Papal Zouaves
{{Infobox military unit
| unit_name = Papal Zouaves
| native_name = Zuavi Pontifici
| image = Papal Zouave.jpg
| image_size = 200px
| caption = Papal Zouave {{circa}} 1865
| dates = January 1861 – September 1870
| country = {{flag|Papal States}}
| countries =
| allegiance = Pope Pius IX
| branch = Army
| type = Infantry
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| commander1 = Eugène Allet
| commander1_label = Commander
}}
The Papal Zouaves ({{langx|it|Zuavi Pontifici}}) were an infantry battalion (later regiment) dedicated to defending the Papal States. Named after the French zouave regiments, the {{lang|it|Zuavi Pontifici}} were mainly young men, unmarried and Catholic, who volunteered to assist Pope Pius IX in his struggle against the Italian unificationist Risorgimento.{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}}
Origin
The Zouaves evolved out of a unit formed by Louis Juchault de Lamoricière on 23 May 1860, the 'Company of Franco-Belgian Tirailleurs'.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=1}}{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}} The company was quickly increased to an 8-company battalion by amalgamating the Tirailleurs with another volunteer unit, the 'Crusaders of Cathelineau'.{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}}
On 1 January 1861 the unit was renamed the Papal Zouaves, after already proving themselves in 1860.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=2}}{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}} The name had been introduced by Xavier de Mérode.{{cite web|url=http://jcrao.freeshell.org/LastCrusade|title=The Last Crusade|first=John|last=Rao|author-link=John Rao|access-date=2010-08-09|archive-date=2010-07-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100713021026/http://jcrao.freeshell.org/LastCrusade|url-status=dead}} The Almoner was Mgr. Edouard de Woelmont.{{Cite web|title=WOELMONT Édouard de (1824-Namur, juillet 1870).|url=http://archives.wallonie.be/?id=recherche_grandpublic_detail&doc=accounts%2Fmnesys_spw%2Fdatas%2Fir%2FAvis%20n%C3%A9crologiques%20namurois%2FW%2Exml&page_ref=5179|access-date=12 December 2020|website=Site des Archives régionales Service public de Wallonie}}
Composition
The unit was commanded by the Swiss colonel Eugène Allet (1814–1878), from Leuk, who had previously served in the Pontifical Swiss Guard under Pope Gregory XVI.{{HDS|21236|Eugène Allet}} All orders were given in French.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=287}}
From 1867 to 1868, the Papal Zouaves increased their strength from that of a single battalion to a four-battalion regiment, each battalion having six active and one depot company.{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}}
Initially, the French and Belgian unit was mostly composed of young aristocrats and gentlemen.{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}} Later on, the unit was truly international, and by May 1868 numbered 4,592 men.{{cite journal|last1=Marraro|first1=Howard R.|year=1944–45|title=Canadian and American Zouaves in the Papal Army, 1868–1870|url=http://www.umanitoba.ca/colleges/st_pauls/ccha/Back%20Issues/CCHA1944-45/Marraro.pdf|journal=CCHA Report|volume=12|pages=83–102 at 83|access-date=July 26, 2014}} who cites the New York Herald for the numbers. A British volunteer, Joseph Powell, noted in his account of his service with the Papal Zouaves that at least three individuals of African descent and one person from China served in the Zouaves.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=287}}
class="wikitable sortable"
|+Composition of the regiment in May 1868 !Ethnicity of the people !{{Abbr|No.|Number}} of people |
Dutch
|1,910 |
French
|1,301 |
Belgians
|686 |
Italians (Romans and Pontifical subjects)
|157 |
Canadians
|135 |
Irish
|101 |
Germans (Prussians)
|87 |
English
|50 |
Spaniards
|32 |
Germans (beyond Prussia)
|22 |
Swiss
|19 |
Americans
|14 |
Italians (Neapolitans)
|14 |
Italians (Modenese)
|12 |
Poles
|12 |
Scots
|10 |
Austrians
|7 |
Portuguese
|6 |
Italians (Tuscans)
|6 |
Maltese
|3 |
Russians
|2 |
South Sea Islands
|1 |
India
|1 |
Africa
|1 |
Mexico
|1 |
Peru
|1 |
Circassia
|1 |
Between February 1868 and September 1870, the number of Canadian volunteers, mainly from the Francophone and majority Catholic province of Quebec, rose to seven contingents numbering some 500 men in total – with a contingent of 114 turning back to Canada because news had reached them of the surrender of the Papal States in September 1870.{{cite website |url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/zouaves |title=Zouaves |work=The Canadian Encyclopedia |access-date=July 26, 2014}}
Operational history
=Peacetime service=
In addition to involvement in the suppression of brigandage between 1864 and 1868, the Papal Zouaves were employed in humanitarian relief when a cholera epidemic devastated Albano during early 1867. All members of two companies of the 1st Battalion were decorated by Pope Pius IX for their work in burying the dead and tending to the infected.{{Sfn|Esposito|2011|p=155-156}}
