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fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biot_(Alpes-Maritimes)#Une_possession_templière
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphonse_II_de_Provence
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_souverains_de_Provence#Se...
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_commanderies_templières_...
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commanderie
www.templedeparis.fr/actualités-1/biot-et-les-templiers-...
templiers.org/divers/programme-templiers-biot.pdf
www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3IK0Yxao0I
www.dailymotion.com/video/x1beyvm
archives.nicematin.com/article/antibes/biot-le-tresor-des...
www.nice-panorama.com/Biot/Fete-Templier-Biot-2009/Une-ba...
www.nice-panorama.com/Biot/Fete-Templier-Biot-2009/Histoi...
www.nice-panorama.com/Biot/Fete-Templier-Biot-2009/SlideS...
www.biot-tourisme.com/decouvrez/patrimoine-historique/tem...
English version www.visit-biot.com/discover/historical-heritage/knights-t...
freerider06.over-blog.com/article-biot-la-cite-templiere-...
freerider06.over-blog.com/article-la-legende-du-tresor-de...
freeridermagasine.over-blog.com/article-29608787.html
faire une recherche pour 'Biot' :
pays-d-azur.hautetfort.com/archive/2014/04/04/les-templie...
www.templiers.net/departements/index.php?page%3D06
templarii3m.free.fr/doc_templiers_alpes_maritimes.htm
Vue d'en haut :
www.openstreetmap.org/#map=19/43.62327/7.09856
Un autre point de vue (croix centrale) :
Philip Drakards Transport depot at Hartest in Suffolk in the early 1980's A White Commander and a Volvo F10 the White was purchased by Fred Lay and was painted and sign written as B J and the bear
The lead character from Palitoy's version of Hasbro's US Superjoe toy line (though sadly with half the figures). Unfortunately due to the rubber used in the joints the figures were almost as short-lived as the toy line; the Commander here is held together by superglue... and his hands tend to crumble if you so much as look at them!
Commander Neyo, a clone marshal commander of the 91st Reconnaissance Corps in the Grand Army of the Republic, invades my desk and joins the other Clone Troopers standing guard over my office.
U.S. Air Force Maj. Gen. Chad P. Franks, the commander of Fifteenth Air Force, far right, discusses total force integration initiatives and the active association program, with Col. Akshai Gandhi, 169th Fighter Wing commander, at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, South Carolina, Feb. 23, 2021. This was Franks first visit to the South Carolina Air National Guard base in his current position to meet with Airmen of the 169th Fighter Wing and active-associate, regular Air Force members of the 316th Fighter Squadron. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Edward Snyder, 169th Fighter Wing Public Affairs)
FORT STEWART, Ga. September 29, 2015 –Lieutenant Col. David Allen, commander of the 1st Battalion 118th Field Artillery Regiment and Capt. Jared Smith, commander of Battery C, 1-118th FA observe battery live fire of M777 Howitzers assigned to Battery C. The Savannah-based 118th FA is conducting annual training at Fort Stewart.
Georgia Army National Guard photo by Capt. William Carraway / released
Today i started on commander thorn. I am still waiting for the clone army customs helmet to paint so all i have got done so far is the shoulder pad....
Youtube: www.youtube.com/channel/UCSQvWstI2zp6cHP6QLzRkuQ?feature=...
This is a T-64BK with reactive armour at an Armoured Vehicle Repair Plant in the Lvov District.. The B variant has a larger sight on the left front of the turret; K, or command, variants have the "bean can" antenna mount on the turret.
The Commander after her first Bricklink order was added to her. Many detail still preliminary. The port side was largely unfinished. The tumble hole was created using black 1x2 hinge bricks
140220-N-DX698-054 CAMP H.M. SMITH (Feb. 20, 2014) Adm. Samuel Locklear, Commander of U.S. Pacific Command, gives opening remarks at the Pacific Command Commanders Conference at US Pacific Command Headquarters in Hawaii. Commanders from the Asia-Pacific gathered to discuss security in the Indo-Asia-Pacific. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jay M. Chu/Released)
See complete photo gallery of the 2010 Jeep Commander Limited
Photographer: Matthieu Lambert
Brochure.
