- by A.K.O. dd 24 January 1899: the IR87 and IR88 of Nassau received the banderoles: respectively:
-"La Belle Alliance” and - "La Belle Alliance”-“Mesa de Ibor"-Medellin". These units were integrated in Napoleon's Army and contributed to two important victories: Mesa de Ibor and Medellin. Although Kaiser Wilhelm II was not really friends with the French, he did not hesitate to reward both Regiments these banderoles.
Maréchal Victor; Commander of the first Army Corps; was supposed to enter Portugal at the same time as Maréchal Soult. But General Cuesta had cut off the main access by blowing up the Almaras bridge. By doing so; the Spaniards were master of the left bank of the Tagus river.
-The morning of March 17th 1809: General Leval’s Division-to which the Regiments of Nassau belonged-attacked the enemy by the village of Mesa de Ibor; 200 km south of Madrid. Maréchal Victor’s troops storm down the steep bank to the Ibor river and crossed the river under the fire of the Spaniards. This achievement will enable the French troops to cross the Tagus river.
-28 March 1809-the Battle of Medellin:-Yet another bloody episode in the Peninsular War.
-The French troops; under command of Maréchal Victor and the Spaniards under General Cuesta met in Medellin. The Centre of the French Army occupied the main road that leads to Medellin, while the wings-commanded by Lasalle (on the left) and La Tour-Maubourg (on the right) are deployed much further to the South and to the South-East. Each wing is composed of a Cavalry Division and two Infantry Bns; grouping German soldiers of the Rheinbund-from various regions. Including the units of Nassau; that are to form the future IR88.
La Belle Alliance recalls the Battle of Waterloo.
-It is the name of an inn-South of Brussels-that had no importance in the battle and never was part of any fight. The morning of June 18th 1815: This inn then happened to be in the centre of the French deployment .
-At the end of the hostilities Wellington and Blücher met at the Inn "La Belle Alliance"; in this way; symbolically marking the Allied Victory. The Prussians immediately understood this extraordinary coincidence: this name: "La Belle Alliance" and the political and military situation leading to the fall of the Napoleonic Empire.
Blücher insisted in using “La Belle Alliance” when refering to the "Battle of Waterloo"
from Uniformes HS Nr 31
Francis