Hussars of Junín
Regimiento de Caballería «Glorioso Húsares de Junín» № 1 - Libertador del Perú
Members marching in Lima
Active1821–present
Country Peru
AllegiancePresident of Peru
Branch Peruvian Army
TypeCavalry
Size3 squads:[1]
  • 210 men
  • 140 horses
Part ofPeruvian Guard Legion
Garrison/HQLima
Motto(s)Honour and Loyalty (Spanish: Honor y Lealtad)
ColorsMaroon
March"Trompetas de Caballería"
Anniversaries18 August
6 August
EngagementsPeruvian War of Independence

Gran Colombia–Peru War

Salaverry-Santa Cruz War

  • Battle of Socabaya

War of the Confederation

1841 Bolivian–Peruvian War

Peruvian Civil War of 1856–1858

Chincha Islands War

War of the Pacific

Commanders
Current
commander
Cavalry Col. Carlos Fabricio Castro Ugarte
Notable
commanders
Antonio Gutiérrez de la Fuente
Pedro Benigno Raulet
William Miller
Federico de Brandsen
Antonio Placencia Romero
José Andrés Rázuri
Manuel Isidoro Suárez
Domingo Nieto
Ramón Castilla

The Hussars of Junín (Spanish: Húsares de Junín), officially the Cavalry Regiment "Glorious Hussars of Junín" № 1 Liberator of Peru (Spanish: Regimiento de Caballería «Glorioso Húsares de Junín» № 1 - Libertador del Perú), is a traditional light cavalry regiment of the Peruvian Army. Originally the 4th Squadron of the Peruvian Guard Legion, the unit was renamed in 1824 to its current name after its performance in the Battle of Junín.[2]

History

Origin

In July 1821, José de San Martín created on the basis of a squadron of the Army of the Andes, the Hussars of the General's Escort (Spanish: Húsares de la Escolta del General), which initially had sixty-four men under the command of French captain Pedro Benigno Raulet. This squadron was one of the first to enter Lima on 6 July 1821 and the one that accompanied the official delegation on the day of the Declaration of Independence of Peru. It was then incorporated into the troops besieging the Real Felipe Fortress until September of the same year, when its defenders capitulated.[3]

On 18 August 1821, the Peruvian Guard Legion was created with a decree by San Martín, composed of an infantry battalion, made up of six companies (one of grenadiers, one of jägers and four of riflemen), two squadrons of light cavalry and a flying artillery company. San Martín arranged for Captain Raulet's squadron to serve as the basis for the creation of the two squadrons of Hussars of the Peruvian Legion, which would be under the general command of Lieutenant Colonel Guillermo Miller.[4][5]

In 1822, these hussar squadrons gave rise to the Hussar Cavalry Regiment of the Peruvian Guard Legion with four squadrons of approximately one hundred men each. The fourth squadron of this unit was organized in Trujillo under the orders of Colonel Antonio Gutiérrez de la Fuente, with an initial force of one hundred and eight men.[2]

During the Second Intermedios campaign, the first three squadrons of the regiment were commanded by Colonel Federico de Brandsen. On the basis of the fourth squadron that had remained in the north of Peru in 1823, the Cuirassiers Regiment of Peru (Spanish: Regimiento Coraceros del Perú) was created, which, after being merged with the remains of the Hussars of the Guard in 1824, was renamed Hussars of Peru (Spanish: Húsares del Perú).[2]

In 1824, under the command of Colonel Antonio Placencia, the regiment took part in the Battle of Junín. In battle, the patriot army was forced to retreat in the face of an unforeseen royalist attack. The hussars decided to attack by surprise in the enemy rear, a decisive action that allowed the deployment of the patriotic troops to counterattack. Because of this, Simón Bolívar renamed the unit to its current name.[6] After its performance in the decisive Battle of Ayacucho, the unit obtained the title of Liberator of Peru (Spanish: Libertador del Perú), this time under the command of the Argentine commander Manuel Isidoro Suárez.[1][7]

