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unusual facts about standing army


Career Soldiers

Standing army, an army composed of full-time professional soldiers who do not disband during times of peace.


John George III, Elector of Saxony

After his accession as Elector, he reduced the size of the royal household and began with the establishment of a small standing army of 12,000 men, after the model of the Margraviate of Brandenburg and managed to extract from the states of the realm a commitment to contribute funds.

John Plunkett, 3rd Baron of Dunsany

In 1474 he was a founder member of the Brotherhood of Saint George, a short-lived military guild which was charged with the defence of the Pale (the part of Ireland under secure English control), and which was for some years the only English standing army in Ireland.


see also

Captaincy General of Chile

The Spanish Empire had to divert silver from Potosí to finance a standing army in Chile to fight in the Arauco War.

Cavalry regiments of the British Army

The British Army, in the modern sense of the standing army under the Crown, was formed following the Restoration of King Charles II in 1661.

Continental Army

However the United States military realised it needed a well-trained standing army following St. Clair's Defeat on November 4, 1791, when a force led by General Arthur St. Clair was almost entirely wiped out by the Western Confederacy near Fort Recovery, Ohio.

Jackson Johonnet

The Northwest Territory was rendered unsafe for settlement, and President George Washington and Congress were endeavoring to increase the standing army and provide for defense of the frontier.

Non-Permanent Active Militia

The NPAM (also called "the Militia" though that term could also encompass the full-time standing army known as the Permanent Active Militia (PAM)) was composed of several dozen infantry battalions (redesignated as regiments in 1900) and cavalry regiments.

Sir Thomas Burnett, 3rd Baronet

He opposed the proposal of making an addition to the standing army, which parliament adopted; and in the same parliament, during the discussions regarding the colony of New Caledonia in Darién Province, when the question was raised whether the Company's right should be made the subject of an address to the King or of an Act of Parliament, and the former alternative was carried by a majority of 108 to 84, Sir Thomas Burnett was one of the dissenters and protestors.