翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ 420
・ 420 (cannabis culture)
・ 420 (dinghy)
・ 420 (disambiguation)
・ 420 (Family Guy)
・ 420 (number)
・ 41st Annual Grammy Awards
・ 41st Armoured Regiment (India)
・ 41st Army (Russia)
・ 41st Army Corps (France)
・ 41st Bachsas Awards
・ 41st Battalion
・ 41st Battalion (French Canadian), CEF
・ 41st Battalion Iowa Volunteer Infantry
・ 41st Battalion Virginia Cavalry
41st Battalion, Royal New South Wales Regiment
・ 41st Berlin International Film Festival
・ 41st Bombardment Group
・ 41st Bombardment Squadron
・ 41st Bombardment Wing
・ 41st Brigade
・ 41st Brigade (United Kingdom)
・ 41st Brigade Royal Field Artillery
・ 41st British Academy Film Awards
・ 41st British Columbia general election
・ 41st Canadian Parliament
・ 41st Cavalry Division (Soviet Union)
・ 41st Century Splendid Man
・ 41st Chess Olympiad
・ 41st César Awards


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

41st Battalion, Royal New South Wales Regiment : ウィキペディア英語版
41st Battalion, Royal New South Wales Regiment

The 41st Battalion, Royal New South Wales Regiment, (41 RNSWR), is an infantry battalion of the Australian Army. A Reserve unit, it is one of four battalions of the Royal New South Wales Regiment and is attached to the 8th Brigade, 2nd Division. It is based in northern New South Wales, with its headquarters in Lismore and depots in a number of locations including Tweed Heads, Taree, Grafton, Kempsey, Port Macquarie and Coffs Harbour. In its present form the battalion was raised in 1965, however, it can trace its lineage back to a Scottish Rifles unit formed in 1899. It also perpetuates the battle honours and traditions of a battalion that served on the Western Front during the First World War.
==History==
41 RNSWR was formed in 1965 after the Australian Army ended its experiment with the Pentropic divisional structure which, in 1960, had seen the reorganisation of the previously existing regional Citizens Military Force (CMF) infantry battalions into company-sized elements within six new State-based regiments. The experiment was a failure and by 1965, the Army returned to the triangular divisional structure and the CMF was reorganised once more. In an effort to reinvigorate the regional ties that had been so important to the CMF, the Pentropic battalions were reduced and new battalions formed by re-raising a number of their subordinate companies to battalion strength and re-adopting historical numerical designations. As a part of this reorganisation, the Byron Scottish Company, which had been part of the 1st Battalion, Royal Queensland Regiment was expanded to form the 41st Battalion, Royal New South Wales Regiment, headquartered around Lismore on the northern New South Wales coast.〔
Drawing its lineage from the Byron Scottish Regiment, which had previously existed prior to the Pentropic restructure, 41 RNSWR's predecessor units can trace their history back to the Maclean Company Scottish Rifles which was formed in 1899. This unit went through a number of name changes during its early history, eventually becoming the 9th Infantry in 1912. In 1918, it was amalgamated with the 12th (Byron) Infantry to form the 2nd Battalion, 41st Infantry after the Citizens Force was reorganised to form multi-battalion Regiments which were numbered after units of the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) with which they had been associated.〔
In 1921, the decision was made to disband the AIF and to perpetuate its battle honours and traditions by reforming the Citizens Force along the same lines as the AIF, with the multi-battalion regiments being redesignated as separate battalions and adopting the unit colour patches and battle honours of the AIF. Consequently, the 2nd Battalion, 41st Infantry was redesignated as the 41st Battalion.〔
During the First World War, this battalion had been formed in February 1916 at Bell's Paddock in Brisbane, Queensland, with men drawn from Queensland and northern New South Wales. Attached to the 11th Brigade, 3rd Division, it took part in the fighting on the Western Front from November 1916 until the end of the war, during which time it took part in battles at Messines, Broodseinde, and Passchendaele in 1917. In early 1918, they took part in repulsing the German Spring Offensive, defending the railway near Amiens before taking part in the Allied Hundred Days Offensive which ultimately brought about an end to the war. The 41st Battalion's final involvement in the fighting came in early October when they took part in the joint Australian–US operation along the St Quentin Canal. It was out of the line resting when the armistice was signed in November 1918 and was disbanded in May 1919.〔 Losses during the war totalled 444 killed and 1,577 wounded.〔 One member of the battalion, Bernard Sidney Gordon, received the Victoria Cross. Other decorations included: one CMG, two DSOs, 13 MCs and three bars, 12 DCMs, 82 MMs and two bars, four MSMs, 26 MIDs and seven foreign awards.〔
In 1927, territorial designations were adopted and the battalion adopted the title 41st Battalion (The Byron Regiment). The motto ''Mors Ante Pudorem'' was also approved at this time.〔 In 1929, the compulsory training scheme was suspended by the Scullin Labor government, and this, combined with the economic hardships of the Great Depression led to a decline in the number of recruits. As a result, the battalion was amalgamated with the 2nd Battalion to form the 2nd/41st Battalion.〔 In 1933, these two units were delinked, however, the 41st Battalion was amalgamated with the 33rd Battalion to form the 33rd/41st Battalion. They remained linked until 1936 when tensions in Europe meant that the government decided to double the size of the Militia.
During the Second World War, the battalion served in a garrison role within Australia and did not see active service overseas, even though it was gazetted as an AIF battalion after the majority of its members volunteered to do so. In 1943, when the Australian Army began reallocating manpower resources, the battalion was amalgamated once more with the 2nd Battalion, forming the 41st/2nd Battalion.〔 They remained linked until December 1945 when the demobilisation process began and the unit was disbanded.〔
In 1948, the Citizens Military Force was re-raised, albeit on a limited scale. The 41st Battalion was re-formed at this time, adopting the title 41st Infantry Battalion (The Byron Regiment), however, the following year its title was changed to The Byron Scottish Regiment. This remained the state of affairs until 1960, when the Pentropic divisional structure was introduced and the battalion became 'E' (Byron Scottish) Company, 1st Battalion, Royal Queensland Regiment.〔 The unit remained part of that regiment until being reformed as a full battalion within the Royal New South Wales Regiment after 1965.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「41st Battalion, Royal New South Wales Regiment」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.