From nps.org:
1 BRIGADIER GENERAL ALBERT PIKE
Commander, Pike's Indian Brigade
Pike was a noted poet, educator and Masonic scholar from Arkansas. Although he opposed secession, he was loyal to his state. In August, 1861, he was commissioned a Brigadier General and negotiated several treaties between the "Five Civilized Tribes" and the Confederate States. Those treaties specifically stated that the Indian regiments would only be used for the defense of the Indian Territory.
When General Van Dorn took command of the Trans-Mississippi District, which included the Indian Territory, he ordered Pike to assemble his regiments and join the Army of the West. Pike protested, stating that this violated the treaties. Van Dorn ignored Pike's objections though. Pike led his brigade east, although many Indian troops refused to leave the Indian Territory.
Prior to Pea Ridge, Pike's "Indian Brigade" had about 1,000 soldiers, which included a unit of Texas cavalry. The Brigade played a limited role on the Leetown battlefield, protecting the Confederate right flank. After ambushing a company of the 3rd Iowa Cavalry, they came under fire from Federal artillery, which disorganized and scattered the Indian Brigade. Many of the troops left the battlefield and returned home.
The Indian Brigade's service at Pea Ridge was noted more for its propaganda value than for any military worth. When a number of Federal dead were found scalped and mutilated, the Indian troops were accused of the atrocity and Pike was vigorously denounced throughout the North. In July, 1862, he resigned his commission saying that the Confederate Government was violating the treaties with the Indians. After the war, Pike left Arkansas and moved to Washington, D.C. where he died in 1891.
Last updated: April 10, 2015
2 MAJOR GENERAL EARL VAN DORN
Commander, Army of the West
On January 10, 1862, Confederate President Jefferson Davis offered Mississippi-born Earl Van Dorn, command of the region west of the Mississippi River, known as the Trans-Mississippi. Two other generals, Henry Heth and Braxton Bragg had both turned down the command previously.
Fiery and impulsive, Van Dorn was a romantic, an accomplished painter, a poet and an excellent horseman. In 1842, he graduated from West Point. He ranked 52nd out of a class of 56, in a class that included 17 future Confederate and Federal generals. During the Mexican War, he was promoted twice for gallantry. While serving on the frontier with the 2nd US Cavalry, he was wounded severely in the arm, stomach and lung. In 1860, he was promoted to Major. (The 2nd Cavalry was considered to be the Army's best. The 2nd's other field officers were Colonel Albert Sydney Johnson, Lieutenant Colonel Robert E. Lee, and Major George H. Thomas, all of whom would gain fame during the Civil War.)
Prior to the Pea Ridge campaign, Van Dorn wrote home to his wife, "I am now in for it, to make a reputation and serve my country conspicuously or fail. I must not, shall not, do the latter. I must have St. Louis -- then Huzza!" After Pea Ridge, and again after Corinth, General "Damn Born" (as his men called him) was accused of negligence, disregarding his men's welfare and failing to adequately plan his campaign. After the disastrous battle of Corinth, MS, in October, 1862, he was sent before a court of inquiry. Although he was acquitted on all charges, he was never again trusted with the command of an army. He was given overall command of the cavalry operating around Vicksburg, MS. Several of his subordinates were Nathan Bedford Forrest, John Hunt Morgan and Joseph Wheeler. While there, his reputation as a womanizer became public. A Vicksburg newspaper reporter referred to Van Dorn as "the terror of ugly husbands". In 1863, he was shot in the back of the head by an outraged husband as he sat writing in his office in Spring Hill, TN.
