German panzergrenadier pioneers with a mine detector on the back of Panther tank - France, June 1944
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German panzergrenadier pioneers with a mine detector on the back of Panther tank - France, June 1944

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Bonaparte, First Consul, Distributes Swords of Honor to the Grenadiers of his Guard after the Battle of Marengo (June 14, 1800)
Artist: Antoine-Jean Gross (French, 1771-1835)
Date: 1803
Medium: Oil on canvas
Collection: Louvre Museum, Paris, France
Description
The painting depicts a troop review held on June 16, 1800 (27 Prairial, An VIII), at the camp in San Giuliano-Vecchio, where Napoleon distributed weapons of honor to the bravest soldiers of his Guard two days after the battle.
About the Artist: Antoine-Jean Gros (1771–1835) was a French painter who bridged Neoclassicism and Romanticism, renowned as the primary painter of the Napoleonic epic. His style evolved from dramatic, vibrant, and emotional propaganda scenes to stricter, restrained neoclassicism, characterized by strong color, intense light, and pioneering thematic elements that influenced Eugène Delacroix.
Swedish Officers of Life Grenadier Regiment and Grenadier Corps c.1813
Uniforms of the Napoleonic Wars in Colour 1796-1814, Illustrated by Jack Cassin Scott
Soldiers of the best Jean-Baptiste, my Bernabro
Foot Grenadier of the Imperial Guard
By Dmitry Slepushkin
Smith's Costumes: Week Seventeen
Welcome back to our exploration of Charles Hamilton Smith's Costumes of the Army of the British Empire, in which we'll be looking at a different print every week of the year.
This week we're looking at Grenadiers and Light Infantry of the 29th or Worcestershire Regiment of Infantry on Duty at Home. [1]
The 29th is quite an interesting regiment. Not only were they important to several Napoleonic War battles, but they played a key part in a seismic event in early American history.

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Grenadiers at the Kremlin, Moscow, Russia
Russian vintage postcard
"Enlist as a volunteer into the Grenadier regiment Feldherrnhalle." Period postcard (my collection)
A poem by Paul Muldoon
Bramleys, not Grenadiers
The apple trees are put up against a wall and shot at dawn. The bodies lie where they fall. These are Armagh Bramleys, not Grenadiers, given their russet tinge. That’s blood coming out of an ear. At the heart of the espalier is the stake to which the branches are bound with pantyhose to allow for a little give and take. The apple trees are put up against a wall almost as often as, in Gaelic football, Maghery is bested by the boys of Mullaghbawn. These are Armagh Bramleys, not Grenadiers for whom the thought of pruning shears will cause a twinge. At the heart of the espalier is the stake about which Grenadiers are known to bellyache. That’s blood coming out of a nose. The apple trees put up against a wall and shot at dawn are Armagh Bramleys, not Grenadiers, given their russet tinge. At the heart of the espalier is the stake to which the branches are bound with pantyhose?
Paul Muldoon
Paul Muldoon reads his poem.
Note: Armagh is now home to 4,000 acres of orchard. In 2012, the Armagh Bramley was awarded Protected Geographical Indication (PGI).