Flag List Pages

Saturday, 19 October 2024

Standards of the Danish 3rd Jyske Cavalry Regiment late 17th to early 18th Century

3rd Jyske Cavalry Regiment (Jutland)

First raised 1670 as 2nd Jyske Cavalry Regiment but split into 3rd and 4th in 1675.

Strength 8 staff officers and 6 companies in 2 squadrons with a total strength of 440 officers and men.

In the service of Great Britain and Holland 1701-1712. Served in the Great Northern War 1715-1716 in North Germany.

Service in the WSS:

1702: Siege and capture of Liège
1704: With Marlborough's Army; 13th August battle of Blenheim; sieges of Trarbach and Saarburg
1706: Distinguished service at the battle of Ramillies 23rd May; sieges of Antwerp, Ostend, Menin, Ath, Dendermonde and Oudenarde
1708: 11th July battle of Oudenarde
1709: Siege of Tournai; 11th September battle of Malplaquet
1713: Returned to Denmark

These standards carry the cipher of King Christian V, who ruled Denmark 1670-1699. It is known that standards with his cipher were carried well into the reign of his successor Frederick IV.

As the PNG version of this file was so very large (8.6 MBs) I have chosen this time to upload a JPEG version. Closely examining the two side by side I cannot see that the JPEG loses much, if any, detail but is a very much smaller file at only around 2 MBs.



And this was probably the uniform in the WSS:


6 comments:

  1. All of these recent Danish cavalry standards are simply marvelous!

    Kind Saturday Regards,

    Stokes

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Stokes! :-) I still have a sneaky feeling much of the detail is likely to be lost (damask background?) at the size these flags will be used, which is a little bit disappointing, but if printed at a high enough definition I hope they will look impressive enough!

      All the best,

      David.

      Delete
  2. More Danish loveliness David, very nice standards and a very useful regiment for wargaming.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Donnie. :-) Yes, it's good to see they served right through the big battles in Flanders, plus some of the GNW after too!

      All the best,

      David.

      Delete
  3. I really do like these Danish flags. I've printed stuff for 10mm on a very good quality laser printer at work some years ago, and was amazed at hoe much detail it could capture and thee crispness too.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Steve. :-) Yes, I do agree; laser printing is the way to go if possible for best results!

      All the best,

      David.

      Delete

Saturday 6th June 2020 I've decided to allow comments from Anonymous Users but I'll still be moderating posts, as I'm sure the spam will probably flood in now! We'll see...