1. Hungarian fusilier, c. 1809. This figure illustrates two significant changes at about the time of the 1809 campaign. The jacket tails had the piping altered to two lines, with the turnbacks deepended to show a band of facing colour at the front. More importantly, the helmet has been replaced by the 1806 shako, which seems to have been issued to Hungarian regiments first (e.g. the 31st wore it at Aspern), with several varieties featuring in contemporary pictures. Georg Kininger, for example, shows a shako of regulation design, but with small peaks over the ears; and a Hungarian regiment with a cap more closely resembling the French type, worn by NCOs with a broader top and no rear peak, and apparently metal chinscales with circular bosses. 2. NCO with Colour, German fusiliers, c. 1809. This NCO wears the shako with double lace bands of Prima Plana rank. As a Colour bearer he carries no cartridge box, and is armed only with a sabre. The Colour, measuring 165 x 135 cm, is a Leibfähne with one white face and one yellow. The pike head bore the Emperor's cypher 'F.II', being an example of the continued use of the 1792 pattern of flag, which is believed to have been carried at this date by the unit whose pale grey facings and yellow buttons identify it as the 30th Regiment. Some regiments carried streamers or cravats tied below the pike head, e.g. white fringed with gold for the 14th Regiment, and white fringed red for the 39th. 3. Officer, German fusiliers, c. 1809. The officers' uniform post-1806 was like that worn earlier, with minor differences in the cut of the coat (especially in the turnback design), and the 1806 shako replacing the helmet. The cap illustrated has the two gold bands (or single band with black central line) which identified junior ranks, and the turned-up rear 'peak', though some contemporary sources show officers' shakos with an actual rear peak like those of the rank and file. Note the Feldzeichen (spray of foliage) worn behind the pompon. Despite a degree of standardisation after 1798, some latitude was still permitted in the design of officers' swords. 4. Officer, Hungarian fusiliers, c. 1809. This shows the Hungarian version of the uniform in figure 3, with the distinctive cuffs, legwear and sabre instead of the Degen or épée of German regiments. Turnbacks are shown in the facing colour, a feature contrary to regulations but one shown by contemporary pictures as well as reconstructions (such as those by Ottenfeld), indicating that some regiments (or individuals) were coloured turnbacks.