「Lieutenant-colonel」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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18 June 1916 | Lieutenant-Colonel A C H MacLean |
's Own), CEF had one officer commanding: | Lieutenant-Colonel A. C. Pratt. |
eptember 14, 1915, by the appointment of | Lieutenant-Colonel A.H. Borden as its commanding officer. |
son was born on 26 June 1919, the son of | Lieutenant-Colonel A.R. Rawlinson, OBE, a figure in militar |
mortally wounded - whilst the horses of | Lieutenant-Colonel Adams and Lieutenant Viscount Fincastle |
n 1814 he was promoted to be the 104th's | Lieutenant-Colonel after the previous commanding officer wa |
The fort was built by | Lieutenant-Colonel Alexander Dickson (British Army commande |
Mounted Rifles in 1903 with the rank of | Lieutenant-Colonel, although, perhaps with an eye towards t |
neral Headquarters in France as a Brevet | Lieutenant-Colonel and Honorary Brigadier General. |
neral Staff, reaching the rank of Brevet | Lieutenant-Colonel and being mentioned in despatches twice. |
d World War, where he gained the rank of | Lieutenant-Colonel and became a Member of the Order of the |
the War of Austrian Succession, first as | Lieutenant-Colonel and later as Colonel of the second Wallo |
soon returned to Spain with the rank of | lieutenant-colonel and joined the Carlist expedition that t |
ght years later he became major, in 1887 | lieutenant-colonel and in 1888 colonel. |
He was promoted to | lieutenant-colonel and took command of the Royal Montreal R |
manded his regiment in World War II as a | Lieutenant-Colonel and was wounded in the leg by a shell sp |
Lieutenant-Colonel and Honorary Colonel Samuel Smith Crosla | |
owever, in early 1901 he was promoted to | lieutenant-colonel and offered command of the 1st Battalion |
He first joined the Green Howards as a | Lieutenant-Colonel and was promoted Colonel in 1928. |
812 and eventually attaining the rank of | lieutenant-colonel, and also served as justice of the peace |
He gained the rank of | Lieutenant-Colonel and was mentioned in despatches. |
other, William Elliot of Wells, was then | Lieutenant-Colonel, and of which Eliott was afterwards Lieu |
ot in 1795, of which his father was then | lieutenant-colonel, and was promoted lieutenant on 4 April |
with the Syrian campaign of 1860-61 as a | lieutenant-colonel; and as colonel commanded the 45th Regim |
In the Sinai Campaign, Davidi, as | Lieutenant-Colonel and regimental commander, played a decis |
gham as Colonel and Stewart as its first | Lieutenant-Colonel and Commanding Officer. |
f the Carlist War he rose to the rank of | lieutenant-colonel and had two orders of knighthood conferr |
Under the latter leader he was made a | lieutenant-colonel, and received a brevet promotion to colo |
He rose to the rank of | lieutenant-colonel, and commanded the Arizona Cavalry and t |
In January 1917 he was appointed a | lieutenant-colonel and made director of supply and transpor |
He rose to the rank of | Lieutenant-Colonel and also held the honorary colonelcies o |
1772 he rose to the rank of Captain and | Lieutenant-Colonel, and last appeared in the Army List in 1 |
of the province of Oran with the rank of | lieutenant-colonel, and remained there till the Crimean War |
He served in the local militia, becoming | lieutenant-colonel, and also served as justice of the peace |
he First World War, reaching the rank of | Lieutenant-Colonel and being awarded the Distinguished Serv |
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel Charles Edward Swaine | |
November 1916 he was appointed temporary | lieutenant-colonel, and commanded the machine guns of the I |
1919 Applin was given the brevet rank of | lieutenant-colonel and in February was made commanding offi |
till on half-pay, he was promoted Brevet | Lieutenant-Colonel and in 1880 Brevet Colonel. |
In October, 1943, he was promoted to | Lieutenant-Colonel and assumed the command of the Long Rang |
In 1855 he was promoted | Lieutenant-Colonel and subsequently retired from the Britis |
He was later Senior | Lieutenant-Colonel, and on the staff of Headquarters London |
irst World War broke out he had risen to | Lieutenant-Colonel and was Officer Commanding of the 44th ( |
They had one son, Edmund, who became a | Lieutenant-Colonel and the father of two illegitimate sons |
July 1771 he was elevated to the rank of | lieutenant-colonel and promptly retired from the army. |
ged into his old regiment as captain and | lieutenant-colonel, and served with it in the expedition to |
