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    azyeoman

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    Everything posted by azyeoman

    1. I wanted to get at least one group of medals with lots of paperwork and this is what I ended up with. Sadly I don't know German and so can't figure out the details about this man and his wife other than the very obvious. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
    2. 1. 1939-45 Star 2. Africa Star 3. War Medal 4. TEM - GVI Territorial 1st type - Sgt. R. Hutchinson D.L.I.) with cap badge. With photocopies of the PoW rolls showing that he was taken prisoner as a Sgt. in the D.L.I. and had the POW no. 223062; he was held at Campo 66 at Capua, Italy, and later at Stalag 357 at Oerbke near Fallingbostel. Camp 66 was a transit camp about 30Km north of Naples. His number suggests service with the 9th Bn. D.L.I., which fought with 151st Brigade at Matruh in June 1942 and suffered heavy losses in the face of a strong German attack, much of the battalion being surrounded and taken prisoner. This was a VC action too for a man in the 9th. The 9th D.L.I. was based at Gateshead.
    3. A bar with a couple of Romanian medals.
    4. Panzerschiff Deautschland group
    5. A nice DAK bar with two Italian medals.
    6. Naval group for Romania and the Spanish Civil War.
    7. Here's an interesting one to a man who served overseas or at least supported the overseas campaigns from the Fatherland.
    8. Not as long as some, but the longest in the collection and to a non-combatant as well!
    9. I'm adding this because it's such a nice bar.
    10. Over the weekend I looked through many sites and came across one; I scooped it up. These are very nice and I'm going to be on the lookout for them from now on. : )
    11. Thank you! Here's what I've been able to find out in a few stroke because of your expertise: The I Royal Bavarian Corps (along with the participated in the Franco-Prussian War as part of the 3rd Army. It initially fought in the battles of Worth, Beaumont and the Bazeilles, where it lost about 7.000 men, it also fought at the decisive battle of Sedan. After Sedan, the Corps was responsible for the removal of prisoners and ensuring transport of the booty. Thereafter, it moved south of Paris to the Loire, to shield the army during the Siege of Paris. From October to late December 1870, the Corps was on service without interruption, particularly from the beginning of November in the battles of Villepion, Loigny, Orleans and Beaugency, normally against the numerically superior French. The losses in December alone amounted to 5,600 men.
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