Dictionary Definition
fatigues n : military uniform worn by military
personnel when doing menial labor
User Contributed Dictionary
Verb form
- third-person singular of fatigue
French
Pronunciation
Noun
fatigues- Plural of fatigue#French | fatigue
Extensive Definition
Battle Dress, was the combat uniform worn by
British, many Commonwealth and Empire forces and many Free European
Forces through the Second World War, mostly but not exclusively in
temperate climates. In some armies it continued in use into the
1970's. During the Second World War and thereafter this uniform was
also used for formal parades (incuding mounting the Queen's Guard
at Buckingham
Palace) until the re-introduction of separate parade uniforms.
The Battle
Dress Uniform (BDU) was the combat uniform of United States
forces through the late 20th Century.
The term is sometimes used more generally to
cover Combat
uniforms, as opposed to 'display' dress or formal uniform worn at
parades and functions. It may be either monochrome (often a shade of
green or brown) or in camouflage colours. The first
purpose-made and widely issued camouflage garments were used by the
Italian
Army after the First World War; most nations developed
camouflage uniforms during the Second World War, though in many
cases they were issued widely only among "elite" units.
Australia
Currently, Australian troops wear a multicolour camouflage called Disruptive Pattern Camouflage Uniform (more commonly called DPCU or Auscam), shades to suit Australia's terrain. It was developed by entering the colours of the Australian landscape into a computer program and the present battle dress was the result.There are three variations, the original design
which is most commonly used, another for use in desert environments
and a third for use by OPFOR units in training exercises.
Canada
Canada's battledress developed parallel to that of the British from 1900 to 1950, though always with significant differences, and then increasingly followed the US pattern of separate uniforms for separate functions, becoming distinctively "Canadian" in the process and utilizing CADPAT design.Service Dress 1907-1940
The first true battledress adopted by Canada for standard issue across the board was the khaki field uniform known as Service Dress, adopted in 1907. This was of a separate pattern from the British Service Dress adopted after the Boer War, and marked a departure in Canadian uniforms in that it was distinct from the scarlet/blue/rifle green uniforms traditionally worn to that point, the latter of which became "ceremonial" dress for parades and other functions apart from field training.Canadian pattern Service Dress worn by Other
Ranks did not stand up to the rigours of campaigning, however, and
was widely replaced by British uniforms in France; some samples of
Canadian pattern SD were retained in Canada, and after the war,
surviving to be issued briefly in 1939.
Officers wore a distinctive pattern of Service
Dress (as did Warrant Officers I Class), which was identical to
that worn by British officers; they were privately purchased, and
of better quality than Other Ranks uniform. In combat in France and
Flanders, they were often replaced on an individual basis by Other
Ranks' Service Dress, to make them less visible to enemy snipers
and soldiers.
Khaki Drill 1900-1949
Khaki Drill was a series of different uniform patterns of light khaki cloth, generally cotton, first worn by Canadian soldiers in the Boer War and reserved for summer training in Canada, or for employment in tropical climates. Canada developed its own pattern after the First World War, and the uniform was commonly worn in Canada, with officers again having the option of finer garments privately purchased. In the Second World War, Canadians serving in Jamaica and Hong Kong wore Canadian pattern KD; the I Canadian Corps troops in Italy wore KD supplied in theatre by the British, generally of British, Indian or US (War Aid) manufacture.Battle Dress 1939-1970
In 1939, the Battle Dress
uniform was adopted as a field uniform; made of wool and patterned
after British BD, Canadian uniforms were darker in colour with a
distinctive green tinge to the dark khaki colour. Officers had the
option of having BD tailored from better material, but in the field
most wore "off the rack" BD, perhaps with a modified open
collar.
Service Dress was worn in 1939 and into 1940 by
soldiers in Canada as field dress, and afterwards was no longer
issued except to a select few. While a new pattern of Service Dress
was introduced for Other Ranks in this period, it was reserved for
dress wear only. Battle Dress completely replaced SD as a field
uniform beginning in 1940 as enough of the new uniforms became
available.
A new pattern of BD was introduced in 1949, with
an open collar matching that of British Pattern 1949 BD. The
garment was worn as a field dress throughout the Korean War, and
into the 1960s until replaced by the Combat uniform. Some Militia
units used BD as a dress uniform until the early 1970s, but field
use had probably been phased out by then.
The US Army produced its own version of the BD
blouse for issue to soldiers in Europe. Although most of these were
produced in England, they were of a dark green colour, rather than
khaki. Called the ETO (European Theatre of Operations) jacket,
American soldiers dubbed it the Ike Jacket, after General Dwight
D. Eisenhower.
Bush Dress 1950-1960
Bush Dress was a series of dark green cotton uniforms, similar to KD clothing, which replaced those uniforms just prior to the Korean War. Like KD, Bush Dress was worn primarily as a field uniform. It was replaced by the Combat uniform in the 1960s.Combats 1960-2000
The green combat uniform became universal battledress in the 1960s, and was designed to be worn in any environment (though a tan coloured "tropical" version was worn during Operation Desert Storm and by the Airborne in Somalia).The Canadian pattern combat uniform had angled
pockets, designed to take magazines from the FN C1A1 assault rifle;
a truly poor design of infantry load bearing equipment inspired
this design - the 1964 Pattern Web Equipment had no ammunition
pouches. The angled pockets are repeated on the new CADPAT uniform,
though they are enlarged and not intended for ammunition
carriage.
The Canadian combat uniform had a high nylon
content, which had the potential for producing significant
burns.
CADPAT 2000-present
In Canada, battledress is referred to officially as "No. 5 Operational Dress", and in general parlance as "combat uniform" or "combats".Currently, the Canadian
Forces use the four-colour CADPAT design, a
computer-generated pixelated pattern issued in TW (temperate
woodland) and AR (arid region) colours. Camouflage cloth of CADPAT
pattern was created and adopted in 1995, used for issue
helmet covers in 1997 and trousers and
blouses in CADPAT began to replace the olive green combat uniform
from 2001 when
Canadian forces joined the UN
peacekeepers in Bosnia-Hercegovina.
The AR version was introduced when Canadian troops were deployed to
Afghanistan.
Previously, a tan version of the olive combats had been used for
tropical wear by soldiers deployed to the Middle East, particularly
during Operation
Desert Storm and the deployment to Somalia.
Until well into the post-World War II era, the
Canadian Army had worn battle dress uniforms similar to their
British and Commonwealth counterparts, though with different
national identifiers and regimental accoutrements (with Khaki Drill
uniforms being worn in the summer or in tropical regions). In the
early 1950s, battle dress began to be replaced with lightweight
uniforms, at first Bush Dress for summer wear, and in the 1960s
with Combat Dress, a set of olive drab garments more similar to the
American style of combat wear (ie made up of layers and solely for
wear in the field as opposed to all-purpose wool Battle
Dress).
Specialist Clothing
Specialist battledress was developed primarily during the Second World War, including the Denison smock - originally for parachutists but also adopted by snipers. Specialized jump clothing was perpetuated by the Canadian Airborne Regiment who wore distinctive disruptive-pattern jump smocks from 1975 until disbandment in 1995.Special patterns of AFV uniform were also worn
beginning in the Second World War, initially black coveralls, later
khaki coveralls as well as the padded "Pixie suit". Olive drab
tanker's uniforms were adopted with the Combat uniform in the
1960s, including a distinctive padded jacket with angled front
zip.
Coveralls
The Canadian Army has made extensive use of plain coveralls as a field uniform, commonly using khaki coveralls in the Second World War to save wear and tear on wool BD. In the 1950s and 1960, the Canadian military adopted black coveralls which were often worn as combat dress, replacing them in the 1970s with rifle green coveralls. These were worn in the field in Canada by units in training but are also evident in photos of men deployed to West Germany during the Cold War, as armoured and mechanized units sometimes preferred to wear coveralls when carrying out maintenance.France
France adopted low visibility field uniforms well after other European armies had already done so. During the early months of World War I a conspicuous blue and red uniform continued to be worn, only being replaced with horizon blue in early 1915. The Section de camouflage, established the same year, was hugely influential.The first widely used camouflage pattern was the
1951
three-colour over-printed tenue de léopard, usually called "lizard"
it was issued in many colour variants (colourways) and saw war
service in Africa and Indochina. The
last official issue was in 1958, but use
continued for some years. The "lizard" was a symbol of elitism and
was issued only to French
Foreign Legion and French airborne units (the conscript army,
on the other hand, wore plain olive green). This elitism went very
far with the Foreign Legion, who would regularly have its members
march in this uniform with medals, green beret, the blue sash, and
rarely, the green and red epaulettes.
