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The 6th Regiment of Dragoons (6e Régiment de Dragons) is a French regiment of dragoon cavalry formed under the old regime, and dissolved in 1992.
Creation and renames
September 14, 1673: Creation as the Régiment d'Hocquincourt (Regiment of Hocquincourt)
1675: Renamed to Régiment de Dragons de la Reine (Dragoons of the Queen)
1791: Renamed to 6e Régiment de Dragons (6th Regiment of Dragoons)
1814: Renamed to Régiment de Dragons de Monsieur (Dragoons of Gentlemen)
1815: Renamed back to 6e Régiment de Dragons, dissolved after the Hundred Days
1815: Recreated as Régiment de Dragons de la Loire (Dragoons of the Loire)
1825: Renamed to 6e régiment de dragons
1940: Dissolved
1951: Recreated as 6e régiment de dragons
1963: Dissolved
1964: Recreated as 6e régiment de dragons out of the 3e Algerian Spahis Regiment
1992: Final dissolution
Regimental Leaders
Until the French Revolution, the regimental leader were called mestre de camp, who owned the regiment they commanded. Beginning in 1791, the leader was referred to as a colonel. In reality, only the first dragoon regiment leader had this quality, his followers, being only mestre de camp-lieutenant, corresponding afterwards to lieutenant colonel.
1673: Gabriel de Monchy
1675: Mestre de Camp de Brizay, Viscount of Enonville
1685: Mestre de Camp Nicolaï, Knight of Murçay
1692: Mestre de Camp Texier, Marquis of Hautefeuille
1704: Mestre de Camp Riencourt, Marquis of Orival
1731: Mestre de Camp Lamber of Herbigny, Marquis of Thibouville
1734: Mestre de Camp Chabannes, Marquis of Chabannes-Pionsac
1740: Mestre de Camp Durey of Sauroy, Marquis of Terrail
1748: Mestre de Camp Charles, Marquis of Morand
1762: Mestre de Camp Grossoles, Earl of Flammarens
1780: Mestre de Camp Franquetot, Knight of Coigny
1784: Mestre de Camp Grammont, Duke of Guiche
1788: Mestre de Camp Machault, Viscount of Machault
1793: Chef de Brigade François Philibert Michel Pelicot
1794: Chef de Brigade François Jourdan
1794: Chef de Brigade Vincent
1794: Chef de Brigade Jean-Louis-François Fauconnet
1797: Chef de Brigade Jacques le Baron (Colonel in 1803)
1807: Colonel Cyrille-Simon Picquet
1809: Colonel Pierre Alexis de Pinteville
1813: Colonel Claude Mugnier
1814: Colonel Jean-Baptiste Saviot
1815: Colonel Dornier
1823: Colonel Podenas
1830: Colonel Lacour
1834: Colonel Scherer
1845: Colonel Beltramin
1852: Colonel Robinet des Plas
1855: Colonel Jean Jacques Paul Félix Ressayre
1863: Colonel Bourboulon
1869: Colonel Tillion
1870: Colonel Fombert de Villiers
1876: Colonel Maréchal
1881: Colonel Rapp
1887: Colonel Brossier de Buros
1893: Colonel of Lestapis
1898: Colonel of Sesmaisons
1899: Colonel Faure
1908: Colonel Trafford
1912: Colonel Champeaux
1914: Colonel of Champvallier
1918: Colonel Joannard
1925: Colonel Yvart
1931: Colonel Barbe
1933: Colonel of the Perrier de Larsan
1936: Colonel Jacottet
1951: Colonel of Soultrait
1953: Colonel Ameil
1956: Colonel Renoult
1958: Lieutenant-Colonel Bonnefous
1961: Lieutenant-Colonel Boileau
1963: Lieutenant-Colonel Jeannerod
1964: Lieutenant-Colonel le Diberder
1967: Colonel Fournier
1969: Lieutenant-Colonel O'Delant
1971: Lieutenant-Colonel Maillard
1972: Lieutenant-Colonel Carabin
1974: Colonel Delcourt
1976: Colonel of Cotton
1978: Colonel Thiébaut
1980: Colonel Burel
1982: Colonel Winckel
1984: Colonel Cailloux
1986: Colonel Lefebvre
1990: Colonel Françon
1991: Lieutenant-Colonel Riediner
Regimental leaders killed or injured in combat
July 23, 1675: Knight of Hocquincourt (Killed)
August 4, 1692: Knight of Murçay (Killed)
April 26, 1794: Chef de Brigade Vincent (Killed)
February 6, 1807: Colonel Lebaron (Killed)
July 22, 1812: Colonel Picquet (Wounded)
Garrisons
In March 1788, the Régiment de Dragons de la Reine moved to Laon in a newly built barracks, which, as new as it was, is assigned to it a merry-go-round, a quarry, and even a hospital. Dragoons are sworn to the nation and the King and Queen on August 1789. Becoming the 6e Régiment de Dragons early in 1792 and this time, after swearing loyalty to the nation, the law, administrators of the executive, to maintain the Constitution with all its strength, never to abandon its guiding principles, to observe the rules of discipline and to live free or to die, the regiment nevertheless left the city the following year for the campaigns of the French Revolution and the French Empire. Laon was later destroyed by bombing during World War I, only a pediment inscribed on historic monuments remains. From the end of the empire in 1815 until the Franco-Prussian War, the regiment was mobile throughout the metropolitan territory and changed garrison almost every two years. After the fall of the empire, the regiment was dissolved while garrisoned at Nîmes. It was reformed in 1816 in Haute-Saône under the name of Régiment de Dragons de la Loire. Before renaming back to the 6e Régiment de Dragons in 1825, the regiment was moved from Nancy, Charleville, Saint-Omer, Lille, and Verdun. It then passed through Lyon, Tours, Pontivy, Valenciennes, and Paris, where it took part in the riots of June 1832. It was continued to be moved through Dax, Limoges, Poitiers, Fonatinebleau, Sedan, Chalon-sur-Marne, Limoges, and Toul. In 1853, before leaving for the Crimea, it was stationed in Tarascon. After that, they were moved to Clermont-Ferran, back to Paris, Saint-Mihiel, Valenciennes, Lunéville, and Lyon. In 1870, the regiment was in Libourne, where they were at for a short time and then returned to Lyon. From this period, stability was established. From 1872 to 1880, the regiment was in Chambéry, where it had already been in between 1867 and 1869, where it concurred