below a crown, the same rank badge as a | Lieutenant-Colonel and wear police caps with a laurel wreat |
In late 1783, DePeyster was promoted to | Lieutenant-Colonel and transferred to Fort Niagara. |
At the end of 1800 he became a | lieutenant-colonel, and in 1801 received the command of the |
In 1854, Balfour was promoted to | lieutenant-colonel and awarded the CB. |
ved in the militia, reaching the rank of | lieutenant-colonel and also was a justice of the peace and |
peace he was promoted up to the grade of | lieutenant-colonel, and in 1841 became brevet-colonel. |
the Air Force, Hawn rose to the rank of | Lieutenant-Colonel and he then served an additional five ye |
tle of Waterloo (in which he lost a leg) | lieutenant-colonel and C.B. |
He was promoted brevet | lieutenant-colonel and received two mentions in despatches |
He was commissioned | lieutenant-colonel and raised a regiment, the Seaforth (Hig |
erican War of 1898 began, he was named a | Lieutenant-Colonel, and in 1901 a Brevet (honorary or actin |
He was | Lieutenant-Colonel, and Brevet Colonel in the Lovat Scouts. |
In June 1980 Smith was promoted to | lieutenant-colonel and again in June 1985 to colonel. |
In the same year Roon was made a | lieutenant-colonel, and in 1851 full colonel. |
against the Arabs, returned to Mexico as | lieutenant-colonel, and, after winning further distinction, |
Lieutenant-Colonel Andrew Clarke, Governor of Western Austr | |
command of the regiment passed to Brevet | Lieutenant-Colonel Andrew Browne. |
Lieutenant-Colonel Andrew Hamilton Russell (1812-1900) was | |
of Western Australia as a Crown Colony - | Lieutenant-Colonel Andrew Clarke. |
Lieutenant-Colonel Andrew Clarke KCH (1793 - 11 February 18 | |
Lieutenant-Colonel Angus Falconer Douglas-Hamilton VC (20 A | |
Lieutenant-Colonel Anthony John Muirhead MC & Bar TD (4 Nov | |
Lieutenant-Colonel Anthony Charles Richards, LVO (born 1953 | |
erzaghi was born the first child of Army | Lieutenant-Colonel Anton von Terzaghi and Amalia Eberle in |
Linklater is the daughter of | Lieutenant-Colonel Archibald Michael Lyle and Hon. |
be highly respected Alta Battalion under | Lieutenant-Colonel Arne Dagfin Dahl counter-attacked and dr |
Lieutenant-Colonel Arthur Cecil Murray, 3rd Viscount Eliban | |
ia , where he was third in command under | Lieutenant-Colonel Arthur Currie. |
d to captain in 1905, major in 1930, and | lieutenant-colonel as part of his participation in World Wa |
Lieutenant-Colonel Aubrey John "A.J." O'Brien CBE, CIE (5 D | |
1736), born in Copenhagen, was son of a | lieutenant-colonel, Axel Sehested, and grandson of the King |
scape after others alerted him, allowing | Lieutenant-Colonel B D Pritchard's regiment to capture Davi |
Lieutenant-Colonel B. B. Bagnew, late of the Fourth Loyal L | |
Lieutenant-Colonel Banastre Tarleton by Joshua Reynolds. | |
Hyacinthe-Marie Delorme, then serving as | lieutenant-colonel, became ill. |
Grade from 1934-1937 and was promoted to | Lieutenant-Colonel, becoming a General Staff Officer, First |
Territorial Army and rose to the rank of | lieutenant-colonel, being awarded a military OBE in 1975 fo |
On 1 March 1794 Montagu was made | lieutenant-colonel, being now third on the list of Bengal a |
chief of staff) was acting | Lieutenant-Colonel Bernard Montgomery, then in his very ear |
Lieutenant-Colonel Bernard Cruddas DSO (1 January 1882 - 23 | |
ugh distant relatives and his son-in-law | Lieutenant-Colonel Bernhard Klamroth, involved in the July |
Captain (Temporary | Lieutenant-Colonel) Bertram Best-Dunkley, Great War |
Lieutenant-Colonel Brook - an agent during World War One, h | |
e for War and the Colonies, and promoted | lieutenant-colonel, but Governor Darling appointed him inst |
the Confederates and rose to the rank of | lieutenant-colonel, but did not follow Inchiquin when he de |
aptain in Our Holland Regiment, becoming | Lieutenant-Colonel by 1685. |
ier Guards, Canada rising to the rank of | Lieutenant-Colonel by 1916. |
January 1919 | Lieutenant-Colonel C F A Portal |
The son of | Lieutenant-Colonel C. W. F. and Katharine Scott, Scott was |
ative of the SS and DNSAP who approached | Lieutenant-Colonel C.P. Kryssing of the Danish army shortly |
the principal officers of the PCMR were | Lieutenant-Colonel C.W. Peck, Lieutenant-Colonel A.L. Coote |
of May last, in having saved the life of | Lieutenant-Colonel Cameron, his Commanding Officer, who dur |
om Captain Macpherson, 42nd Regiment, to | Lieutenant-Colonel Cameron, Commanding that Regiment.) |
In this phase of the fighting | Lieutenant-Colonel Campbell's personality dominated the bat |
