
n.
An ornamental braided cord usually looped around the left shoulder of a uniform, sometimes awarded to an entire military unit.
[French, from fourrage, forage, from Old French forrage. See forage.]
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[French, from fourrage, forage, from Old French forrage. See forage.]
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The fourragère is a military award, distinguishing military units as a whole. The award has been firstly adopted by France, followed by other nations such as the Netherlands, Belgium and Portugal.
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As a regimental distinction the fourragère should not be confused with the aiguillette which was introduced by Napoleon I and which it closely resembles.
The modern fourragère of the French Army is awarded to all members of military units which have been awarded a mention in dispatches. It should not be confused with unit awards of particular decorations, where the medal itself is hung on the flag of the unit. For example, there are many units wearing the fourragère of the médaille militaire, whereas only six units wore the medal on their flags. See also the article dealing with the Croix de guerre.
During the First World War, the French Ministry of War first awarded the fourragère to units which had been recorded as distinguishing themselves more than once in the Orders of the Army. There were then six fourragères, depending on the numbers of Mentions in Dispatches awarded to the unit:
| Numbers of mentions | First and Second World Wars | Overseas Wars |
|---|---|---|
| 9,10 or 11 | Double, red (color of the légion d'honneur) and green with red stripes (colors of the croix de guerre 14-18) | not awarded |
| 6, 7 or 8 | Simple, red | Simple, red, with an olive red and blue (colors of the croix de guerre Overseas) |
| 4 or 5 | Simple, yellow with green stripes (colors of the médaille militaire) | Simple, yellow with green stripes, with an olive red and blue |
| 2 or 3 | Simple, green with red stripes | Simple, red and blue |
If a unit received this distinction in both the First and Second World Wars, its fourragère bears two olives, one for each conflict it earned mentions. These olives are different:
| numbers of mentions | First World War | Second World War |
|---|---|---|
| 9, 10 or 11 | half-red and half-green with red stripes, the two halves separated by a white ring | not awarded |
| 6, 7 or 8 | half-red and half-green with red stripes | not awarded |
| 4 or 5 | half-yellow with green stripes and half-green with red stripes | half-yellow with green stripes and half-red with green stripes |
| 2 or 3 | green with red stripes | red with green stripes |
During the Second World War, the medal of the Ordre de la Libération was awarded to the flags of 17 military units, whose members now wear a fourragère since June 18, 1996. This fourragère is considered the top unit award in the French military, as the ordre de la Libération award is seen to be more important than any mention in Dispatches.
Certain French military units wear combinations of fourragères, if they were mentioned in Orders in both one of the World War and an overseas (colonial) war. For example, the famous Foreign Legion regiment the 3rd Foreign Infantry wears a double fourragère red and green with red stripes (9 mentions during World War I), with an olive red with green stripes (3 mentions during World War II) and a fourragère yellow with green stripes, with an olive red and blue (5 mentions during Overseas Wars).
Fourragères used by the French Foreign Legion are:
The fourragère is normally worn by members of a unit awarded the decoration. When they leave the unit, they have to relinquish the fourragère. However members who took part personally in the actions leading to the award of the fourragère can continue to wear the fourragère, even after leaving the unit. They can only wear a fourragère corresponding to the number of actions they actually took part in. Thus, if a member of a 5-mentions regiment leaves but took part in only two mentioned actions, he can only wear the croix de guerre fourragère and not the médaille militaire fourragère.
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The most impressive set of fourragères : double fourragère of Légion d'honneur and Croix de guerre with olives of both WWI (9 mentions) and WWII (3 mentions) and fourragère of Médaille militaire with olive of TOE (4 mentions). Worn by members of 3 REI. |
The Belgian fourragère of 1940 was created by Prince Charles of Belgium, Regent of the Kingdom to honour certain military formations that distinguished themselves during the Second World War. It consists of three cords terminated by a knot and a metal tag, and is braided in red and green; the colours of the Belgian Croix de Guerre of 1940. The fourragère is in cotton for non-commissioned officers and soldiers and in silk for officers.
Portugal has three fourragères: the War Cross (red and blue), the Medal of Military Valour (blue and white) and the Order of the Tower and Sword (solid blue).
The Vietnam Gallantry Cross is the equivalent of the French Croix de Guerre. It was created by Decree No 74-b/Qt dated 15 August 1950 and Decree No 96/DQT/HC dated 2 May 1952. Both individuals (denoted by a star) and formations (denoted by a palm) cited for gallantry were awarded the decoration. Formations that were awarded the Gallantry Cross for two or more occasions were initially authorised to wear a fourragère.[2]
Fourragères are often worn as decorative items to liven up ceremonial uniforms in military, police, and cadet organisations. Members of the United States and Canadian 1st Special Service Force wore a red, white, and blue fourragère made out of parachute shroud lines. [3]
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