To deal with the uprising in a hurry, the 15th and 26th Line Infantry Regiments, based in the Loire were to be used. In addition, the 47th Line Regiment, a battalion of the 14th Line Regiment in Orléans, a brigade of Young Guard skirmishers, two artillery batteries, and some 400 local militia were also detached. The force would later be reinforced by the 3rd and 4th battalions of the 14th, 43rd, 65th, and 82nd Line regiments, the 4th and 5th squadrons of the 12th, 16th Dragoons, and the 2nd Hussars, and 13th Chasseurs. These units now formed the Corps of Observation of the Vendée.[1]
Shortly after arriving in the area and its headquarters established, the Vendée Military Division–a regional military district–then sent additional reinforcements, consisting of the 82nd Line Infantry and a battalion of the 15th Line. Shortly after, two new divisions of National Guardsmen were formed in Angers and Niort, where they were joined by 1,000 gendarmes to help police the countryside.[1] The National Guard divisions were provided by the 12th (Charente-Inferieure, Vendée, Loire Inferieure, Deux-Sèvres, and Vienne), 13th (Finistère, Côtes-du-Nord, Ille-et-Vilaine, and Morbihan), and 20th Military Divisions (Corrèze, Dordogne, Lot-et-Garonne, Lot, and Charente) (Districts).[4][5]
During the Vendéen Revolt, the corps consisted of two divisions, and after 11 June was expanded by 3,000 men, and by the 17th the corps was expanded into the 'Army of the West' (Armée d'Ouest), though also known as the Army of the Vendee (Armée de la Vendée) consisting of 6,000 men.[1][6][7][8] The army was further expanded with reinforcements arriving with a division from Toulouse, a division from Bordeaux, and around 4,000 gendarmes. By this time, the army consists of 24,000 men.[9]
Following the end of the war, the army was reorganised into the 'Royal Army of Vendee' within the new French Royal Army.
Organisation
A 'Corps of Observation' doesn't have any modern equivalent, but during the Napoleonic Wars these Corps were used by the Imperial Army many times. These 'Corps' usually consisted of either one small division, or at max two large corps, being grouped into a 'Regional Army'. The purpose of these corps, throughout the war, was to provide a modern equivalent of border reconnaissance, reporting back to reserve units on enemy movements. These corps could then quickly move and mobilise local units to provide a rearguard till further reinforcements could arrive.[6]
Order of Battle
The below organisation is for the corps after its expansion to an army:[1][7][10]
Smith, Digby (2000). Napoleon's Regiments: Battle Histories of the Regiments of the French Army, 1792–1815. London, United Kingdom: Greenhill Books. ISBN978-1853674136. OCLC43787649.
Smith, Digby (2006). An illustrated encyclopedia of uniforms of the Napoleonic wars : an expert, in-depth reference to the officers and soldiers of the revolutionary and Napoleonic period, 1792-1815. London Lanham, Md: Lorenz North American agent/distributor, National Book Network. ISBN978-0-7548-1571-6. OCLC60320422.
Muret, M. Théodore (1848). Historie des Guerres de L'Ouest: Vendée et Chouannerie (1792–1815). Paris, Kingdom of France: La Libraire, Palais-Royal.
de Vaudoncourt, Guillaume (1826). Historie des Campagnes de 1814 et 1815, en France: Tome Troisième. Paris, Kingdom of France: Le Palais-Royal.
de Vaudoncourt, Guillaume (1826). Historie des Campagnes de 1814 et 1815, en France: Tome Quatrième. Paris, Kingdom of France: Le Palais-Royal.