Shoulder belt (military)

(Redirected from Cross belt)

In military uniforms, a shoulder belt is a wide belt worn usually over the shoulder and across the body. With nearly all line infantry, skirmishers, light infantry, grenadiers and guard regiments, two shoulder belts were worn - one carrying the cartridge box, and another for the bayonet, a sword ("sword belt" was also the term in this case), or other military equipment.[1]

Napoleon grenadiers featuring fully laden shoulder belts

A shoulder belt was worn in various configurations, depending on army and rank. For example, an officer may have only worn one shoulder belt as appropriate for only having a pistol. A light horseman may have also worn one shoulder belt, for their cartridge pouch.

Initially shoulder belts had buckles. In the second half of the 18th century the British army replaced buckles with shoulder belt plates. The latter ones were solid metal plates fixed with two studs to one end of the belt and used a hook to pass through one of several holes by the other end. This arrangement allowed for quick readjustment and a more neat appearance. Officers used to wear fancy gold and silver plates with elaborate engravings. Soldiers wore brass plates, usually with numerical or other design indicative of their regiment.[2]

Cross belt

edit
 
Reenactment of British infantry of 1815. Line infantry wear white cross belts with belt plates, with the officer on the right wearing a single shoulder belt to his left hip which carries his sabre's scabbard.

A cross belt is two connected straps worn across the body to distribute the weight of loads, carried at the hip, across the shoulders and trunk. It is similar to two shoulder belts joined with a single buckle at the center of the chest. The cross belt was predominantly used from the 1700s (American Revolutionary War) to the 1840s – they were not part of a soldier's equipment in the American Civil War and Anglo-Zulu War/First Boer War.

For most line infantry, skirmishers, light infantry, grenadiers and guard regiments during much of Europe's Age of Gunpowder, either a cross belt or two shoulder belts were worn.[citation needed] One configuration for the belts would be the cartridge box on the right hip and sword scabbard on the left. Such equipment would be attached to the belt at its lowest point, where it rests on the hip. Officers almost never carried muskets or rifles, so they typically wore only one shoulder belt, such as for the pistol cartridge box or for a sabre scabbard. As officers were often aristocratic and used many independent symbols for their family, rank, and command, their uniforms and gear organisation could be highly variable.[3]

For British infantry, the cross belt had a metal belt plate with the regiment of the soldier inscribed on it.[4]

Pouch belt

edit

From the early 1800s light cavalry officers in the British Army adopted the practice of wearing single belts across the chest and back, holding a pouch on the right hip.[5] The pouch was subsequently moved to the back and the leather belt was decorated with gold or silver braiding varying according to regimental practice. Officers of Rifle regiments also wore pouch-belts holding the unit distinctions and honours, which in other infantry appeared on flags.[6]

These ornamental pouch-belts continued to be worn as part of the officers' full dress of hussars, the Royal Engineers, and Rifles until 1939, and survive in the modern units descended from these regiments.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Edward Samuel Farrow, "Dictionary of Military Terms", Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1918, p. 555
  2. ^ William K. Emerson, "Encyclopedia of United States Army Insignia and Uniforms", 1996, ISBN 0806126221, p.29
  3. ^ "Infantry Tactics & Combat : Napoleonic Wars : Musket Fire : Bayonet".
  4. ^ "British and French Military Belt Plates (Crossbelt or Waistbelt) - Army Regiment".
  5. ^ Major R.M. Barnes, page 238, "A History of the Regiments & Uniforms of the British Army", Sphere Books 1972
  6. ^ Carman, W. Y. (1977). A Dictionary of Military Uniform. pp. 104–105. ISBN 0-684-15130-8.