「artillery」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)7ページ目
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artillery group from 1938. | |
n Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of | Artillery Western Front 1914-18. |
w of a 240mm howitzer at the U.S. Army Field | Artillery Museum, Ft. |
A lg. sFH 13 at the U.S. Army Field | Artillery Museum, Ft. |
155 mm Howitzer M-114 at the U.S. Army Field | Artillery Museum, Ft. |
s an army of 5,000 rebel soldiers with eight | artillery pieces further up the road. |
hout the Mexican-American War with the light | artillery, alongside future Civil War artilleryman Hen |
Tennessee Battery (Harding | Artillery): Capt G. H. Monserratt, Cpt Ed Baxter |
en the infantry came under fire from Turkish | artillery at Gaba Tepe, Bacchante approached close in |
After the French siege | artillery breached Gaeta's walls, the Neapolitan garri |
After First World War service with the Royal | Artillery at Gallipoli and on the Western Front, Bruce |
The start of the | artillery duel galvanized Napoleon. |
port by General Albion P. Howe, Inspector of | Artillery, the garrison of Fort Greble consisted of a |
mustering ship for Royal Marines, and Royal | Artillery personnel garrisoning the East Island. |
whittled in two by the incessant musket and | artillery fire, gave testimony to the tenacity of both |
He used the title "Colonel" after the Leeds | artillery volunteers gave him the title of Honorary Co |
With the continued presence of air and | artillery fire, Gen. Manjome realized that his entire |
Trained as an | artillery officer, General Wieker served in every majo |
Altfrater was born in Warsaw the son of an | artillery officer, General Mikhail Altfater who was fr |
rance and was Chief of Staff of the 1st Army | Artillery, Commanding General of the 33rd Artillery Br |
W. Danilov and S.A. Martynov and accepted by | artillery commander, general Peter Ivanovich Shuvalov. |
f 3rd Corps and then as Major-General, Royal | Artillery at General Headquarters in 1915. |
e village of Kaiserslautern supported by the | artillery of General Desaix's division. |
ainaut, governor of Valenciennes, general of | artillery, and general of the Spanish cavalry in the L |
In 1944, he was Commanding Officer 4th | Artillery Brigade, General Officer Commanding 4th Divi |
(First Manassas), Walker became the chief of | artillery to General A.P. Hill. |
y Train, 5th Battalion (late Serjeant, Royal | Artillery) Lieutenant George Symons Date of Act of Bra |
died on 24 March 1945 serving with the Royal | Artillery in Germany. |
In 1800 he became Brigade Major to the Royal | Artillery in Gibraltar. |
Infantry, | artillery (cannonballs give them the ability to blow u |
ach its target much quicker than an ordinary | artillery shell giving the target little warning to ta |
scued the wounded while exposed to rifle and | artillery fire, going close to the enemy's parapet. |
owned in the viciously cold ponds, dozens of | artillery pieces going down along with them. |
e wearer: sky blue for infantry, scarlet for | artillery, and gold for cavalry. |
endale Academy is a high school located near | Artillery Center Golkonda, Hyderabad, India. |
While his | artillery silenced Goring's two light guns, he sent 15 |
personnel carriers, 2S7 Pion self-propelled | artillery units, Grad multiple rocket launcher units, |
After war service in the Royal New Zealand | Artillery, he graduated MA from Wellington in 1948 and |
e was commissioned in to the 5th Regiment of | Artillery upon graduation, and fought with it in the P |
he area between 1868-69, including Volunteer | Artillery, Brisbane Grammar School and Civil Service. |
y the reserves on those positions, while the | artillery used grapeshot on the enemy. |
of a post so gallantly won, against numerous | artillery and great masses of infantry, the enemy empl |
The number of vehicles damaged by | artillery was greater. |
In heavy | artillery fire, Griffith was wounded in his thigh by a |
ehicle was tested in summer 1939 at the Luga | Artillery Proving Ground. |
cided to use the ship as a floating anti-air | artillery battery guarding the harbour. |
letoe while engaged in the inspection of the | artillery at Guernsey. |
officers, Newport, Rhode Island; the Army's | Artillery and Guided Missile School, Fort Sill, Oklaho |
L 33 Modelo Argentino) is an Argentinian | artillery field gun in service with the Argentine Army |
