9th Infantry Regiment (Polish: 9 puà Âk piechoty) â was a Polish infantry regiment in the Army of the Duchy of Warsaw.
The 9th Infantry Regiment was formed at the turn of 1806 and 1807 in Gniezno as the 1st Regiment of the Poznaà  Legion Infantry (Polish: 1 puà Âk piechoty Legii Poznaà Âskiej). It participated in the Pomeranian campaign of 1807 â soldiers from the regiment fought near Tczew, among other places, and also took part in the sieges of Gdaà Âsk and Koà Âobrzeg. After the signing of the Treaty of Tilsit, the 9th Infantry Regiment's garrison was at Leszno.
In 1808, it was selected as one of three Polish infantry regiments (along with the 4th and 7th) to be sent to Spain. In the spring of 1808 the regiment landed in Spain and by the end of 1809 it numbered 2050 soldiers. According to the 1810 staffing table, the regiment consisted of a 27-person staff and three infantry battalions, each with six companies. The battalion staffs were to have 4 people, and the companies 136 soldiers. In total, 2,487 soldiers were to serve in the regiment. In fact, the unit's personnel strength was slightly lower.
The 9th Infantry Regiment took part in the battles of Almonacid and OcañÃÂ. In the spring of 1812, a decision was made to withdraw the Polish Division from Spain. During preparations for the French invasion of Russia in 1812, the regiment was incorporated into the structures of General Girard's 28th Division.
After the end of the French retreat from Russia, The 9th Regiment marched through the Duchy of Warsaw until it reached German territory. There, Napoleon ordered the remnants of the 4th, 7th and 9th Infantry Regiments to form a new 4th Infantry Regiment under the command of the former commander of the 9th Regiment, Colonel Michaà  Cichocki. At the start of June 1813 it was incorperated into Jan Henryk Dàbrowski's Division
After the abdication of Napoleon, Alexander I of Russia agreed to send Polish troops back to their country. They were to form the basis for the creation of the Polish Army under the command of Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich. On 13 June 1814, the regiment was assigned a concentration point in à Âomà ¼a. However, the regiment was not recreated, as the Kingdom of Poland's army only had 12 infantry regiments. New infantry regiments were only formed after the outbreak of the November Uprising when the 1st Regiment of the Kraków Province was formed, later renamed the 9th Line Infantry Regiment.
Regiment commanders:
Battles and skirmishes:
Andrzej Daleki, originally a soldier in the 3rd Infantry Regiment of the Poznaà  Legion (11th Infantry Regiment of the Duchy of Warsaw), and then the 9th Regiment, described the uniform of Polish soldiers during the Pomeranian campaign as: <nowiki/>'a navy blue uniform with white lapels and buttons, with a red collar, a navy blue square cap with white cords and a Polish bow at the front, navy blue trousers with green piping and boots.
The dress code of 3 September 1810 did not lead to complete standardisation of the infantry uniform. Some regiments differed significantly from the regulations. In the 9th Infantry Regiment, the cut was the same as in the 4th Infantry Regiment: a crimson collar with a navy blue trim, white lapels, crimson sleeve lapels with a white trim, navy blue sleeve tabs, and epaulettes with a white trim; white buttons.