The colonial associations of camouflage kept the
French in monochrome olive green until 1990, although a
number of African and Asian nations used
variants on the "lizard."
Research results in the 1980s were rejected,
one because of the similarity to German flecktarn. With the Gulf War, a
hurried effort produced the 1990 three-colour "Daguet" desert
pattern. A four-colour Euro pattern was issued from 1991.
Nazi era
The Nazi regime funded a great deal of research on camouflage uniforms, investigating many patterns including NIR camouflage. After much trial the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, in 1938, issued the basic four-colour "plane tree" pattern (Platanenmuster) of Schick and Schmid in the form of camouflage smocks to units of the Waffen SS. The three-colour disruptive Splittermuster, more commonly known in English as 'splinter pattern', was issued to the army beginning before the war, in the form of camouflaged tent quarters (zeltbahn) which was reversible, with a splinter pattern in dark colours on one side, and light coloured on the other. From 1942, a year after the Luftwaffe started producing uniforms in this pattern, a variety of helmet covers and camouflage smocks were adopted by the Heer (Army). A distinctive variant of splinter pattern camouflage was introduced midway through the war, a blurry marsh pattern (Sumpfmuster) referred to as "tan water pattern" in English by collectors. During the war, additional SS variants including "palm", "smoke", and "oak leaf" were introduced, in spring and autumn colours. By 1944 the complex "peas" pattern (Erbsenmuster) was also used by the Waffen SS issued as standard, in tunic and trouser combinations, but never in smocks or caps. Initially, camouflage had been a sign of elite troops and the SS continued this differentiation by using its own distinctive patterns.In 1941, during the
winter on the
Eastern Front, German troops were at a considerable
disadvantage because they were lacking winter camouflage, expecting
a quick summer victory.
In 1945, a five-colour
Leibermuster design was introduced. Intended to be used by all the
armed forces, it was layered to improve effectiveness at distance,
used a new print method to reduce obvious repetition, and included
NIR protection. Due to the distribution situation, it was issued to
eastern units only.
Post-war
In the 1950s, West Germany used two versions of the wartime "splinter", a four-colour pattern called BV-Splittermuster. Thereaft, from 1961 until 1990 they used the so called olive-green battle dress. Following various trials the dots-and-blotches five-colour Flecktarn pattern was chosen in 1976 and issued from the 1980s.East
Germany's first pattern was the 1956 Russisches
Tarnmuster based, as the name suggests, on the Soviet "amoeba"
designs. It was soon replaced by the four-colour Flächentarnmuster
pattern (sometimes called "potato" or "splotch"). In 1965, the dense
straight-line two-colour Strichmuster pattern was introduced,
sometimes called "ein Strich - kein Strich", it remained in use
until reunification.
Flecktarn was
made the pattern for the unified country.
Italy
The Italian Army used grigio-verde in the Alps from 1906 and across the army from 1909. In 1929, the country was the first to mass-produce camouflage fabric, the three-colour telo mimetico. It was not issued as uniform until 1942.The pattern remained in use after the war, moving
through several colour variations. The marines adopted a complex
five-colour "Mediterranean spray" pattern in the 1980s. In 1990, a new army
pattern was introduced, a four-colour design inspired by the
popular U.S. "woodland" pattern; a desert version was also issued
from 1992.
Japan
The Japanese tried monochrome green during the 1905 conflict with Russia, but entered World War II with a monochrome mustard khaki uniform. Some were fitted with special loops to aid the attachment of natural vegetation.The Japan
Self-Defense Forces did not issue a pattern until the 1980s,
choosing a four-colour green-and-brown design, sometimes called
"fang". It was succeeded in 1991 by a dot pattern
close to flecktarn, while during the Gulf War a six-colour pattern
similar to the U.S.
choc-chip was used.
Russia and the Soviet Union
The Imperial Russian Army fought mostly in white or in dark green colours (introduced by Peter the Great in 1700), even if several regiments (Life Guards regiments, Cavalry Guards, Dragoons and Uhlans regiments) dressed in distinctive and colourful attire. Cossack regiments were reported to use basic camouflage patterns and techniques during the Crimean War. Duller colours were used unofficially in the 1880s and again in 1905. The whole army began using khaki from 1908 on.In the early 1930s, the Soviet Union developed
two-piece suits with a disruptive pattern of big amoeba-like spots,
which, in conjunction with the baggy shape of the suit itself, were
very effective in breaking the outline of the human silhouette. The
two-piece suits were made to be worn over the uniform and gear,
which could be accessed through the special slots (a design feature
later employed by the Germans). The limited use of a two-colour
disruptive "amoeba" pattern began in 1938. The "amoeba" remained in
use until the 1950s.
The Soviet Union
issued all-white winter camouflage in 1938. During World War
II, other designs were tried, including "leaf" (1940) and the jagged
three-colour "TTsMKK" (1944). Most troops
remained in a monochrome brown.
Post-war Soviet camouflage remained a sign of
elite units. A two-colour "sun-ray" pattern was used by
paratroopers from 1969 and two- or
three-colour versions were issued to Spetsnaz, KGB and
MVD troops into the 1980s. The KLMK pattern was the first
"digital" camouflage and it was issued to Spetsnaz troops and some
Border
guards units.
After the collapse of the Soviet regime, a new
pattern was developed as the standard field uniform. Issued from
1993, the
three-colour green-brown-tan design in a vertical orientation was
called VSR, or "Schofield" in the West. This was quickly superseded
by the same basic pattern in a horizontal orientation, called
"flora", in 1998. Other widely
used patterns in the 1990s were inspired by Western designs,
notably the British DPM and U.S. "woodland"
patterns. The elite forces maintain different patterns; MVD troops
began using the four-colour "SMK" pattern in 1992 and other units
wear a distinctive "reed" pattern. Versions of the "woodland"
pattern also remain in use.
United Kingdom
From the late 17th century to the late 19th century, most British soldiers (red coats) fought in scarlet tunics. The adoption of scarlet was mainly for economic reasons. When Oliver Cromwell initially started forming the New Model Army, red was the cheapest dye available. Toward the end of the 19th century, however, as the nature of warfare moved away from close formation fighting to more individual fighting, it began to be recognised that this colour stood out too much.The move towards camouflage began in India, and khaki was used during the Indian
Mutiny (or First War of Independence). It became standard in
India in 1885,
for all foreign postings in 1896, and was adopted
throughout the army in 1902 during the
Second Boer
War.
World War II
Battle Dress (BD) was the official name for the standard working and fighting uniform worn by the British Army and the armies of other Imperial and Commonwealth countries in temperate climes from 1937 to the late 1960s. It was a pair of trousers and a close fitting short jacket Blouse made of khaki-coloured woollen cloth. Blue battledress was worn by the Royal Air Force, and Royal Navy shore parties wore a navy blue version. Camouflage dress was hand-painted for some specialists.The Battle Dress design at the start of the war
was the (19)37 Pattern. In 1940 it was replaced with the simpler
made (19)40 Utility Pattern. This omitted finer details such as
pleating on pockets. In both cases the blouse came in two forms,
the ordinary ranks with closed neck and the officers open neck
which exposed their shirt and tie. From 1942, the camouflaged
Denison
smock, originally issued to the
Airborne forces to be worn over the BD, was issued more
widely.
Tropical Uniforms
In the early campaigns in North Africa and the Mediterranean theatre, British troops wore khaki drill (KD) shorts or slacks with long sleeved Aertex shirts. The paler shade of KD was more suited to desert or semi-desert regions than the dark khaki serge used in Battle dress. When the Allies moved up through Italy, however, two-piece khaki denim battledress overalls where increasingly preferred. By 1943, the KD shirt began to be replaced by a more durable cotton KD bush jacket.In the Far East, the
British found themselves at war with the Japanese
while equipped with the impractical KD uniform. Shirts and trousers
had to be dyed green as a temporary expedient until more suitable
jungle clothing became available. A new tropical uniform in Jungle
Green (JG) was quickly developed – a JG Aertex battledress blouse,
a JG Aertex bush jacket (as an alternative to the blouse) and
battledress trousers in JG cotton drill. In the hot and humid
conditions of Southeast
Asia, JG darkened with sweat almost immediately.
