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Posts posted by Mark C
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Thanks, liked these very much.
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It appears that a number of the photos are a result of some guy having a camera ready and rushing to his second-story window whenever something interesting passed by. Sometimes you can see one or two of the German soldiers glancing up at the cameraman.
Thanks for sharing,
Mark C
Maryland
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I think he's wearing a stable jacket and not his full dress tunic. I also think there are several indications of his being a hussar (either regular army or yeomanry). The cuff knot is not the typical full-dress Austrian knot, but closer to this: http://www.britishempire.co.uk/forces/army...ssarsstable.htm It might be described as typical cuff piping as in any branch, even the infantry, but gussied up in a way that to me bespeaks hussar.
Notice also that the buttons are small and round - something not found on full dress except for hussars (but as I said, I don't think this is full dress; full dress for a hussar would have braid all across the chest in several rows).
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I have no doubt Rumjar's photos were being sold commercially. I have a sense of deja vu for the first one, which I have the feeling I has been somewhere labeled as US Marines.
The Asian soldiers in dark blue with the one peering at the camera -- I would have reflexively said "Japanese," but aren't those flat British-style helmets? Maybe this is the Chinese navy.
Thanks for posting,
MConrad
Maryland
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http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/eu...opup&ino=46
shows the "black Tommy."
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Sorry, these scans are all I have. I don't have the paper copies.
Regards,
Mark
GordonWould you be prepared to let me have a good quality scan of this photo, please? It is for use in a book on the armies of the Boxer Uprising & 8 Powers War. These photos are in the US NARA collection, and in the public domain, but I have lost contact with the guy who used to dig them out for me - and as I am in the UK, it makes it difficult (NARA admin is amazingly bad and almost, it seems, delibertely obstructive). You would get an acknowledgement as the source, of course.
Mark,
First, thanks again for your wonderful Russian sources website. Next - the same question as above. Do you have a high res scan of the photos you've posted which I could use (you and your website are already in the acknowledgements in the book), please?
Any Other Member
If anyone else has any photos of the Boxer Uprising they would be prepared to allow to be used, please get in touch with me.
Thanks
Mike
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http://books.google.com/books?id=dDUoAAAAY...lient=firefox-a
For Husaren-Regt Nr 3.
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http://www.archive.org/details/kaiskniglmilitr00kriegoog on the internetarchive for 1878 Schematismus
Read this http://austrohungarianlandforcesdiscussion...-1820-1885.html for links to 11 more.
And that's not even looking at Google books yet.
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I agree, absolutely super! :cool:
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I'd also say late-WWI or early post-war, if the tunics are to be military. Such styles, with the integral cloth belt, are much more 1918-1920 than say, 1910.
If the photo is indeed from 1910 or earlier, than the boys in the tunics are almost certainly civilians in civilian coats.
My guess is 1910, civilians.
Regards,
Mark C
Maryland
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Google for these regiments on Google Books. Several dozen regimental histories are available. Then you can check yourself.
In general, officers are mentioned as coming and going, a few mentioned in regard to promotions, and that's about it. A commanding colonel may get a short biography covering service not with the regiment.
You know, the KuK Schematismus are also online to look at the position of any officer in a given year.
Regards,
Mark
Maryland
HiFor my research, I am interested in finding out if there are any kind of detailed careerdescriptions of individual officers in the regimental histories of the following k.k. Regiments
Cavalerie
Husaren-Regiment Nr 2 "Nicolaus Grossf?rst von Russland"
Husaren-Regiment Nr 3 "Ludwig Graf Foillot de Crenneville, Feldmarschallieutenant"
Husaren-Regiment Nr 6
Husaren-Regiment Nr 8 "Churf?rst von Hessen"
Husaren-Regiment Nr 9 "Franz F?rst Liechtenstein"
Chevaux-Leger-Regiment Nr 5 "Carl F?rst von Liechtenstein"
C?rassier-Regiment Nr 1 "Franz Joseph"
C?rassier-Regiment Nr 6 "Prinz Alexander von Hessen und bei Rhein, Feldmarschallieutenant"
C?rassier-Regiment Nr 7 "Herzog Wilhelm von Braunschweig"
Uhlanen-Regiment Nr 3 "Erzherzog Carl"
Dragoner-Regiment Nr 6
Artillerie
Artillerie-Regiment Nr 4
K?sten-Artillerie-Regiments
if someone could tell me that (for some of the Regts) that would be great!
regards
David
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A real-photo postcard being sold out of Japan. I think the seller's description did not do it justice. The first group is an Italian band in their grey field uniforms, and just beyond them a number of carabinieri (military police) in full dress. I guess they don't go anywhere without their bicorne hats, even to Siberia! The next group is another band with a white flag out front - they might be British, or they might be White Russians. In the way back under the Rising Sun would be Japanese sailors in dark blue with white caps.
Regards,
M Conrad
Maryland
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In 1914, the French 149th Infantry Regiment was stationed at Epinal, the location of this photographer's studio.
Case solved.
Mark Conrad
Maryland
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A photo of Germans and Russian cossacks during the Boxer Rebellion, from the Russian Collector site http://russiamilitaria.ru/index.php?showtopic=8751
The shoulder straps have "1. Cht." in Cyrillic letters for the 1st Chita Cossack Regiment.
Mark Conrad
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SMS Gneisenau (a German ship) sailors (left background) socializing with Russian soldiers, dated 1903 (post-Boxer Rebellion). Seen on EBay some time ago.
For info on Russian troop units in China, see Russian Operations in the Boxer Rebellion . As regards infantry, it looks like only three line Rifle regiments plus a whole series of Siberian Rifle regiments were involved. No regiments from the main line of over 200 numbered Infantry (different from "Rifle") regiments took part, since they were only stationed in European Russia.
Regards,
Mark C
Maryland
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See http://marksrussianmilitaryhistory.info/WarMedals.htm for specifics on criteria for award. Sorry, no information on numbers awarded. In the hundreds of thousands sounds right.
Regards,
Mark Conrad
Maryland
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Please look at my site's page showing two interesting photos of the 21st Infantry in their pre-WWI dress blue uniforms:
http://marksrussianmilitaryhistory.info/US...os/USGroup.html
Thanks,
Mark Conrad
Maryland
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Any idea of what type of tank Jemadar Rajpal Singh was using in the Deccan Horse?
Great collecting and documentation.
M Conrad
Maryland
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Isn't that a cross after his printed name, signifying he is deceased?
Mark C
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Schutztruppe and Unknown Uniform?
in Germany: Imperial: Rick (Research) Lundstrom Forum for Documentation and Photographs
Posted
The fellow on the left looks to me like a generic "settler/plantation owner."