=The Battle of Mentana=
One thousand five hundred Papal Zouaves assisted in the notable Franco-Papal victory at the Battle of Mentana, fought on 3 November 1867 between French-Papal troops and Italian volunteers led by Giuseppe Garibaldi.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=26}}
In his report to the Pope, the commander of the Papal forces, General Kanzler, praised the elan of the Zouaves, citing a determined bayonet charge as a particular example.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=28}}
The Zouaves suffered the brunt of the fighting, sustaining 81 casualties in the battle, including 24 killed (the Papal forces suffered only 30 dead in total) and 57 wounded.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=32}} The official French report of the battle prepared by the French commander, General de Failly, also cited the bravery of the Papal Zouaves.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=35-36}} The youngest victim, aged seventeen, was English Zouave Julian Watts-Russell.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=219}}
=Last days of the Papal States=
The Zouaves also played a role in the final engagements against the forces of the newly united Kingdom of Italy in September 1870, in which the Papal forces were outnumbered almost seven to one.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=260|ps=~Quoting the Evening Freeman, September 29, 1870.}} The Zouaves fought off enemy lancers on the 13th,{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=256}} withdrew with Papal artillery under heavy fire on the 20th{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=257}} and made preparations for a counterattack against the Italians before being told of the surrender at the Capture of Rome.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=259}}
Several Zouaves were executed or murdered by the Italian forces following the surrender, including a Belgian officer who refused to give up his sword.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=260|ps=~Quoting the Evening Freeman, September 29, 1870.}}{{Sfn|Villarrubia|2008|p=}}
Aftermath
File:1870._Catholic_French_Papal_Zouaves_fighting_for_France.png
After being disbanded, veterans of the Papal Zouaves fought on in other units, for example, on the side of the Carlists in the Third Carlist War and on the side of the French in the Franco-Prussian War.{{Sfn|Shann|1991|p=33}}
= Franco-Prussian War =
After the Capture of Rome by Victor Emmanuel in 1870, 760 French soldiers of the disbanded Papal Zouaves, led by Colonel de Charette, offered the French Government of National Defense their service.{{Sfn|Shann|1991|p=33}} They were renamed as {{lang|fr|Légion de Volontaires de l’Ouest}} (Legion of the Volunteers of the West){{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}} and, by 7 October 1870, the contingent, composed of 64 officers, 1,620 men, 80 cavalry, 80 gunners, was organised into:{{Sfn|Shann|1991|p=33}}
- three 6-company battalions, plus three depot companies
- squadron of mounted éclaireurs
- mountain battery
While retaining their grey and red Papal uniforms, the Zouaves fought the Prussians and their other German allies outside Orléans, with 15 killed or wounded between 11 and 12 October 1870, and also engaged the enemy at Patay.{{Sfn|Powell|1871|p=297}} Expanded to two battalions totalling about 1,800 men,{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=9}} the new force with its experienced core of former Papal Zouaves fought with distinction at the Battle of Loigny where the 2nd Battalion charged with the bayonet, losing 216 out of 300 men (18 officers and 198 men) while covering the retreating and shattered 16th Corps.{{Sfn|Shann|1991|p=33}} The {{lang|fr|Volontaires}} were armed with Chassepots and Remingtons.{{Sfn|Shann|1991|p=33}} The unit was disbanded after the entrance of Prussian troops into Paris.{{Citation needed|date=January 2021}}
= Third Carlist War =
Some Spanish Papal Zouaves fought on the Catalan Front as the Carlist Zouaves ({{Langx|es|Zuavos Carlistas}}), commanded by Alfonso de Borbón, the brother of the Carlist King Carlos VII, who asked him to enter the Catalan front, naming him General in Chief of the Zouaves. The Carlist Zouaves were also joined by many of the young aristocrats who previously fought side by side in Rome with the Infante Alfonso for the pontifical cause.{{Cite web|date=December 2009|title=The Zouaves in the Second Carlist War|url=https://zuaus.blogspot.com/2009/12/los-zuavos-en-la-segunda-guerra.html|language=es}}
Uniform
The Zouaves wore a similar style of uniform to that of the French Zouaves but in grey with red trim.{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}} A grey and red kepi was normally substituted for the North African fez, while a black busby with white plume was worn for parade dress.{{Sfn|Esposito|2018|p=8}}
File:Royal Belgian Army Museum 10.JPG|Medals of a Papal Zouave, blue original uniform in collections of the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces, Brussels