Last updated: April 10, 2015
3 MAJOR GENERAL STERLING PRICE
Commander, Price's Division (Missouri State Guard), Army of the West
Born in Virginia in 1809, "Old Pap" commanded the Missouri State Guard. He moved to Missouri in 1831, where he owned a tobacco plantation. He was active in the Democratic Party and was appointed by President Polk as a Brigadier General during the Mexican War, where he served as the military governor of New Mexico. After the war, he was a representative to the state legislature and the U.S. Congress. In 1852, he was elected as Missouri's Governor.
Price initially opposed secession; but after Unionist militia fired into a pro-secession crowd after the capture of the Missouri State Guard at Camp Jackson, he embraced secession. In May, 1861, he was given command of the Missouri State Guard. Although he was devoted to the Southern cause; he saw military operations only in terms of liberating Missouri.
After the Battle of Wilson's Creek, Price quarreled openly, even childishly, with Brigadier General Benjamin McCulloch, commander of the Confederate Western Army. In his official report of the battle, Price omitted McCulloch's leadership role, and took credit for actions that belonged to McCulloch's men. Price then wrote a series of stinging attacks on McCulloch in the local newspapers. He was angry that McCulloch refused to follow up the victory with a march on Saint Louis. McCulloch had orders from Richmond that he was only to enter Missouri if Price's army was threatened. Any continued operations in Missouri by McCulloch would technically have been an invasion and a violation of Missouri's neutrality. McCulloch was also concerned by an acute ammunition shortage in the entire army. Most men had only a few rounds left after the battle.
After Pea Ridge, Price accepted a command in the Confederate Army. He led unsuccessful campaigns at Iuka & Corinth, Mississippi and at Helena, Arkansas. In 1864, he attempted an invasion of Missouri, but was defeated again by General Curtis at Westport, near present-day Kansas City. Price went to Mexico after the war, but returned to Missouri in 1866. He died there the next year.
Last updated: April 10, 2015
4 BRIGADIER GENERAL BENJAMIN MCCULLOCH
Commander, McCulloch's Division, Army of the West
Benjamin McCulloch was a tough frontiersman who commanded the Confederate troops from Arkansas, Texas and Louisiana. Born in Tennessee in 1811, "Ol' Ben" went to Texas in 1835, where he missed joining his friend Davy Crockett at the Alamo due to the measles. In the years prior to the Civil War, McCulloch was a Texas Ranger, an Army scout, a gold miner, representative to the legislatures of both the Republic and State of Texas, commander of the Texas Republic's militia, and a US Marshall.
Throughout the 1850s, McCulloch asked the Army for a commission as the Colonel of the 2nd United States Cavalry. The position instead went to Albert Sydney Johnston. Instead, McCulloch was offered the Lieutenant Colonelcy of the 2nd: an offer which he turned down. The position was ultimately filled by a Regular Army officer - Lt. Col. Robert E. Lee.
When Texas seceded in 1861, McCulloch was commissioned a Brigadier General in the Confederate Army and was given command of the Indian Territory. In July, he moved north to aid the Missouri State Guard, against Brigadier General Nathaniel Lyon's Army of the West. The two other Southern commanders, Major General Sterling Price (Missouri State Guard) and Brigadier General Bart Pierce (Arkansas State Troops), agreed to allow McCulloch to command the Western Army. On August 10, 1861, at Wilson's Creek (Oak Hills), his army recovered from Lyon's surprise attack and defeated the Federals. After the battle, relations between Price and McCulloch broke down due to differences in opinion over strategy and personal attacks by Price in the Missouri newspapers.
From their first meeting, McCulloch thought Price was pompous, egotistical and overbearing. He doubted his military ability and had similar opinions about the State Guard's officers. Although he thought that the State Guard was basically an undisciplined mob, he did believe that it could be turned into an effective military force, but only under a "competent military man."
On the first day of the battle, prior to launching his attack on Osterhaus's division, McCulloch rode forward to inspect the Federal line. As he emerged from the tree line, he was spotted by the Federal skirmishers, who quickly fired a volley at him. McCulloch was killed instantly. Although Private Peter Pelican, of the 36th Illinois, was credited with firing the fatal shot, it is not known who actually killed McCulloch. Pelican had been the first to reach the general's body and took his gold pocket watch, which he later sold to his colonel.
