A Stunning, Demi-Shabraque Of An Officer Of The British Monarch, Her Late Most Beloved Majesty Queen Elizabeth IInd Mounted Bodyguard of the Household Cavalry The Horse Guards. Post 1953 With 19 Battle Honours Up to 1991 A Stunning, Demi-Shabraque Of An Officer Of The British Monarch, Her Late Most Beloved Majesty Queen Elizabeth IInd Mounted Bodyguard of the Household Cavalry The Horse Guards. Post 1953 With 19 Battle Honours Up to 1991 A Stunning, Demi-Shabraque Of An Officer Of The British Monarch, Her Late Most Beloved Majesty Queen Elizabeth IInd Mounted Bodyguard of the Household Cavalry The Horse Guards. Post 1953 With 19 Battle Honours Up to 1991 A Stunning, Demi-Shabraque Of An Officer Of The British Monarch, Her Late Most Beloved Majesty Queen Elizabeth IInd Mounted Bodyguard of the Household Cavalry The Horse Guards. Post 1953 With 19 Battle Honours Up to 1991 A Stunning, Demi-Shabraque Of An Officer Of The British Monarch, Her Late Most Beloved Majesty Queen Elizabeth IInd Mounted Bodyguard of the Household Cavalry The Horse Guards. Post 1953 With 19 Battle Honours Up to 1991 A Stunning, Demi-Shabraque Of An Officer Of The British Monarch, Her Late Most Beloved Majesty Queen Elizabeth IInd Mounted Bodyguard of the Household Cavalry The Horse Guards. Post 1953 With 19 Battle Honours Up to 1991 A Stunning, Demi-Shabraque Of An Officer Of The British Monarch, Her Late Most Beloved Majesty Queen Elizabeth IInd Mounted Bodyguard of the Household Cavalry The Horse Guards. Post 1953 With 19 Battle Honours Up to 1991

A Stunning, Demi-Shabraque Of An Officer Of The British Monarch, Her Late Most Beloved Majesty Queen Elizabeth IInd Mounted Bodyguard of the Household Cavalry The Horse Guards. Post 1953 With 19 Battle Honours Up to 1991

With the regiments Garter Star, the lion surmounted the Queen's Crown {the Imperial State Crown}, with 19 battle honours around and below. All in the finest gold and silver bullion, on a garnet cloth with a wide bullion trim with embossed oak leaves of the mounts fore-quarter shabraque.

A post 1953 shabraque, with battle honours up to 1991.

This shabraque would look amazing bespoke framed

The Household Cavalry is classed as a corps in its own right, and consists of two regiments: The Life Guards and The Blues and Royals (Royal Horse Guards and 1st Dragoons). They are the senior regular regiments in the British Army, with traditions dating from 1660, and act as the King's personal bodyguard. They are the cavalry element of the guards regiments and, with the five foot guard regiments, constitute the seven guards regiments of the Household Division.

A shabrack or shabraque is a saddlecloth, formerly used by European light cavalry.

The shabraque was an accoutrement of the hussar cavalry, based on the Hungarian horsemen in Austrian service who were widely imitated in European armies in the 18th and 19th centuries. The shabraque was a large cloth which in its original form, covered the Hungarian-style saddle, and was itself surmounted by a sheep or goat skin.

Made of Sheep or Goat skin, The Shabrack was a common Military article during The Napoleonic Wars, used by both The French, their Allies and by The English and theirs. Traditionally, Royal Regiments bore their Monarch's Signet – often embroidered in Silver or Gold Thread.

By the end of the 19th Century and into the 20th, Shabracks (when found), were used solely by Officers of various Elite Cavalry Units (such as those found today on Great Britain). Variations were used by both American and Confederate Officers during The American Civil War. Today, in The American Army, The Shabrack is most commonly used for Funeral Processions known as The ''Fallen Rider''.

The corners of the shabraque were rounded at the front and elongated into long points at the rear. It could be elaborately decorated with a contrasting border and a royal cypher or regimental crest. It was often discarded while on active service and by the start of the 20th century, was confined to ceremonial use; in the British Army, it is used by the Household Cavalry and by General Staff officers.

Code: 25510

950.00 GBP