File:John Surratt.jpg|John Surratt in Papal Zouave uniform in Nantes, France, {{Circa|1866–1867|lk=no}}
File:Knötel III, 48.jpg|Papal Zouaves (individuals in grey)
File:Zouaven douwe matthijs walta.jpg|Douwe and Matthijs Walta from Workum, two Dutch Zouaves serving under Pope Pius IX in 1870
File:Zouave Pontifical.jpg|Jules Marie Deluen (1849–1918) in Papal Zouave uniform in Nantes, France
Monuments and mementos
There are a number of monuments to the Papal Zouaves, including a Dutch museum near the Oudenbosch Basilica,[http://www.zouavenmuseum.nl/ The Zouave museum] {{in lang|nl}} the Mass chapel in Rome's Capuchin Crypt and a monument in the Lateran.{{cite web|url=http://romanmiscellany.blogspot.com/2008/10/papal-zouaves.html|title=Roman Miscellany}}
The names of the 507 Canadian Papal Zouaves are engraved in gold letters on marble slabs in Montreal’s Mary, Queen of the World.{{Cite web|date=26 May 2017|title=Le dernier Zouave|trans-title=The last Zouave|url=https://diocesemontreal.org/fr/actualites/nouvelles/le-dernier-zouave|access-date=12 December 2020|website=Église catholique à Montréal|language=fr}} Also in Montreal, a miniature silver ship was hung from the ceiling of Our Lady of Succor chapel by Papal Zouaves as an ex-voto to thank the Virgin Mary after they escaped a shipwreck.{{Cite news|last=Sabbath|first=Lawrence|date=24 July 1988|title=Martyrs' Tales, Angels of Gold In Montreal|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1988/07/24/travel/martyrs-tales-angels-of-gold-in-montreal.html|access-date=12 December 2020}}
In popular culture
= Literature =
The Zouaves are mentioned in Victor Hugo's poem Mentana.{{cite web|title=Readbookonline.org|url=https://www.readbookonline.org/readOnLine/11983/|website=www.readbookonline.org}}
=Film=
A bombing of the Zouave barracks at Palazzo Serristori, Rome, is the start of the 1977 film In the Name of the Pope King.{{Cite web|title=In the Name of the Pope King (1977) Plot|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0076185/plotsummary?ref_=tt_ov_pl|access-date=12 December 2020|website=IMDb}}
See also
- Corps of Gendarmerie of Vatican City
- Military of Vatican City
- Pontifical Swiss Guard
- Swiss Guard
- John Surratt, fugitive son of executed Lincoln assassination conspirator Mary Surratt, who served in the Pontifical Zouaves
=Former Pontifical Guard Corps=
References
{{Reflist|2}}
Sources
=Books=
{{Refbegin|30em}}
- {{Cite book|last=Coulombe|first=Charles A.|url=https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/column/50434/the-popes-legion-the-multinational-fighting-force-that-defended-the-vatican|title=The Pope's Legion: The Multinational Fighting Force that Defended the Vatican|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|year=2008|isbn=9780230617568|location=New York|access-date=30 June 2019}}
- {{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/twoyearsinponti00powegoog|first1=Joseph|last1=Powell|title=Two Years in the Pontifical Zouaves|location=London|publisher=R. Washbourne|year=1871|access-date=27 July 2014}}
- {{Cite book|last=Esposito|first=Gabriele|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vNJjDwAAQBAJ|title=Armies of the Italian Wars of Unification 1848-70|year=2018|isbn=978-1-4728-2624-4|volume=2|publisher=Bloomsbury }}
- {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3j5DYgEACAAJ&q=The+Pope%27s+Soldiers.+A+Military+History+of+the+Modern+Vatican|last=Esposito|first=Gabriele|title=The Pope's Soldiers. A Military History of the Modern Vatican.|year=2011|publisher=University Press of Kansas |isbn=978-0-7006-1770-8}}
- {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J9wbDAAAQBAJ|last=Shann|first=Stephen|title=French Army 1870-71 Franco-Prussian War|publisher=Osprey Publishing|year=1991|isbn=978-1855321359|series=Men-at-Arms 237|volume=(2) Republican Troops}}
{{Refend}}
=Journals=
- {{cite journal |url=http://catholicism.org/the-popes-legion-the-multinational-fighting-force-that-defended-the-vatican-book-review.html |journal=Catholicism.org |title=The Pope's Legion: The Multinational Fighting Force That Defended The Vatican |first1=Eleonore |last1=Villarrubia |date=December 23, 2008 |access-date=27 July 2014}}
Further reading
- {{cite journal |last1=Bosman |first1=T.A. |last2=Stevens |first2=F. |title=Origine sociale et locale des zouaves pontificaux belges et hollandais |journal=Revue Belge d'Histoire Militaire |date=1980 |volume=23 |issue=8 |pages=699–712}}
- {{cite book |last1=Lorette |first1=J. |title=Actes du colloque d'histoire militaire belge (1830-1980). Bruxelles, 26-28 mars 1980 |date=1980 |publisher=Musée royal de l'armée |location=Brussels |pages=151–163 |chapter=Historiographie des Zouaves Pontificaux Belges, 1860-1980}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Military of the Papal States
Category:1861 establishments in the Papal States
Category:1870 disestablishments in the Papal States
Category:Multinational army units and formations
Category:Expatriate military units and formations
Category:Catholicism and politics
Category:1860s in military history