She married | Lieutenant-Colonel Cedric Hall in 1978. |
Lieutenant-Colonel Chanan Singh Dhillon (retd) (born 1920), | |
Lieutenant-Colonel Charles William Reginald Duncombe, 2nd E | |
d time, to Camilla Cathcart, daughter of | Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Cathcart, later that year. |
ors against James II, Trelawny, with his | lieutenant-colonel Charles Churchill, and part of his offic |
Sussex (1917 - 26 January 2005) married | Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Pepys, King's Own Yorkshire Ligh |
by Woodford in memory of his second son, | Lieutenant-Colonel Charles John Woodford (1823-1857) of the |
Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Collier Michell, (29 March 1793- | |
at Al-Qaeda as the prime suspect," said | Lieutenant-Colonel Christopher Garver, a United States mili |
Lieutenant-Colonel Claude Cunningham Bruce Marshall, known | |
drons led by Brigadier-General Massy and | Lieutenant-Colonel Cleland. |
In 1779 he was appointed | Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant of the new 87th Regiment of F |
He was also | Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant of the Royal Lancashire Milit |
On 2 December 1803, he was appointed | Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant of the 2nd Battalion, Carmart |
He was appointed | lieutenant-colonel commandant of the Gloucestershire Yeoman |
the East Cornwall Militia, and in 1810, | Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant. |
Deputy Lieutenant of County Down and the | Lieutenant-Colonel commander of the North Irish Horse in th |
He later became | Lieutenant-Colonel Commanding the District Depot No. 4, Mon |
In 1936 he was promoted to full | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the brigade. |
He was | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding from 1924 to 1929, being prom |
jor and on July 7, 1848 he was appointed | lieutenant-colonel commanding the Montreal Rifles. |
1 and fought in the Second Boer War as a | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the Infantry Battalion of the |
Elstob was 29 years old, and a temporary | lieutenant-colonel commanding the 16th Battalion, The Manch |
l Army after the war and was promoted to | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the Dorset Heavy Brigade in 1 |
Major-General in the British Army and a | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the Royal Horse Guards. |
After the War he served as | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding 566 LAA Regiment RA (City of |
During World War I, Tremain was | lieutenant-colonel commanding the 112th Battalion of Highla |
He joined the army and became | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the 16th Lancers. |
pur Railway Rifles, reaching the rank of | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the battalion. |
Engineer Militia from 1882 to 1892, and | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the 2nd Battalion, Monmouthsh |
He then became | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the 3rd Battalion, South Wale |
He was | Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the 3rd Durham Artillery Volu |
Lieutenant-Colonel Conrad Reginald Cooke, OBE (31 August 19 | |
Lieutenant-Colonel Cyrus Peck commanded the battalion for m | |
Under the command of | Lieutenant-Colonel D.H. MacLaren, the 157th was tasked with |
cceeded as Assistant Commissioner "A" by | Lieutenant-Colonel David Allan. |
Lieutenant-Colonel David Archibald Price-White, TD (5 Septe | |
remain in command, he was superseded by | Lieutenant-Colonel David Robert Chaundler, who was flown in |
ed into the British No. 4 Commando under | Lieutenant-Colonel Dawson, part of the 1st Special Service |
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment as a | Lieutenant-Colonel, deploying to Maysan, Iraq in 2004/5 in |
During the fighting commanding officer | Lieutenant-Colonel Des Voeux and the second in command of 1 |
Lieutenant-Colonel Donald Dickson Farmer VC MSM (28 May 187 | |
Lieutenant-Colonel Douglas George Carnegie (4 January 1870- | |
n Hill 70 at the Battle of Loos, France, | Lieutenant-Colonel Douglas-Hamilton, when the battalions on |
Lieutenant-Colonel Dudley Gladstone Gordon, 3rd Marquess of | |
of whom had contributed to the defeat of | Lieutenant-Colonel Dugenne's column in June 1884 in the Bac |
s federal political experience, he was a | Lieutenant-Colonel during World War I in which he led the 1 |
