「artillery」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)8ページ目
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se of its heavy caliber by treating it as an | artillery piece in World War II. |
Voronezh Military School, the Mikhaylovskoye | Artillery School in Saint Petersburg (1882) and the Ge |
There was a "fives" game at the | Artillery Ground in which the Duke of Dorset's team be |
father of Rufus King, Jr., of the U.S. Horse | Artillery Brigade in the Civil War, and General Charle |
Alexander had enlisted in a U.S. Army | artillery company in 1800. |
The | Artillery Ground in Finsbury is one of London's most c |
82, Dzugaev served in the Soviet Army, as an | artillery officer in the Transbaikal Military District |
Capron became a well-known | artillery officer in the Regular Army. |
Land was first purchased here for use as an | artillery range in 1849, and the main use of the site |
883, and the turret handed over to the Royal | Artillery Regiment in March 1886. |
Between 1874-1876 he studied at the | artillery school in Berlin and 1901 was promoted to co |
tralian Task Force-with armour, aviation and | artillery support; in total 6,300 personnel. |
The 46th Group was stationed at | Artillery Kaserne in Neckarsulm, West Germany until Ju |
Battle of New Orleans and transferred to the | Artillery Corps in May, 1815 before resigning his comm |
er 24, 1841 - January 14, 1912) was a career | artillery officer in the United States Army, and a vet |
ars to be its predecessor, the M1931, in the | Artillery Museum in Saint Petersburg. |
ssee and during World War I, he served as an | artillery captain in France and Belgium. |
inek (1889 - 1944), Austrian-German General, | artillery officer in the Austro-Hungarian Army during |
He served as a Confederate | Artillery Captain in the 31st Texas Cavalry during the |
ell was subsequently posted to the 2nd Field | Artillery (Mounted) in the Panama Canal Zone, where he |
A 90mm de Bange | artillery piece, in 1898. |
Battery Chamberlin is an | artillery battery in the Presidio of San Francisco, Sa |
erial traveller in Britain mounting from the | artillery ground in London and traversing the regions |
was commissioned Captain in the 1st Norfolk | Artillery Volunteers in 1882. |
Pennicott was in charge of the Royal | Artillery forces in the Falklands War and as a witness |
Between 1895-1910 he served with the 11th | Artillery Regiment in Lviv. |
Guthrie has previously served as a field | artillery officer in the 101st Airborne Division at Fo |
In 1964, he was transferred to an | artillery division in Thrace by decree of the Center U |
l in August 1946 Heath joined the Honourable | Artillery Company, in which he remained active through |
served on the Mexican frontier, commanded an | artillery battalion in France as a major when he was w |
He graduated from the Konstantin's | Artillery School in St. Petersburg in 1903 and served |
referred, is a former Australian Royal Navy | artillery battery in the hinterland of Horseshoe. |
was soon assigned as second lieutenant to an | artillery unit in Charleston, South Carolina. |
The 1st Division's | artillery batteries in front of Lagnicourt were overru |
to Major, and served as head of division for | artillery affairs in the Bavarian war ministry until 1 |
Promoted to Captain with the 1st | Artillery Regiment in 1891, he began to develop teleme |
Civil War, he enlisted in the Arkansas Light | Artillery, serving in the 1st Battalion. |
rld War l, he was assigned to the 63rd Heavy | Artillery Regiment in France and actively participated |
"Val Po'" Alpine | Artillery Group in Piasco |
In the same year he created a new | artillery school in Valence, which was to include Napo |
"Pinerolo" Alpine | Artillery Group in Beinette |
Major General Harold Grimwade, served as an | artillery officer in France during World War I. |
The Royal | Artillery Barracks in 2005. |
as commissioned as a Lieutenant in the Royal | Artillery, and in September 1876 he was promoted to th |
The Royal | Artillery Barracks in 1900 |
1841 - April 2, 1865) was an important young | artillery officer in Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army |
During World War II, he served as an | artillery captain in the First Infantry Division in No |
Vyborg and infantry company in Ino and heavy | artillery battery in Sveaborg. |
d command of the 2d Howitzer Battalion, 35th | Artillery Regiment in 1968. |
March 1917, the 161st Brigade and divisional | artillery were in reserve while the 53rd Division carr |
