cuirassier - meaning and definition. What is cuirassier
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What (who) is cuirassier - definition

TYPE OF CAVALRY FIRST APPEARING IN LATE 15TH-CENTURY EUROPE
Cuirassiers; Cuirasser; Curiasseurs
  • Italian [[corazzieri]] during a public event, 2006
  • The charge of the French cuirassiers at the [[Battle of Waterloo]] against a British infantry square.
  • French cuirassiers in Paris, August 1914. These regiments wore cloth-covered cuirasses and helmets during the early months of [[World War I]].<ref>Louis Delperier, ''Les Cuirassiers 1845-1918'', 1981, pp. 60-67</ref>
  • French cuirassier (1809)
  • Cuirassiers giving fire with their pistols (cuirassiers of [[Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim]])
  • A pair of long-barrelled wheel-lock pistols, the primary weapon of the early cuirassier
  • Captain of Her Majesty's Lifeguard Cuirassier Regiment in winter uniform. Krasnoe Selo, Russian Empire, 1892.

cuirassier         
[?kw?r?'si:?]
¦ noun historical a cavalry soldier wearing a cuirass.
Origin
C16: Fr.
Cuirassier         
·noun A soldier armed with a cuirass.
II. Cuirassier ·add. ·noun In modern armies, a soldier of the heaviest cavalry, wearing a cuirass only when in full dress.
Cuirassier         
Cuirassiers (; ) were cavalry equipped with a cuirass, sword, and pistols. Cuirassiers first appeared in mid-to-late 16th century Europe as a result of armoured cavalry, such as men-at-arms and demi-lancers, discarding their lances and adopting the use of pistols as their primary weapon.

Wikipedia

Cuirassier

Cuirassiers (; from French cuirassier [kɥiʁasje]) were cavalry equipped with a cuirass, sword, and pistols. Cuirassiers first appeared in mid-to-late 16th century Europe as a result of armoured cavalry, such as men-at-arms and demi-lancers, discarding their lances and adopting the use of pistols as their primary weapon. In the later part of the 17th century the cuirassier lost his limb armour and subsequently wore only the cuirass (breastplate and backplate), and sometimes a helmet. By this time, the sword or sabre had become his primary weapon, with pistols relegated to a secondary function.

Cuirassiers achieved increased prominence during the Napoleonic Wars and were last fielded in the opening stages of World War I (1914-1918). A number of countries continue to use cuirassiers as ceremonial troops.

The French term cuirassier means "one with a cuirass" (French: cuirasse), the breastplate armour which they wore.