McCulloch's death, so early in the battle, doomed the effort to turn the Federal left, and quite possibly ensured the Southern defeat. His body was returned to Texas, where he was buried.
Last updated: April 10, 2015
5 Brigadier General Samuel Ryan Curtis
Commander, Army of the Southwest
Samuel Curtis was born in New York in 1805. He attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, NY, graduating in 1831, but left the Army soon after. He moved to Ohio, where he worked as a lawyer, a civil engineer, and a railroad promoter. Publicly, he was methodical, precise and formal; in private, however, he enjoyed long walks, collecting wildflowers and writing to his family.
During the Mexican War, he served as a military governor of several occupied cities. After the war, Curtis moved to Iowa and, in 1856, was elected to Congress as a Republican. He was a strong supporter of Abraham Lincoln and was considered for a cabinet position in the new administration. When war broke out, he raised the 2nd Iowa Infantry and was assigned to organizing the chaotic affairs in Saint Louis. General Halleck gave Curtis command of the Army of the Southwest on Christmas Day, 1861.
After Pea Ridge, Curtis continued the campaign, eventually capturing Helena, Arkansas on July 12th, 1862. He was promoted to Major General for his successes at Pea Ridge. In September, 1862, Curtis was given command of the Department of Missouri, although President Lincoln was soon forced to reassign him because of a bitter dispute between Curtis and Missouri's governor over Curtis's abolitionist views. He took to the field once again in 1864 against Sterling Price's invasion of Missouri. He ended Price's plans at the Battle of Westport (near present day Kansas City, Missouri). Curtis ended the war as commander of the Department of the Northwest, dealing with issues on the frontier.
After the war, he returned to Keokuk, Iowa where he promoted the transcontinental railroad. He died on December 26, 1866, after an inspection of the Union Pacific Railroad line. Although largely forgotten by history, Curtis was the Federal Army's most successful general throughout the first two years of the war.
Last updated: April 10, 2015
6 BRIGADIER GENERAL FRANZ SIGEL
Commander, 1st & 2nd Divisions, Army of the Southwest
Franz Sigel was one of the Union Army's worst and most controversial generals. His greatest contribution to the war effort was his ability to rally the North's German population to the Union cause. He joined the German revolution of 1849 and served as the rebel government's Minister of War. When the revolution failed, he immigrated to the United States, where he became the superintendent of the Saint Louis public school system.
Sigel played a prominent role in the events that led to Nathaniel Lyon's capture of the Missouri State Guard at Camp Jackson and was Lyon's second-in-command at Wilson's Creek. He was blamed by many, including General Halleck, for the defeat at Wilson's Creek for urging Lyon to divide his army even though Lyon was outnumbered.
When the Army of the Southwest was organized, Sigel believed that he should be given the command. When it went to Curtis instead, Sigel threatened to resign. Fearful that the German regiments might refuse to fight or mutiny if he resigned, Curtis organized the army along ethnic lines and gave Sigel command of the German regiments. This was largely a symbolic gesture though, as the division commanders reported directly to Curtis.
Although his men worshiped him, Sigel never had Curtis's or Halleck's full confidence throughout the campaign. After the battle, his supporters credited Sigel for the victory and accused Curtis of panicking and being ready to surrender after the first day. They claimed that Sigel urged Curtis to keep fighting and that Curtis was drunk while Sigel actually won the battle. Sigel denied any knowledge of these rumors, but did nothing to stop them. He transferred soon after to the East, where he was promoted to Major General.
He was soundly defeated in the Shenandoah Valley, and again, at 2nd Manassas. In 1864, his army was routed at New Market, which cemented his well-deserved reputation for being promoted far beyond his ability to command. He became an editor and publisher and was active in politics after the war. He died in New York City in 1902.