regiment was given the designation A 2 (2nd | Artillery Regiment) in 1830. |
Russian garrison, had 19 bronze and 300 iron | artillery pieces in the fortress, weak in power and ra |
he victorious march of the cavalry and horse | artillery dispatched in the direction of Cawnpore to o |
thereby “force” the enemy into close quarter | artillery duals, in which the immobility of the danish |
He joined the Ancient and Honorable | Artillery Company in 1814. |
(1823 - October 17, 1899) was a Confederate | artillery captain in the American Civil War. |
Coldstream Guards are stationed at the Royal | Artillery Barracks in Woolwich. |
Divisional | artillery remained in the Line until 29 September, par |
y and from 31 May to 1 October 1919 attended | Artillery College in England. |
anal, Sumiyoshi was placed in command of the | artillery units in the Eastern District Army (Japan), |
died while fearlessly exposing himself in an | artillery barrage in order to get his men into a safer |
On February 3rd, 2004 an exploding 122mm | artillery shell in Vladikavkaz killed an army cadet an |
Hau was appointed an | artillery officer in 1938, and served in the Chinese e |
l German Army in 1914 and served in the 15th | Artillery Regiment in World War I as a Leutnant. |
st Point, he was then sent with the U.S. 3rd | Artillery Regiment in 1854 around Cape Horn to Califor |
The first mention of the Pulaski Light | Artillery came in an article published in the Arkansas |
inues to be the most deployed self-propelled | artillery vehicle in the world (over 4,000 have been p |
er training as a private (gunner) at a large | artillery camp in Petawawa, on the Ottawa River. |
In World War I he served as a junior | artillery officer in the Canadian Field Artillery in F |
ed as a lieutenant in Gamble's Florida Light | Artillery and in the Kilcrease Light Artillery. |
he Great War the unit was re-organised as an | artillery regiment, in which form it saw out World War |
of the Wilderness Kitching commanded a heavy | artillery brigade in the Army of the Potomac's artille |
rsion of the D-10 was installed as a coastal | artillery piece in Finland in the 1960s. |
bluff at Randolph with earthen defenses and | artillery batteries in order to protect the fort from |
He joined the Royal | Artillery serving in Palestine from 1918 to 1919. |
He was Commanding Officer 9th | Artillery Brigade in 1942, and in 1943 was Commanding |
ium regiment and the first commandant of the | Artillery centre in Attock in 1952. |
Kursants (cadets) of the Red Army's | Artillery School in Chuhuyiv, 1933 |
He was made squadron commander with the 19th | Artillery Regiment in 1902, but his real work was done |
as a lieutenant in the Ancient and Honorable | Artillery Company) in the failed assaults on French Po |
inek (2 February 1889 - 28 June 1944) was an | artillery officer in the Austro-Hungarian Army during |
ned the military school in 1854, becoming an | artillery Sub-Lieutenant in 1859. |
He was graduated at the | artillery school in 1873, and was in the Philippine se |
The assault began with a bitter four-day | artillery barrage in which the British fired about 100 |
en the U.S. 9th Infantry Division's attached | artillery arrived in Thala after a four-day, 800-mile |
duties as Executive Officer of the 3rd Field | Artillery Brigade in 1928. |
nt-Malo, he earned a job as sub-inspector of | artillery crews in Morlaix, before being employed in t |
on of Hilary Pollard Jones, who commanded an | artillery battalion in the Army of Northern Virginia d |
Peterborough established | artillery batteries in the castle, which had a command |
a government surveyor, later a lieutenant of | artillery, and in 1848 a pupil in the Berlin School of |
became Colonel Commandant of the Royal Horse | Artillery, and in the same year he was appointed Maste |
r first armour plate in 1888 and their first | artillery piece in 1890. |
anover, Germany, he was a radio operator and | artillery observer in the German Wehrmacht during Worl |
ship funded by Alois Bruhl, Cichocki studied | artillery tactics in Dresden. |
From 1956 to 1959, Donaldson was an | artillery officer in the United States Army. |
treet with what appears to be a hole from an | artillery shell in its facade. |
hort continued to be used by some Australian | artillery units in New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and |
Academy in 1833 and was assigned to the 3rd | artillery, served in garrison and as assistant instruc |