e gun for every man wounded and one piece of | artillery with gun crew for every 10 men wounded. |
astle was further fortified to guard against | artillery and gunfire. |
The Royal | Artillery coastal gunnery school, 198 battery, was pos |
The right and center were supported by | artillery, 16 guns in all. |
Divisional | Artillery: (18 guns) |
hirty emplaced naval guns, high-angled field | artillery, machine guns, infantry, and water and land |
Another Mexican force (1,540 men, including | Artillery 14 Guns, Matamoros Natl. |
skillful use of close supporting fires from | artillery, helicopter gunship and tactical air, the of |
ty forces, after "fierce fighting" involving | artillery, helicopter gunships and heavy machine guns |
The 152nd | artillery regiment had four battalions, with a total o |
rs used sledges to retrieve 60 tons of heavy | artillery that had been captured at Fort Ticonderoga. |
Weapons also proved to be a problem, no | artillery pieces had been left in Britain to train new |
ection to be no more than 8,000 men, and its | artillery component had been reduced to only twelve gu |
light and four medium 6-pounder guns; heavy | artillery company had four light and four heavy 12-pou |
s when they were finally given the tanks and | artillery they had long sought. |
D-Day, a detailed report stating that heavy | artillery fire had sunk Corry was about to be submitte |
subjected to volleys of musket fire and the | artillery which had switched from roundshot to grapesh |
n infantry battalions, fourteen batteries of | artillery, a half-company of medium tanks, a squadron |
He died at his house at 3 | Artillery Place, Halifax, aged 91. |
ior Yeomanry Regiments would be re reoled as | artillery the Hampshire Yeomanry was re roled as an Ar |
hey were soon detached and returned as light | artillery in Hancock's II Corps. |
Anthony Porteous (73033), Royal Regiment of | Artillery (Fleet, Hants.). |
The mission of the 2nd Battalion, 5th Field | Artillery, "Rock Hard," is to prepare for combat and, |
Although the remaining German | artillery could hardly acquire targets because the spo |
Jackson methodically positioned his | artillery around Harpers Ferry and ordered Maj. |
Bye-Bye Dolly Gray, | Artillery Publishing, Hartwell, 2006. |
The U.S. Model 1840 light | artillery saber has a brass hilt and knuckle-bow of ab |
Advertiser reported that George Smith of the | Artillery Ground has taken the late Duke of Somerset's |
nlike the Model 1840 Heavy Cavalry Saber the | artillery model has no basket. |
After brilliant conduct in the | artillery, he has proven the highest qualities of cour |
d as 20 Battery, part of 16th Regiment Royal | Artillery and has lately served in the Falkland Island |
The current Danville | Artillery Battery has been in existence since the summ |
w tanks could be provided for the attack, so | artillery would have to be relied upon to prepare the |
The | artillery emplacements have been seen in the televisio |
Since their formation the Mountain | Artillery Regiments have served alongside the Alpini, |
are recorded by the 23 Field Regiment, Royal | Artillery as having made a daylight counterattack thro |
commander of the II.Battalion, 2nd SS Panzer | Artillery Regiment, he was transferred to the 12th SS |
In 1783 he entered the 1st regiment of | artillery, where he rapidly rose to the rank of Adjuta |
Baron was a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Royal | Artillery, and he fought in the Boer War in South Afri |
In 1827, while still an | artillery lieutenant, he helped survey the route for t |
Caught in an | artillery barrage, he was killed in the ruins of the h |
of the Eleventh United States Colored Heavy | Artillery, where he led African-Americans who were fig |
ointed colonel of the 5th U.S. Colored Heavy | Artillery where he performed garrison duty in the Vick |
James II enthusiastically promoted modern | artillery, which he used with some success against the |
a second lieutenant, he served in the Fourth | Artillery until he resigned from the service in 1836 t |
rld War I, he served with the Canadian Field | Artillery where he was wounded and achieved the rank o |
An | artillery captain, he was decorated with a second croi |
After holding various | artillery appointments, he was ambassador to Britain, |
He, like his father, started out in the | artillery when he joined the army in 1793. |
After serving in the U.S. Army as an | artillery officer he attended New College, Oxford, as |