le served in the local militia, becoming | lieutenant-colonel during the Lower Canada Rebellion, and a |
10 May 1915 | Lieutenant-Colonel E B Ashmore |
No.41 (Royal Marine) Commando, | Lieutenant-Colonel E. C. E. Palmer |
nding officer at the time of the mutiny, | Lieutenant-Colonel E. V. Martin. |
he 17th Airborne Infantry Regiment under | Lieutenant-Colonel Eduardo Humberto Cubas. |
Lieutenant-Colonel Edward Arthur Butler (4 July 1843 - 16 A | |
ell assigned his U.S. Army-Navy attache, | Lieutenant-Colonel Edward Hayes to command the UMOPAR troop |
Lieutenant-Colonel Edward L. Campbell | |
His son | Lieutenant-Colonel Edward Walter Blunt (1869-1949) married |
e on 30 June 1900, by his two executors, | Lieutenant-Colonel Edward De Barry Barnett of 32 Cambridge |
January 1872, he married the daughter of | Lieutenant-Colonel Edward King-Tenison in St James's in Wes |
eadmaster and the Victoria Cross winner, | Lieutenant-Colonel Edward Henderson (G G Henderson on the m |
attack, but by means of the buried cable | Lieutenant-Colonel Elstob was able to assure his Brigade Co |
In 1799 he was made a | Lieutenant-Colonel, entering the Quartermaster General's De |
succeeded in the title by his elder son, | Lieutenant-Colonel Ernest Edward de Winton Wills, Scots Gua |
he battalion's first commanding officer, | Lieutenant-Colonel Ernest Michael Murphy. |
wn swords, who were attempting to follow | Lieutenant-Colonel Ewart, when that officer was carrying aw |
Lieutenant-Colonel F. J. Bowen returned to Hong Kong after | |
ecommended for the VC in a dispatch from | Lieutenant-Colonel F. Gottreux, "commanding Field Detachmen |
gallantry in the removal of the body of | Lieutenant-Colonel F. D. Battye, Corps of Guides, under fir |
Edgar Norfolk ... | Lieutenant-Colonel Fair |
ved as clerk for Hastings County and was | lieutenant-colonel for the local militia. |
During World War I, Donaldson was | lieutenant-colonel for the 188th Battalion, Canadian Expedi |
Mackie served in the Boer War and was | lieutenant-colonel for the local militia from 1906 to 1908. |
He served as | lieutenant-colonel for the county militia. |
He was | lieutenant-colonel for the Gloucester County militia. |
He was appointed | lieutenant-colonel for the local militia. |
ice of the peace and, in 1851, was named | lieutenant-colonel for the local militia. |
, however, Dahlbergh remained an obscure | lieutenant-colonel for many years. |
Blackburn served in World War I as a | lieutenant-colonel for the Australian Army Medical Corps. |
He was a | lieutenant-colonel for the local militia and served during |
Lieutenant-Colonel Foveaux allowed the Corps to trade in ru | |
ty selected as its candidate 47-year-old | Lieutenant-Colonel Francis Edward Fremantle, who had previo |
tts on the night of 18 April 1775 led by | Lieutenant-Colonel Francis Smith. |
8) is today a relatively rare novella by | Lieutenant-Colonel Frank McKelvey Bell based on the Halifax |
In this insurrection | Lieutenant-colonel Fraser of the 78th was killed, and Forbe |
Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick Chidley Irwin (1788-1860) was | |
Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick Miller VC (10 November 1831 - | |
of Western Australia as a Crown Colony - | Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick Irwin. |
Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick Baker (1908 - 1958) led the NZ | |
Regiment of Foot, as a major and then a | lieutenant-colonel from 19 February 1781. |
t during the Peninsular war and acted as | lieutenant-colonel from May 1810 to November 1814. |
illed by almost the first volley, as was | Lieutenant-Colonel G. L. J. Goff, the commanding officer of |
Niagara 19 May 1916 under the command of | Lieutenant-Colonel G.F. MacFarland, where it trained until |
25 January 1945 - 22 February 1945 | Lieutenant-Colonel GC Hopkinson |
(2) AA HQ BTNI, 1941-42; and finally to | Lieutenant-Colonel General Staff, Army Council Secretariat, |
Lieutenant-Colonel Geoff Field, Royal Engineers | |
Major (temporary | Lieutenant-Colonel) Geoffrey Charles Tasker Keyes, M.C. (71 |
ngs was the youngest of the four sons of | Lieutenant-Colonel George Hastings, a great-great-great-gre |
mber 1945 Hester Marguerite, daughter of | Lieutenant-Colonel George Cecil Minett Sorel-Cameron, C.B.E |
Lieutenant-Colonel George Thomas Dorrell VC, MBE (7 July 18 | |
Lieutenant-Colonel George Taylor Denison III (31 August 183 | |
He was the son of | Lieutenant-Colonel George Carnegie, 9th Earl of Northesk an |
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