27th Mountain Infantry Brigade (France)


The 27th Mountain Infantry Brigade is a mountain infantry formation of the French Army. The brigade is subordinated to the 1st Armored Division and specializes in mountain warfare.

History

The brigade is heir to the traditions of
  • the 1st Alpine Division French Forces of the Interior, created in September 1944
  • renamed the 27th Alpine Division and finally 27th Alpine Infantry Division in December 1944
  • the 27th Alpine Brigade in December 1962
  • the 27th Alpine Division in August 1976
  • the 27th division d'infanterie de montagne in July 1994.
With the end of conscription, all of the French Army's divisions were downsized and the 27th became a brigade in 1999.
After the liberation of the Combe de Savoie and the Grésivaudan, Colonel Jean Vallette d'Osia became the commander of the 1st Alpine Division of the French Forces of the Interior in September 1944, which unified the mountain units created in the French Resistance in the northern Alps. The unit, the first FFI division, was formed at the suggestion of Colonel Marcel Descour, the FFI commander in Lyon, and approved by General Jean [de Lattre de Tassigny]. Vallette d'Osia located his headquarters in Challes-les-Eaux. Charles de Gaulle reformed the 27th Alpine Infantry Division on 17 November 1944 under the command of General. The division, which became operational in January 1945, included the 5th Alpine Demi-Brigade under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Le Ray and the 7th Alpine Demi-Brigade under the command of Colonel De Galbert. Its 159th Infantry Regiment was sent to defend Strasbourg in the same month and did not return to the Alps until March. While the 27th was reorganized, the Alpine valleys were held by the 4th Moroccan Mountain Division, which rejoined the 1st Army on 17 November. The 4e DMM left behind its artillery, which was used to reform the 27th's 93rd Mountain Artillery Regiment.

After World War II

From 4 September 1945 the division replaced the 4th Moroccan Mountain Division in occupying Austria, under command of General Béthouart. The French occupation zone there disappeared on 26 October 1955.
From 1954 to 1962, they served in Algeria, especially in the mountains of Kabylia, led by General Faure. Some 1,000 Alpines were killed in Algeria.
In 1989 the division included the 27e Régiment de Commandement et de Soutien at Grenoble; the :fr:4e régiment de chasseurs, Gap ; the 6e Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins, Varces-Allières-et-Risset; the 7e Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins, Bourg-Saint-Maurice; the 11e Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins, Barcelonnette; the 13e Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins, Chambéry; the 27e Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins, Annecy; the 159e Régiment d'Infanterie Alpine, Briançon; the 93e Régiment d'Artillerie de Montagne, Varces, and the 7e Bataillon du Génie de division Alpine, Avignon.
Later, the "Alpins" of the 27th mountain infantry brigade intervened in Lebanon, Chad, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Ivory Coast and Afghanistan.
In 2016, the brigade was attached to the 1st Division.

Units

As of 2025, the brigade's units included:
  • 27 Brigade d’Infanterie de Montagne – 27th Mountain Infantry Brigade, in Grenoble
  • * 27 Compagnie de Commandement et de Transmissions de Montagne - 27th Mountain Command and Signals Company, in Varces
  • * 4 Régiment de Chasseurs - 4th Chasseurs Regiment, in Gap
  • * 7 Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins - 7th Mountain Infantry Battalion, in Varces
  • * 13 Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins - 13th Mountain Infantry Battalion, in Barby
  • * 27 Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins - 27th Mountain Infantry Battalion, in Cran-Gevrier
  • * Bataillon de Réserve des Alpes - Reserve Battalion of the Alps, in Grenoble
  • * 93 Régiment d'Artillerie de Montagne - 93rd Mountain Artillery Regiment, in Varces
  • * 2 Régiment Étranger de Génie - 2nd Foreign Engineer Regiment, in Saint-Christol
  • * 6 Groupement d'Instruction de Montagne - 6th Mountain Instruction Group, in Gap
  • * École militaire de haute montagne - High Mountain Military School, in Chamonix
  • ** Groupement d'Aguerrissement en Montagne - Mountain Acclimatization Grouping, in Modane