Civil Guard

Civil Guard refers to various policing organisations:

Current:

  • Civil Guard (Spain): The Spanish gendarmerie
  • Civil Guard (Israel): An Israeli volunteer police reserve

Historic Civil Guards now abolished:

  • Civil Guard (Costa Rica): fully merged into the Fuerza Pública (Public Force)
  • Civil Guard (Peru), formed as main preventive police force of Peru in 1924, later became General Police which in 1988 merged into new National Police
  • Civil Guard (Colombia), created in 1902
  • Civil Guard (El Salvador), created in 1867, which then gave way to the Guardia Nacional in 1912.
  • Civil Guard (Honduras), a militarized police commanded directly by president Ramon Villeda Morales rather than the chief of the armed forces created in 1957
  • Civil Guard (Panama) (abolished)
  • Civil Guard (Philippines), a local gendarmerie organized under the auspices of the Spanish colonial authorities including a contingent of indigenous soldiers. Disbanded after the Spanish-American war of 1898, now being reestablished in the city of Ozamiz . In the Intramuros district of Manila, security forces are dressed in guardia civil uniforms .
  • Civil Guard (South Vietnam) renamed the Regional Force
  • Gwardya Sibil (Philippine resistance network), a civilian underground network operating during World War II to gather intelligence on the activities of the Japanese invaders.
  • Suojeluskunta, a Finnish militia for which "Civil Guard" is one of the many English translations.

Famous quotes containing the words civil and/or guard:

    Colonel Shaw
    and his bell-cheeked Negro infantry
    on St. Gaudens shaking Civil War relief,
    propped by a plank splint against the garage’s earthquake.
    Robert Lowell (1917–1977)

    One should never intend to do harm to others, but should always guard against the harm others might do to him.
    Chinese proverb.