lisco, commanding an army of 500 men and six | artillery pieces, he attacked the invading U.S. Army, |
as Director of the | Artillery School, he became General of Division in 186 |
As | artillery lieutenant, he distinguished himself and was |
After 14 days of continuous | artillery bombardment, he destroyed the two main defen |
ompanied the king's headquarters as chief of | artillery, as he had done in 1866, and was present at |
Army during World War II as a captain in the | artillery, where he saw action at the Battle of the Bu |
41 | Artillery Division, headquarters Pune, Maharashtra. |
, the rebel General Queipo de Llano sends in | artillery and heavily armed troops. |
ncluding infantry, cavalry, engineers, light | artillery, and heavy artillery units, were recruited f |
ed on the cargo ship for several hours using | artillery and heavy machine guns, severely damaging it |
Block 2 ( | artillery): one heavy twin machine gun cloche, one gre |
troops assisted by MNF detachments backed by | artillery and helicopter gunships, made successful cou |
companied a complement of military vehicles, | artillery and helicopter gunships to be used to root o |
The Israeli troops had no | artillery or helicopter support. |
ought about a vastly increased employment of | artillery by helicopters, both for displacement and re |
nducting raids against inland targets-mainly | artillery emplacements helping secure and cut off the |
amel of the 21st Light Infantry Regiment and | artillery Colonel Henri Marie Lenoury). |
Chief of | Artillery: BG Henry J. Hunt |
supported by a division of the Bombay Horse | Artillery, and Her Majesty's 95th Regiment, they route |
supported by a division of the Bombay Horse | Artillery, and Her Majesty's 95th Regiment, they route |
Commander: General of the | Artillery (Germany) Herbert Loch |
V.D (1838-1928) of the Manchester Volunteer | Artillery succeeded him at Gorton Foundry. |
s, one of hussars, and eight pieces of horse | artillery under him. |
2d Lt. Durham, | Artillery, distinguished himself by conspicuous gallan |
ded a four-gun battery called the Rockbridge | Artillery, naming his guns "Matthew, Mark, Luke, & Joh |
very and the accuracy and reliability of the | artillery under his command. |
ommand of combined Batteries A & C, 4th U.S. | Artillery, when his commander was wounded. |
d was born to Colonel Neville Walford (Royal | Artillery) and his wife. |
Israel later stated that "(t)he chances that | artillery fire hit that area at that time are nil". |
e man from the first team was killed when an | artillery round hit their bunker. |
ian bombardment began, "Georgian rockets and | artillery were hitting civilian areas in the breakaway |
the honor of the soldiers of the 133rd Field | Artillery returning home aboard her and employing them |
battle honours are not awarded to the Royal | Artillery, the honour of "1942-45", with scrolls "Ital |
Marshall's Company, Confederate | Artillery (Brown Horse Artillery) |
capture of Winchester, they captured enough | artillery and horses to equip a battalion of infantry |
s round the world, including the Royal Horse | Artillery, the Household Cavalry and various Police Fo |
much smaller fur cap worn by the Royal Horse | Artillery and hussar regiments in full dress. |
Artillery Brigade, I Corps, to November 1863. | |
The principle units (infantry, cavalry, | artillery) are identical to those in the Total War ser |
Artillery Brigade, II Corps, to June 1865. | |
Artillery Brigade, II Corps, Army of the Potomac, to D | |
Artillery Brigade, III Corps, to September 1863. | |
Despite advance the | artillery and improve the trenches, the besiegers, con |
He then finished Mikhaylovsky | Artillery School in Saint Petersburg in 1886, received |
When the | artillery was in place, officers could direct the fire |
initially intended to be reconnaissance and | artillery spotting in support of armies on the ground, |
fter serving briefly as commander of a field | artillery regiment in the Imperial Guards Division, Ka |
Following battalion command with an armored | artillery battalion in 1993-96, Wieker was deployed as |
She then returned to the | artillery school in Kiel until March 1940. |
unich and served as an officer in an armored | artillery battalion in Wildeshausen. |
His assignment was to locate heavy | artillery batteries in France by studying acoustic wav |
During the 1990s, he commanded various | artillery units in the military of a newly independent |