Post-war
When the war in Europe was over, a new jungle uniform began to be produced for troops posted to the Far East. It was based on the U.S. Army Pacific theatre field uniform, with Aertex being rejected in favour of cotton drill. Though the jacket was similar to the U.S. design, the trousers maintained the battledress design, but with some features copied from American olive drab (OD) herringbone twill trousers. Newly available synthetic materials were utilised in one version of the new Olive Green (OG) uniform, as it was called.The khaki Battledress was used until the late
1960s, and
various uniform items in KD, JG and OG remained on issue to
soldiers serving in the Mediterranean, Middle East or tropics after
the war. By the end of the 1940s, however,
stocks were becoming depleted, and a new 1950-pattern tropical
uniform was made available in both KD and JG. It was poorly
designed, with an ill fitting bush jacket in the much-maligned
Aertex, and suspender buckles that dug in to the hips when marching
in full kit. Eventually the much more practical Gurkha regiments’
JG shirt was copied, replacing the 1950-pattern bush jacket. All
the same, troops still sought out the older, wartime, issues of the
better KD, JG and OG kit.
While serving during the Korean War
(1950-53), troops had found the existing combat uniform inadequate:
It was too hot in the summertime, and not warm enough during the
harsh Korean winters. Soldiers were at first issued JG for hot
weather, and battledress in the wintertime, but this had to be
augmented with additional warm clothing (often from the U.S. Army)
as well as caps with ear flaps and fur linings. A solution was
rapidly pursued, and towards the end of the Korean War a windproof
and water-repellent gabardine combat uniform was
issued. The trousers followed the tried and tested battledress
design, while the bush jacket had several pockets inside and out,
closing with zips and buttons, a hip length skirt with draw-strings
to keep out the wind, and a similar arrangement at the waist. The
uniform was produced in a greyish green colour (OG), similar to the
U.S. Army OD.
With the end of National
Service conscription in 1961, the Army looked
for a new uniform: Something that was smarter than battledress, but
also more comfortable, while still having a military air about it.
Using the Korean War combat clothing as a basis, various new items
of field wear were developed for the 1960-pattern Combat Dress,
including the so-called Canadian pattern combat jacket, which was
well made, with a lining above the waist and reinforced elbows. The
1960s was a period of transition for the Army, and this was
reflected in the changes that were taking place in soldier’s
uniform.
DPM
main article Disruptive Pattern Material The new, smaller, all-volunteer Army could also now afford to equip every soldier with his own camouflaged uniform, and following work at the Army Personnel Research Establishment (APRE) a four-colour camouflage pattern was designed in 1960. From 1969 it was issued in limited quantities on 1960-pattern jackets and trousers. Known as "Pattern 1960 DPM" (Disruptive Pattern Material), these items were soon superseded by the ’68-Pattern, which had a very slightly revised camouflage design on a new uniform, featuring minor changes over the preceding 1960/66-Pattern kit, most notably: a full lining for jacket and trousers. It became official issue only in 1972.The temperate clothing was followed by a DPM
jungle combat uniform which, due to the use of different (i.e.
polycotton), material had a slightly different colourway.
The underlying pattern has remained through
various different patterns of clothing but has differed in detail
of the pattern and the coulourway depending on the material and
manufacturer. The most recent major overhall of the combat uniform
was the introduction of the Combat Soldier 95 system in the mid 90s
this system is still in use (with changes to some items) for
Nos 8
and 9 Dress, in 2007 .
Prior to the Gulf War, the
stock of uniform in four-colour desert DPM of browns and tans had
been sold to Iraq therefore a
two-colour DPM version (light brown on tan) was issued to UK
forces.
United States
See Battle dress uniform, Airman Battle Uniform, Army combat uniform & Marine Corps Combat Utility Uniform.See also
References
- DPM: Disruptive Pattern Material by Hardy Blechman and Alex Newman, DPM Ltd. (2004) ISBN 0-9543404-0-X
- FALSE COLORS: Art, Design and Modern Camouflage
- Khaki: Uniforms of the CEF by Clive M. Law (Service Publications, 1998).
- Dressed to Kill: Canadian Army Uniforms in World War Two by Michael Dorosh (Service Publications, 2001). ISBN 1-894581-07-5
External links
- www.canadiansoldiers.com: extensive discussion of Canadian Army uniforms, insignia, and traditions from 1900-2000
fatigues in German: Kampfanzug
fatigues in French: Treillis (vêtement
militaire)
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
apparel, array, attire, bedizenment, clothes, clothing, costume, drapery, dress, dressing, duds, fashion, feathers, fig, garb, garments, gear, guise, habiliment, habit, investiture, investment, linen, rags, raiment, robes, sportswear, style, threads, togs, toilette, trim, vestment, vesture, wear, wearing apparel