Last updated: April 10, 2015
Commander Scott / Heft-Reihe
Gregory Kern (Hans Peschke) / Die Zauberwelt
cover: Carlos Prunés
Bastei-Verlag
(Bergisch Gladbach / Deutschland; 1975-1976)
ex libris MTP
One of Hellboy's main arch-nemesis and all around Nazi badass....this guy totally did a 120% accurate SS costume, right down to the special issue SS dagger. Holy #$@#$ this guy's good!
Police Commander Mohammad Dawood (kneeling at front) with Paktia's police chief Aziz Wardak (red hat) and a man thought to be an American mentor (second from left)
Dawood was gunned down by unknown US and Afghan forces during a botched night raid on his home on Feb 12, 2010. Nato claimed the force - which they have refused to identify - killed several armed militants. In fact they killed Dawood, his brother who was a district prosecutor, two pregnant women and a teenage girl engaged to be married. There were more than 25 guest at the home to celebrate the birth of a newborn boy.
Nato denies a cover up. Officials claim the women were already dead.
Collect pic: Supplied by Dawood's son Abdul Ghafar
130821-A-ZW314-009: Col. Mike Farrell (center), commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Sacramento District, and Michael Bessette (left), director of engineering for Sutter Buttes Flood Control Agency, are briefed by a construction representative about the slurry wall construction underway at Shanghai Bend in Yuba City, Calif., Aug. 21, 2013. This work is part of the Sacramento District's recommended plan for the Sutter Basin Feasibility Study. The study will detail the federal government’s role in the project, which will improve more than 40 miles of levee along the Feather River. The study is nearing its final milestone of a Civil Works Review Board – the Corps’ final review before the plan goes to Congress for consideration. (U.S. Army photo by DeDe Cordell/Released)
Custom Helmet made by me with paint, clay for the ear things and decals made by me, I havent design the kama but soon I will.
Decals and pauldron are edited by me but i dont own them.
First off I wanna show off my new youtube channel for mw3 videos. If you like the game or Cod in general please subscribe.
www.youtube.com/user/MrIJuggernaut?ob=0&feature=resul...
Second, i have a new video going up on my main channel. Please watch it.
Lastly, ask if i'm coming back to Lego in the comments below.
© I m a g e D a v e F o r b e s
Engagement 1,500+
Docking in Greenock
The uniquelly designed Live Fish Carrier Well Boat Ronja Commander is seen awaiting Drydocking
VESSEL BUILDER
Constructed in 2003 Vestnes Norway
by AAS Mekaniske Verksted
Olvtrans Holdings Aalesund Norway
IMO 9276183
First Name & Unchanged
This is my latest acquisition, a vintage Whelen Model 5200 "Commander" strobe beacon. The red dome is only temporary while the blue dome that will be displayed on it gets a professional polishing/buffing. This type of light was very popular with the Connecticut State Police who used them on the center of a removable roof-mounted crossbar flanked by metal plates spelling out STATE POLICE with a rear facing PAR46 strobe head on each end.
ANSBACH, Germany – Colonel Andrew Powell (center), Commander of the U.S. Army Medical Department Activity Bavaria returned to Ansbach to preside over the clinic’s Change of Command ceremony, Tuesday, 11 July, on Bismark Kaserne. During the ceremony Lt. Col. Aristotle Vaseliades (right) relinquished command to Lt. Col. Burke Bristow (accepting the colors, left). In his remarks Powell praised Vaseliades accomplishments and leadership and said Bristow was "A perfect candidate to lead the new Ansbach Clinic and its talented team or healthcare professionals". To learn more about the people and facilities of the U.S. Army Medical Department Activity Bavaria (MEDDAC Bavaria) and the clinics they support in Ansbach, Grafenwoehr, Hohenfels, Stuttgart and Vilseck visit the MEDDAC Bavaria website at rhce.amedd.army.mil/bavaria
Photo by Michael Beaton, U.S. Army Medical Department Activity Bavaria Public Affairs (Released).