In heavy ground and | artillery battles in the mountain town of Chouweifat a |
January 21, 1891) was an | artillery officer in the United States Army who comman |
Matthews coordination of the large-scale | artillery support in Normandy and Walcheren showed him |
ated in the beginning of 1940 at 8th Kalinin | Artillery Plant in Kaliningrad under the guidance of i |
n Army as chaplain of the 1st Missouri Light | Artillery Regiment in 1861. |
hird fleet arrived and together with coastal | artillery engaged in a short and successful skirmish a |
First World War he served in the Royal Field | Artillery and in 1925 was called to the Bar at Inner T |
nsferred to the Army and became a general of | artillery and in 1644 he became Governor of North Wale |
He became Chief Instructor at the School of | Artillery, Larkhill in 1920, serving until 1923 when h |
Mercer worked as a bank cashier, and was an | artillery officer in the local militia. |
ntroduction of newer and more powerful naval | artillery ushered in a new era of war at sea. |
pyrotechnic laboratory and the first Higher | Artillery School in Russia. |
rst album, Into the Night, through the Heavy | Artillery label in November 2008 |
y, rushed alone into the battery, killed the | artillery officer in charge and was himself knocked do |
He spent his last years inspecting | artillery units in various garrison towns. |
nti-tank battery of six guns assigned to its | artillery regiment in 1942. |
y Gen. George McClellan to the command of an | artillery brigade in Gen. Whipple's division. |
with the concept that became the U.S. Horse | Artillery Brigade in the Army of the Potomac. |
r 40 years and was in command of the coastal | artillery forces in the Battle of Corregidor. |
ches were reported in 1765 but events at the | Artillery Ground in August may have been almost the la |
member of the original Ancient and Honorable | Artillery Company in Boston. |
ile serving with the 3rd Battery, SS Polizei | Artillery Regiment in October 1942. |
A small clip depicting | artillery fire in 2003 |
After studying | artillery installations in England and France, he beca |
nemy until reinforcements arrived, then gave | artillery support in defense of the entrenchments from |
he fortress of Peter and Paul with its heavy | artillery was in the hands of the insurgents. |
He was Commandant of the | Artillery School in 1940, and given a field command in |
He was an | artillery office in the U.S. Army. |
e the famed "Twin Sisters" cannons, the only | artillery present in Sam Houston's army. |
He subsequently served as a field | artillery officer in the 1st Marine Division after the |
Diver photographing 14-inch | artillery shells in the Yamagiri Maru |
h, Burr's regiment was devastated by British | artillery, and in the day's terrible heat, Burr suffer |
ved call-up papers to the army's Royal Horse | Artillery, based in Surrey. |
rticularly noted for his command of the 98th | Artillery Division in the Battle of Okinawa, and his i |
In 1840 he became Oberstleutnant and | artillery director in Fort Landau. |
The First Battle of Chattanooga was a minor | artillery battle in the American Civil War, fought on |
to No. 7 Company of the Australian Garrison | Artillery and in 1906 attended a military exhibition i |
rld War II, he served as a staff officer and | artillery commander in the 2nd New Zealand Division. |
Academy and later the Mikhailovsky Military | Artillery Academy in Saint Peterburg, but he also stud |
irst suggested the site of the former Polish | artillery barracks in the Zasole suburb of Oswiecim fo |
nfantry in July 1799, was transferred to the | artillery, and in May 1808 organized and commanded the |
9, 1843 - March 16, 1921) was a noted horse | artillery commander in the Confederate Army of Norther |
the War of 1812, he was appointed captain of | artillery, and in 1813 he commanded Fort Mifflin. |
student he was made a sub-lieutenant in the | artillery school in Metz on 1 September 1789 and promo |
Promoted to colonel of the Coast | Artillery Corps in May, 1917, Smith was made a brigadi |
lness under fire by watching for Confederate | artillery action in order to tell his men to drop to t |
His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Royal | Artillery Museum in Woolwich, England. |
ntre using infantry units, with armoured and | artillery units in support. |
He was appointed colonel of the 2nd | Artillery Regiment in the Georgia forces in August, an |
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