“Jager”, meaning “Hunter”, was a term popularized by the efficient use of German states of the period of hunters and foresters, and militia derived from them, as skirmishers and light infantry. Some would have used rifles, others would have simply been in loose formation and good shots with a smoothbore, depending on the polity and unit. The use of the term spread beyond the German states, due to the efficiency and reputation of German Jager units.
Something like that. The notion of modern sniping, including consistent concealment, was not known, and “sniping” in the sense of targeting specific figures at long distance was fairly new at this point - long rifles in the American Revolution ~20 years before had shocked Britain into forming their own experimental rifle corps, which practiced similar techniques - but more generally that good marksmen are wasted in the “Stand in the line and fire” style needed for most idiots to hit the literal broad side of a barn.
The advantage of such light infantry and skirmisher marksmen is that, by deploying ahead of the main force in loose formation, they’re too few and too spaced apart for the enemy lines to bother wasting a volley on (or if they do stop and fire a volley, far fewer skirmishers are killed than line-infantry would be, and a lot of the enemy’s maneuvering time is wasted), but the skirmishers can still inflict casualties on the rank-and-file due to their excellent marksmanship.
WTF is that Russian “Jager” helmet
What’s a “Jager” in this context, anyway?
mine is bigger than yours
“Jager”, meaning “Hunter”, was a term popularized by the efficient use of German states of the period of hunters and foresters, and militia derived from them, as skirmishers and light infantry. Some would have used rifles, others would have simply been in loose formation and good shots with a smoothbore, depending on the polity and unit. The use of the term spread beyond the German states, due to the efficiency and reputation of German Jager units.
Just FIY, a is an entirely different letter than ä. If no ä is available, you can write it as ae (Jaeger). Same for ö and ü.
dear Pügjesüs, don’t neglect the Ä in Jäger
it’s sad and lonely without its dots
Sorry, I’m an American, my attention span is too short to remember the keyboard shortcuts for diacritics.
Would that be like a sniper unit, to the extend that the technology of the time permitted sniping? Like a unit with greater firing range than usual?
Something like that. The notion of modern sniping, including consistent concealment, was not known, and “sniping” in the sense of targeting specific figures at long distance was fairly new at this point - long rifles in the American Revolution ~20 years before had shocked Britain into forming their own experimental rifle corps, which practiced similar techniques - but more generally that good marksmen are wasted in the “Stand in the line and fire” style needed for most idiots to hit the literal broad side of a barn.
The advantage of such light infantry and skirmisher marksmen is that, by deploying ahead of the main force in loose formation, they’re too few and too spaced apart for the enemy lines to bother wasting a volley on (or if they do stop and fire a volley, far fewer skirmishers are killed than line-infantry would be, and a lot of the enemy’s maneuvering time is wasted), but the skirmishers can still inflict casualties on the rank-and-file due to their excellent marksmanship.