Sacred Squadron (France)


The Sacred Squadron was an cavalry unit which served briefly in the French Grande Armée during the final stage of the Emperor Napoleon's retreat from Moscow in 1812. It was remarkable in that it consisted - out of military necessity - entirely of officers, with those below the rank of colonel serving as troopers.
The Sacred Squadron was formed on 23 November 1812, by the Bobr River to serve as Napoleon's bodyguard. It was disbanded on 10 December 1812, in Kowno. It therefore served during the crossing of the Berezina, and continued to exist for a few days after Napoleon's departure for Paris on 5 December.
Its existence is recorded in the, by which Napoleon hinted to the French people for the first time the scale of the disaster which had befallen the Grande Armée:
French soldiers had earlier coined the phrase "mentir comme un Bulletin". The French populace - and government officials - may have been able to read between the lines for the implications of, if not fully to comprehend, what had happened. The Grande Armée had invaded Russia with 80,000 cavalry.
No written order establishing the unit has been found; it is possible that it was set up orally. No official record of those who served in it has survived; considering the circumstances, it is possible that none was ever made, or that the records of Marshal Berthier were lost during the retreat. Other sources give lower numbers than Napoleon's 600: Chandler says 500.
In addition to its commander Général de division Grouchy, the following are said to have served with the Sacred Squadron: