprising cavalry, infantry and artillery elements, mostly recruited from foreign mercenaries
  • Jamaica Legion, fighting on the British side in the American War of Independence, involved in the San Juan Expedition (1780).
  • Pulaski's Legion (1778–80), one of the few cavalry regiments in the American Continental Army, later merged into Armand's Legion
  • Legion of the United States (1792–96), an early United States land force commanded by Anthony Wayne
  • French Revolutionary Legion of the Mississippi, a French commissioned force of Americans commanded by George Rogers Clark

French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars

  • Légion des Allobroges, Swiss, Piedmontese, and Savoyard supporters of the French Revolution
  • Batavian Legion, Dutch supporters of the French Revolution in 1793
  • Belgian Legion (1792), Liégeois Legion, and Legion of Belgians and Liégeois: Belgian volunteers fighting on the side of the Republicans in the French Revolution
  • Irish Legion, a French battalion established in 1803 for a future invasion of Ireland
  • King's German Legion, British units of expatriate German personnel that fought against the French during the Napoleonic Wars
  • La Legion Noire (The Black Legion), a military unit of the French Revolutionary Army
  • Polish Legions (Napoleonic period), Polish units in the service of Napoleonic France
  • Russian–German Legion, Germans (as well as Dutch and Belgians) in the service of Tsarist Russia

19th century

20th century

World War I

Interwar period

World War II

  • Czechoslovak Legion opposing the Germans in Poland, 1939

Note: Except for the above, all World War II legions fought on the German side.

Other

  • Arab Legion (al-Jaysh al-Arabī) (1920–56), the regular army of Transjordan, predecessor of the present Jordanian Army
  • Foreign legion (disambiguation)
    • French Foreign Legion, a unit of the French Army mainly composed of foreigners wishing to fight for France (1831–present)
  • Polish Legions (disambiguation), eleven units at different times between the 18th and 20th centuries (some of which are listed separately above)
  • Spanish Legion, an elite unit of the Spanish Army (1920–present)

21st century

See also

  • National Legion, a far right Belgian paramilary and political movement in the 1920s and 1930s, headed by Paul Hoornaert
  • Légion Belge, a far right but anti-Nazi World War II Belgian Resistance movement
  • White Legion, a Georgian guerrilla group in Abkhazia after the Georgian regular army's defeat in the War in Abkhazia
  • Caribbean Legion, active in Central American politics of the 1950s

References

  1. ^ Grasmeder, Elizabeth M.F. "Leaning on Legionnaires: Why Modern States Recruit Foreign Soldiers". International Security. Retrieved 30 July 2021.

External links

Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article "Legion".
Military organization
Typical units Typical numbers Typical commander
fireteam 2–4 lance corporal,
corporal
squad,
section
5–14 corporal,
sergeant,
staff sergeant
platoon,
troop
15–45 second lieutenant,
first lieutenant,
lieutenant
company,
battery,
squadron
80–250 first lieutenant,
captain,
major
battalion,
cohort
300–1000 major,
lieutenant colonel
regiment,
brigade,
legion
1,000–5,500 colonel,
brigadier general
division 10,000–25,000 major general
corps 30,000–50,000 lieutenant general
field army 100,000–300,000 colonel general,
general
army group,
front
2+ field armies field marshal,
general,
admiral
region,
theater
4+ army groups marshal of the air force,
general of the army,
admiral of the fleet
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