
| |
SCW: Moroccan Painting Guide (Nationalist)
There appear to have been three types of
Moroccan units:
-
Regulares,
both Infantry & Cavalry
-
Tiradores de Ifni
(literally Riflemen of Ifni)
-
Mehal-la Jalifianas (Military
Police)
Use descriptions from the Nationalist
Service uniform except for the items below.
Figures A1, A2, and A3 in Turnball
(1978) show officers and men of Moroccan units.
Note: A1 is from the Tiradores de Ifni, the others from Regulares.
General Painting Guide
There were only minor differences
between the the three troop types.
|
Item
|
Regulares
|
Tiradores de Ifni
|
Mehal-la Jalifianas
|
|
Boots (if worn), Straps, pouches, large belt wallet
|
Brown leather
|
Early Tiradores:
Brown leather
Late Tiradores:
Black leather
|
Brown leather
|
|
European Officer’s fore-and-aft forage cap (if worn)
|
Band around bottom: Lentil coloured (Coat D'arms 228 Buff)
Crown and tassel: distinctive colour of the unit
Piping: gold.
|
Band around bottom: Red
Crown and tassel: green
Piping: gold
Rank
and service badges: green (in the usual places)
|
|
European Officer’s peaked cap (if worn)
|
Red crown, piped gold with a gold chinstrap, Lentil coloured band, and cloth-covered peak, also lentil coloured (Coat D'arms 228 Buff). Badge of service appeared on the crown at the front, and the rank device appeared below it on the band.
|
Early Tiradores:
Red crown, piped gold with a gold chinstrap, green band, and brown
leather peak. Badge of service appeared on the crown at the front, and the
rank device appeared below it on the band.
Late Tiradores:
Bright blue crown, piped gold with a gold chinstrap, green band, and
brown leather peak. Badge of
service appeared on the crown at the front, and the rank device appeared below
it on the band.
|
Green crown, piped gold with a gold
chinstrap, red band, and black leather peak.
Badge of service appeared on the crown at the front, and the rank device
appeared below it on the band.
|
|
Branch-of-service badge
|
Regulares Infantry: Group number on a silver crescent superimposed on crossed gold rifles (see
Bueno, 1971, inset on page IX).
Regulares Cavalry: Group number on a silver crescent superimposed on crossed silver lances (see
Bueno, 1971, inset on page XIII).
|
Five-point star in gold above a silver
crescent.
|
Six-point star in gold with Arabic
lettering in the centre (see Bueno, 1971, inset on page XVI).
|
|
Skin colour (their own)
|
Most officers were European (pale), and all men were Moroccan (brown). A few junior officers were Moroccan (brown).
|
|
Turban (“rexa”) (if worn)
|
Usually white, but could be greenish-tinged khaki (Cote D'arms 528 Russian Brown)
or lentil coloured (Coat D'arms 228 Buff). All colours could appear in the same unit.
|
|
Fez (“tarbouch”) (if worn)
|
Typically Red, but could be greenish-tinged khaki (Cote D'arms 528 Russian Brown). Branch-of-service badge on front. Both Red or khaki would have been found in the same unit. Officers had a rank badge below the branch-of-service badge.
(All Native officers wore the fez, plus some European officers.)
|
|
European Officer’s Cloak (if worn or rolled on back of saddle)
|
Bright azure blue.
|
|
Rank devices
|
Galleta were in the distinctive colour of the unit, but otherwise as per Nationalist Infantry, eg for a Corporal the 3 bars, chevrons, or diagonals are red.
|
|
Military overcoat/cape (“capote”) (if worn)
|
greenish-tinged khaki (Cote D'arms 528 Russian Brown)
|
|
Chilaba, Moorish poncho-cape () (if worn)
|
(A distinctive cape with a large pointed hood called a “djellaba” in
English.)
Service issue chilaba were greenish-tinged khaki (Cote D'arms 528 Russian Brown), but most would have been
striped in tribal colours (eg brown with white stripes). All were piped in the distinctive colour of the unit, and had intricate Moorish designs on the back.
|
|
Long Military Tunic (if worn)
|
Lentil coloured (Coat D'arms 228 Buff) with brown buttons. Tunic had branch-of-service and ranking devices in the usual places.
|
|
Short Military Tunic (if worn)
|
greenish-tinged khaki (Cote D'arms 528 Russian Brown)
|
|
Shirt (if seen)
|
Cream coloured (Coat D'arms 233 Linen).
|
|
Trousers
|
Lentil coloured (Coat D'arms 228 Buff).
|
|
Waist Sash (if worn)
|
Distinctive unit colour
|
|
Puttees (if worn)
|
greenish-tinged khaki (Cote D'arms 528 Russian Brown) (most common), sandy yellow
(I used (Coat D'arms 228 Buff) or blue. Any could appear in the same unit.
|
|
Bayonet sheath
|
Black with bronze fittings.
|
|
Shoes (if worn)
|
White canvas.
|
Distinctive unit colours:
Each Moroccan unit had a distinctive
colour for their waist sash and for the officer’s Galletas (patch on their
left breast). (It would seem only
the Infantry Regulares used waist sashes – I haven’t found illustrations of
Cavalry, Tiradores of Ifni, or Mehal-la Jalifianas with sashes.)
|
Unit Name
|
Colour
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Tetuan no. 1
|
Red
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Melilla no.
2
|
Blue
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Ceuta no. 3
|
Green
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Larache no.
4
|
Dark blue
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Alhucemas
no. 5
|
Dark red
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Xauen no. 6
|
?
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Llano
Amerillo no. 7
|
?
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Rif no. 8
|
?
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Arcila no. 9
|
?
|
|
Grupo de Regulares de Bab-Tazza
no. 10
|
?
|
|
Early Tiradores de Ifni
|
Red
|
|
Late Tiradores de Ifni
|
Bright Blue
|
|
Mehal-la Jalifianas
|
Green
|
Typical Illustrations
Typical uniforms are given by the
following illustrations:
|
Unit
|
Rank
|
Period
|
Illustration
|
|
Regulares
|
Private
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 31
|
|
Regulares de Melilla
|
Private
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 30
|
|
Regulares de Larache no. 5
|
Private
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 32
|
|
Regulares de Larache no. 4
|
Corporal
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 29
|
|
Regulares
|
Sergeant
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 28
|
|
Regulares
|
Second Lieutenant (provisional)
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 27
|
|
Regulares de Ceuta no. 3
|
Lieutenant
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 25
|
|
Regulares de Melilla no. 2
|
Captain
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 26
|
|
Regulares of a Cavalry Tabor
|
Private
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 36
|
|
Regulares of a Cavalry Tabor
|
Lieutenant
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 35
|
|
Mehal-la Jalifianas
|
Askari
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 43, 45
|
|
Mehal-la Jalifianas
|
Kaid ??
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 42
|
|
Mehal-la Jalifianas
|
Major
|
|
Bueno, 1971, fig. 38
|
|