War of the Pacific

During the War of the Pacific the unit participated in the campaigns of Tarapacá and Tacna, in October 1879, thirty-two hussars under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Belisario Suárez ventured behind the Chilean lines on a reconnaissance mission, obtaining in their retreat a victorious battle in Quillagua against Chilean cavalry. In November of the same year, a combined force of Peruvian and Bolivian hussars of about ninety men, which constituted the rearguard of the allied army, was destroyed by two squadrons of the Cazadores a Caballo regiment of the Chilean Army (one hundred and seventy-five men) perishing during the action its commander José Buenaventura Sepúlveda. In May 1880 a picket of hussars attacked a supply column of the Chilean army in the desert north of Tacna, capturing sixty mules loaded with water. During the Battle of Tacna, one hundred and six hussars fought as part of the allied cavalry, having fifty-three casualties during the action, including their second and third commanders.[8]

20th century

In February 1987, then President Alan García ordered that a "Peruvian character" be given to the presidential guard, which since 1904 had been made up of the "Mariscal Domingo Nieto" Cavalry Regiment, which had uniforms he considered to be similar to the ones used by the French Republican Guard.[1] As a result, the Hussars of Junín became the new presidential escort until 2012, when the former regiment was reinstated as the presidential escort and the latter returned to Army Education and Doctrine Command in Chorrillos.[9]

In 3 June 1989, during the intensification of subversive actions in Lima, the unit suffered a terrorist attack while being transported on a bus to the Government Palace on the street of the same name. Seven soldiers died, and another sixteen were wounded, in addition to six civilians being wounded.[10]

21st century

The Hussars of Junín regiment is composed of 4 squadrons, and its uniform differs from its original English-inspired design by Guillermo Miller.[11]

The unit's guard mounting ceremony was declared part of the national heritage of Peru in 2010.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Vadillo Vila, José (5 August 2010). "Reconocimiento de guardia" [Guard recognition]. El Peruano (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Húsares de Junín changing of the guard to be declared national cultural heritage". Andina. Lima. 5 August 2010. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  3. ""Jubilan" a los Húsares de Junín" [The Hussars of Junín are “retired”]. RPP Noticias (in Spanish). 22 January 2007. Archived from the original on 12 January 2008. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  4. Ayma Ayma, Diego (18 August 2021). "Legión Peruana de la Guardia, la unidad militar que dio origen al Ejército del Perú" [Peruvian Guard Legion, the military unit that gave rise to the Army of Peru]. RPP Noticias (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  5. "Historia de los 21 cañonazos por la Independencia del Perú" [History of the 21 cannon shots for the Independence of Peru] (in Spanish). Congress of Peru. 28 July 2015. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  6. Cobilich Portocarrero, Carlos (1969). "Las batallas de Junín y Ayacucho vistas en 1968" [The battles of Junín and Ayacucho seen in 1968]. Revista del Centro de Estudios Histórico-Militares del Perú (in Spanish). Centro de Estudios Histórico-Militares del Perú. 18: 82–83.
  7. Instituto Libertador Ramón Castilla Magazine (10–11): p. 67.
  8. Paz Soldán, Mariano Felipe (1884). Narración histórica de la guerra de Chile contra el Perú y Bolivia [Historical narrative of Chile's war against Peru and Bolivia] (in Spanish). Vol. III. Buenos Aires: Impr. y libr. de Mayo. p. 263.
  9. "Resolución Ministerial que aprueba la activación de Regimiento de Caballería "Mariscal Domingo Nieto"" [Ministerial Resolution approving the activation of the "Mariscal Domingo Nieto" Cavalry Regiment] (in Spanish). Peruvian Army. 12 February 2012. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  10. Batalla, Carlos (3 June 2019). "A 30 años del brutal atentado terrorista contra la escolta "Húsares de Junín"" [30 years after the brutal terrorist attack against the escort "Hussars of Junín"]. El Comercio (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  11. Medina Montoya, Lourdes; Mendoza Policarpo, Roberto; Parodi Guffanti, Rodolfo (2005). Oficina de Información del Ejército del Perú (ed.). Evolución histórica de los uniformes del ejército del Perú: 1821-1980. Lima: Comisión Permanente de Historia del Ejército del Perú.
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