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Posts posted by Mark C
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No, not Life-Guards Grenadiers, one of the cuirassier regiments.11. Soldier
To me its looks like this man served in the same unit as the men on the previous picture (No.10) but I am not 100% sure. Just "E" and the imperial crown on the pogoni looks like the same unit? Does anyone know whats the badge what he has next to the medal?
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Rifle regiments wore these fur hats. See http://marksrussianmilitaryhistory.info/RUSS1914.html for the ones as they were in 1914.13. three soldiers
My next favorite! Who mainly worn these hats? Cossacs or Calvary? What uniforms they have and also one badge. I think I have seen it but I can't figure out where. Some how almost remaind a pilot badge.
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No cockade on the cap, and is he wearing his belt buckle upside down? Perhaps this signifies post-1917 revolution? If so, he would be ditching those shoulder boards pretty soon.Hi all,
I picked up some interesting photos last week and I would like to share them with you and also learn if some expert willing to share here. Mainly I am interested what type/period uniforms are on the pictures, what units some of the soldiers served and also their ranks. There is as well two regimental badges or school badges to ID.
Any other info and comments are welcome! Enjoy!
1. soldier
Is this pre 1912 soldier's uniform? Like I understand he served in 676thSenkovskajaInfantryRegiment (676-й пехотный Сеньковский полк)? I presume his medal is just some unofficial jeton because the ribbon and its attachment.
2. is this man an officer or cadet?
I can't figure out any stars on the pogoni, so I think is it correct to quess that he was a cadet? Also gymnastiorka looks like enlisted men one? Belt looks very weird or something what I haven't seen.
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Possibly connected with it being a convenient time for the King of Prussia to send a friendly statement to the Swedes. Or perhaps there was a marriage somewhere between members of the two royal houses?There are few of these plates around. But indeed a pain to find at a decent price.
I don't really know the reasons behind it. But I guess it were old regiments with an glorious enough past. Some parts of the 33th and a little bit later the whole of the 34th were given these rights in the middle of the 1800s. Both of them Swedish regiments in pommern since the beginning of 1700s. Later transferred to the prussians after the deal made in june 1815 regarding some territories (we got Norway, shitty trade when considering these guys kept rebelling against us).
Back to the first post of the topic. Somebody that can help me clarify things?
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I don't see much chance for this musket to have come to Afghanistan until much later than 1849. Russian territory did not touch Afghanistan until much later. It was only in the 1860s that they started taking over the central Asian khanates north of Afghanistan.
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For what it's worth...
Got an email of recent books from East View that included something pretty unusual:
Mongolia
Erkhembatyn tsergiin bichig <http://www.eastview.com/russian/books/product.asp?sku=2048000B>
Country: Mongolia, Language: Mongolian(Cyrillic)
Ulan-Bator: Batlan khamgaalakhyn erdem shinzhilgeenii khureelen, 2009. 372 p. ISBN:
Erkhembat's Military Formation Letter
Description: Study of the Military Theory work written by a Barga Mongolian statesman in 1913. The content and annotation are written in English.
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These are very nice looking. What's the first one, and why does the cuff have white piping and the pocket flaps blue?I collect German, Austrian and Russian tunics, I will post a few of them here. Email me if interested in details. Enjoy. Robert E. Smith
Much appreciate the photos,
M Conrad
Maryland
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Can anyone help me with suggestions as to where I can find any information about this unit please? I believe that in about 1865 it was formed into an artillery unit.
Thanks,
Max.
Go to Internet Archive and look for RECORDS OF THE SCOTTISH VOLUNTEER FORCE 1859-1908 by Grierson at http://www.archive.org/details/recordsofscottis00grierich
Regards,
MC
Maryland
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First two photos look like World War One. Group photos look like South Africa, either Boer War or a few years afterward. The Rifles Maltese cross badge on photo 1 would agree with the dark colored rank chevron in the last group photo.
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And here - a little stretched by perspective - is poor old Franz Ferdinand (painted in happier times). [by the way, I intend to show you the car and the Archduke's medals again, later - but that's enough for now.]
This better?
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This is a photograph of a United States soldier in the Coast Artillery Corps, circa 1910. I don't know the language of the writing on the back. Is it Czech?
Thanks,
Mark
Maryland
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Excellent thread.
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S'funny, when you think of women being press ganged into digging tank traps (or whatever) you think of peasants in thick padded winter clothing, not summer skirts and shoes...
What shoes? Aren't they barefoot?
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One on the left, top picture just isnt playing the game is she?
Hell, who do you think just pulled that boulder out?
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Thanks. I'm always partial to M1902 uniforms.
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1940 new quarters? Then what about the Ost Front ribbon?
Might be late 1942 when occupying new quarters in newly occupied Vichy.
As for smiling prisoners - not unknown at all on the Western Front, so that argument can go either way. Can't tell about the gendarme either - maybe he gets his jollies putting the boche in the pen, or maybe he thinks Vichy collaboration is the cat's meow. And then again maybe he's just a happy kind of guy...
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Yes, strange that the only uniformity are the should strap slides. In all other respects they look like Beetle Bailey. Where's the policeman's belt?
And the soft cap in the very front - French not German?
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My guess that these are rear-echelon types rounded up in the summer of 1944. Certainly, it looks like police, firemen, and depot types all happy to be out of the war. (Although the gendarme seems to be the most satisfied with the situation.) Anyone ever see Germans in such shiny helmets elsewhere? Looks like two different types of helmet to me.
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Super secret transistor radio - only issued to elite SS units via a space-time worm hole to 1965 Japan.
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I think these are all your great-grandfather. The one in the uniform coat and tie must be from post 1900, maybe up to WWI if he was recalled to do some war-related work in England.
Just to be sure, the first big group photo is of surviving Lucknow veterans about 40 years after the events?
Thanks,
MConrad
Maryland
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Are we assuming the Coburg/Gotha list was transcribed from the Meiningen list? They probably were never co-located so perhaps someone was scribbling from the Meiningen list, carried that copy to Gotha, and then took the time to carefully and neatly transcribe into the official entry book. But the carried list inbetween could very well have not been so carefully done, and led to the errors?
MC
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Book on Turkish Navy uniforms: http://www.militaryz...p?topic=11670.0
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See
http://rapidshare.com/files/385044201/LatviaMuzeumAnnual.pdf
for articles on navy uniforms, independence units, badges, and general gripes about WWII. In Latvian, but short summaries in English.
Regards,
MarkC
Maryland
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I don't think it's Customs Agent, in the sense that he was a civil servant in government employ. I think he was a private individual offering services to help businesses and people get things through customs, following necessary paperwork, storing in warehouses, etc.
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Haul of imperial photos - info required
in Russia: Imperial
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