He drew on | artillery units, in particular rocket systems 9K51 Gra |
A businessman and militia | artillery officer in the 1930s, he rose to be the comm |
the French Army where he became a decorated | artillery officer, including the Legion of Honor. |
The division further had 47 | artillery pieces, including 12 self-propelled guns. |
s Fort Ertugrul) and it was equipped with 10 | artillery pieces, including two 28 cm Krupp L/22 guns. |
ut the ever-modernization of coastal defense | artillery, once including 10-inch and 12-inch guns on |
3 | artillery brigades, including a mortar regiment and a |
It also trains all | artillery NCO's, including forward observers and morta |
t Westminster School and served in the Royal | Artillery 1942-47, including two years in the Far East |
Save for a few mishaps, the | artillery was incredibly effective. |
ter and about 6000 strong,did not have siege | artillery (or indeed any artillery) to breach the wall |
r is popularly credited with introduction of | Artillery in India, in the Battle of Panipat in 1526, |
s and in 1887 he became Inspector-General of | Artillery in India. |
g World War II as Brigadier, Commander Royal | Artillery, in Indian 4th Infantry Division (in North A |
army establishments including the School of | Artillery of Indian Army and nearby Airforce station. |
tery and 104 Field Battery, Royal Australian | Artillery providing indirect fire support in conjuncti |
or the infantry and used horses to tow their | artillery; German industry could not turn out sufficie |
Shortly before noon, with American | artillery fire inexplicably withdrawn and the five sup |
Artillery, 2nd Infantry Division, Army of West Virgini | |
At the time they were under heavy | artillery and infantry fire from the enemy who were on |
a unit of veterans or invalides supported by | artillery and infantry from the 61st demi-brigade. |
by an ad hoc brigade of armoured cars, towed | artillery and infantry which completed the trip in 30 |
ng with many in the front line under intense | artillery and infantry attacks. |
up of tanks from The South Alberta Regiment, | artillery, and infantry of the Argyll and Sutherland H |
Finally, co-ordinated air, | artillery, and infantry attacks resulted in the captur |
square, but were again stopped by the French | artillery and infantry fire. |
1943 and comprised 5 Azeri and 6 Turkestani | artillery and infantry units. |
battalion sergeant major in the 124th Field | Artillery, 33rd Infantry Division, being discharged Ju |
f staff departments, Field Grade officers of | Artillery and Infantry, Company Grade Officers of Ligh |
are bas-relief parapet panels depicting the | Artillery, Cavalry, Infantry, and Signal Corps. |
he Austrian army (thirty five thousand light | artillery and infantry, five thousand cavalry, not inc |
eport lists the garrison as "drilled some at | artillery and infantry," putting it a step ahead of th |
heavy cavalry, not caring much about either | artillery or infantry. |
o led the Polish cavalry against the Spanish | artillery and infantry. |
immediately stopped by fire from the French | artillery and infantry. |
chments, machine gun nests, barbed wire, and | artillery repeatedly inflicted severe casualties on th |
n, the 18 men of the platoon along with four | artillery observers inflicted between 60 to more than |
The Battery B, 3rd Rhode Island Heavy | Artillery was initially organized in Providence, Rhode |
The Battery E, 3rd Rhode Island Heavy | Artillery was initially organized in Providence, Rhode |
not was appointed deputy adjutant-general of | artillery, then inspector-general of artillery, and fi |
Trumbull was improved by having more modern | artillery pieces installed. |
afi was using fighter jets, helicopters, and | artillery strikes, instead of his ground troops, to at |
More specialists in anti-aircraft | artillery, engineering, intelligence, special commando |
Attack Helicopter Battalion preventing Iraqi | artillery from interfering, the 1st ID conducted a pas |
Lloyd was credited with turning the 12th | Artillery Brigade into an outstanding unit. |
r 217 days when the Royal Horse and Canadian | Artillery galloped into Mafeking on 17 May 1900. |
On 27 February 1967, in response to Marine | artillery fire into and the area north of the DMZ (Ope |
By 31 March, there was heavy | artillery fire into the north, south, and west of Bres |
wen's "Sonnet On Seeing a Piece of our Heavy | Artillery Brought into Action" |
