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#1
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"Fleur de Lys" badge ??
Hello
what is that badge who seems british ? thanks for answers cordially Didier |
#2
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Looks like one of those Cavalry arm badges that used to be worn by NCO scouts/recon soldiers. I don't have any so cannot confirm age or useage. There is one in the Cox book attributable to the Household Cavalry.
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#3
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Baden-Powell introduced a north point of the compass badge very much like this for soldiers he trained in military scouting, later to be adopted as a badge for the Boy Scouts he founded in 1908. I am apt to think of this as an early army badge for a 'Tradesman'
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#4
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It is listed in Edwards and Langley as 12 (A and B). They say it was used by Household Cavalry, Cavalry of the Line and Infantry.
In addition to the use mentioned above, this badge was used to identify scouts in infantry battalions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force.
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Res ipsa loquitur |
#5
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Hello Gentlemen
thanks for all explanations cordially Didier |
#6
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and expensive should you ever sell it.
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#7
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4 versions of this - 2 large and 2 small, one of each without the cross and one of each with the cross. The cross signifies that the holder is a corporal if memory serves correct.
These were indeed badges for Army Scouts and it was on these that Baden Powell based the Scout Badge. There is a really good article on this website (http://www.scoutingmilestones.co.uk) about how this badge became the badge used by boy scouts across the world. (Its also from this website that I took the image attached to this post illustrating the different variants of the badge). |
#8
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Scout
Also available in cloth
Tim
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"Manui dat cognitio vires - Knowledge gives strength to the arm" "Better to know it but not need it than to need it and not know it!" "Have more than thou showest, speak less than thou knowest." |
#9
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Thanks again Gentlemen
cordially Didier |
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