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・ I Corps (Belgium)
・ I Corps (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
・ I Corps (British India)
・ I Corps (Czechoslovakia)
・ I Corps (German Empire)
・ I Corps (Grande Armée)
・ I Corps (Hungary)
・ I Corps (India)
・ I Corps (North Korea)
・ I Corps (Ottoman Empire)
・ I Corps (Pakistan)
・ I Corps (Polish Armed Forces in the West)
・ I Corps (South Korea)
・ I Corps (South Vietnam)
・ I Corps (Union Army)
I Corps (United Kingdom)
・ I Corps (United States)
・ I Corps Observation Group
・ I Corrupt All Cops
・ I Corvi
・ I Could
・ I Could Be
・ I Could Be an Angle
・ I Could Be Persuaded
・ I Could Be So Good for You
・ I Could Be the One
・ I Could Be the One (Avicii and Nicky Romero song)
・ I Could Be the One (Stacie Orrico song)
・ I Could Be the Only One
・ I Could Be with Anyone


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I Corps (United Kingdom) : ウィキペディア英語版
I Corps (United Kingdom)

I Corps ("First Corps") was an army corps in existence as an active formation in the British Army for most of the 80 years from its creation in the First World War until the end of the Cold War, longer than any other corps. It had a short-lived precursor during the Waterloo Campaign.
==Napoleonic precursor==

Assembling an army in Belgium to fight Napoleon’s resurgent forces in the spring of 1815, the Duke of Wellington formed it into army corps, deliberately mixing units from the Anglo-Hanoverian, Dutch-Belgian and German contingents so that the weaker elements would be stiffened by more experienced or reliable troops. As he put it: ‘It was necessary to organize these troops in brigades, divisions, and corps d’armee with those better disciplined and more accustomed to war’.〔Hofschroer, ''Ligny and Quatre Bras'', p.109.〕 He placed I Corps under the command of the Prince of Orange and it was this corps that was first contacted by the advancing French at Quatre Bras on 16 June 1815. However, Wellington did not employ the corps as tactical entities, and continued his accustomed practice of issuing orders directly to divisional and lower commanders. When he drew up his army on the ridge at Waterloo, elements of the various corps were mixed up, and although he gave the Prince of Orange nominal command of the centre, that officer had different forces under him. Subsequent to the battle, the corps structure was re-established for the advance into France, I Corps being commanded by Maj-Gen Sir John Byng, the Prince of Orange having been wounded at Waterloo.〔Hofschroer, ''The German Victory'', p.201.〕

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