The Wiard rifle is a semi-steel light | artillery piece invented by Norman Wiard. |
RAF aircraft and coastal | artillery were involved in the sinking, which had been |
roop became part of 1st Regiment Royal Horse | Artillery which involved, at the outset, the formation |
A three-a-side game in the | Artillery Ground involving six players esteemed the be |
an Army tanks, helicopter gunships and heavy | artillery, the IPKF routed the LTTE. |
Artillery in Ipswich first came about in 1866 when the | |
esert and camel troops, infantry battalions, | artillery and irregular cavalry (called "Spahis"). |
sor of which, the 206 (Ulster) Battery Royal | Artillery (Volunteers), is one of the most efficient u |
Joining the Royal | Artillery, Montresor is said to have been present at t |
Firepower: The Royal | Artillery Museum is a military museum in Woolwich in s |
The 5th Battalion, 52nd Air Defense | Artillery Regiment is an air and missile defense batta |
The 6th | Artillery Regiment is also based at Minneriya along wi |
causeway, while German machine, mortar, and | artillery fire is shot at them. |
The 1st Field | Artillery Regiment is an Field Artillery regiment of t |
f China: The People's Liberation Army Second | Artillery Corps is the only operator of the DF-5. |
Artillery Duel is a strategy game and artillery clone | |
The Honourable | Artillery Company is also still separate but, although |
The 15th Field | Artillery Regiment is an Field Artillery regiment of t |
Artillery Ridge is an unincorporated community in Spot | |
The punchline to the long gun gag where the | artillery shell is fired and blasts the city of Tokyo |
hen the camp was used as US Army 202nd Coast | Artillery Bainbridge Island Headquarters. |
In 1938 the | Artillery Directorate issued specifications for a whee |
her John, a captain in the Royal Regiment of | Artillery, and it became extinct upon his death at Cli |
y a small detachment of just 300 men without | artillery made it an initial objective for Smuts' offe |
e remaining Panther turret with aircraft and | artillery, but it finally fell to one of the New Zeala |
number of men would be exposed to the enemy | artillery when it discovered their location. |
a great cricket match will be play'd in the | Artillery Ground; it will be the last plaid (sic) this |
at length of time taken to manufacture heavy | artillery, and it was recognised that the gun of 13.5 |
The 82nd Field | Artillery traces it earliest history to that of the "F |
and large artifacts such as tanks and field | artillery on it for public view. |
Uniquely among American | artillery weapons it has the recoil cylinder situated |
Originally planned as a light | artillery regiment, it was converted to an infantry un |
Besides the Royal | Artillery Barracks it was the location of the Royal Ar |
The 1st Mountain | Artillery Regiment Italian: 1° Reggimento Artiglieria |
The 2nd Alpine | Artillery Regiment Italian: 2° Reggimento Artiglieria |
The 3rd Mountain | Artillery Regiment Italian: 3° Reggimento Artiglieria |
The 4th Mountain | Artillery Regiment Italian: 4° Reggimento Artiglieria |
He served with the Royal | Artillery in Italy during the Second World War, includ |
ng had spent the war with the Royal Garrison | Artillery in Italy, and also made over 30 appearances |
When the Sri Lanka | Artillery disbanded its Anti-Aircraft Regiments in 196 |
Field Battery, Royal Regiment of Australian | Artillery, had its beginnings in Egypt, in March 1916. |
icers with fighting experience, insufficient | artillery, and its troops were under-trained. |
This | artillery barrage, its effectiveness, leading practice |
n also caused large difficulty in moving the | artillery from its position on the southern edge of th |
when Kent played against All-England at the | Artillery Ground, its team included Larkin and a playe |
army was forced to abandon its supplies and | artillery in its hasty retreat. |
the proximity fuse for immediate use by the | artillery, despite its secret status. |
it is likely that the exterior casing of the | artillery shell itself was made of titanium. |
Artillery Brigade, IV Corps, Army of the Cumberland, t | |
Artillery Brigade, IV Corps, to November 1864. | |
Artillery Brigade, IV Corps, to August 1865. | |
Artillery Brigade, IX Corps, to August 1864. | |
s battery served in the First Virginia Light | Artillery under J. Thompson Brown in the Maryland Camp |
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