The 2nd Dragoon Regiment (Danish : 2. Dragonregiment) was a dragoon regiment of the Royal Danish Army, active from 1683 to 1910.
The regiment was established in 1683 as Løvendahls Dragoneskadron and finally disbanded 20 June 1910 in Odense as 2. Dragonregiment.
A part of Holstenske Lansenerregiment was amalgamated with the regiment on 1 July 1842.
Løvendahls Dragoneskadron | Løvendahl's Dragoon Squadron | 1683-12-27 | – | 1684 |
Løvendahls Dragonregiment | Løvendahl's Dragoon Regiment | 1684 | – | 1693 |
Livregiment Dragoner | Life Regiment Dragoons | 1693 | – | 1772 |
Norske Livregiment Rytteri | Norwegian Life Cavalry Regiment | 1772 | – | 1785 |
Livregiment Dragoner | Life Regiment Dragoons | 1785 | – | 1791 |
Livregiment lette Dragoner | Life Regiment Light Dragoons | 1791 | – | 1842 |
2. Dragonregiment | 2nd Dragoon Regiment | 1842 | – | 1848-03-24 |
Disbanded | Disbanded | 1848-03-24 | – | 1851 |
Holstenske Dragonregiment | Holstein Dragoon Regiment | 1851 | – | 1852 |
2. Dragonregiment | 2nd Dragoon Regiment | 1852 | – | 1865-03-24 |
Disbanded | Disbanded | 1865-03-24 | – | 1867-09-30 |
2. Dragonregiment | 2nd Dragoon Regiment | 1867 | – | 1910-06-20 |
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The Royal Danish Army is the land-based branch of the Danish Armed Forces, together with the Danish Home Guard. For the last decade, the Royal Danish Army has undergone a massive transformation of structures, equipment and training methods, abandoning its traditional role of anti-invasion defence, and instead focusing on out of area operations by, among other initiatives, reducing the size of the conscripted and reserve components and increasing the active component, changing from 60% support structure and 40% operational capability, to 60% combat operational capability and 40% support structure. When fully implemented, the Danish army will be capable of deploying 1,500 troops permanently on three different continents continuously, or 5,000 troops for a shorter period of time, in international operations without any need for extraordinary measures such as parliamentary approval of a war funding bill.
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This article lists the structure of the Royal Danish Army in 1989 and in May 2020: