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2/8/08 Edition of Houston Real Estate TODAY! We go into the studio with Colleen Uriarte with Parkmont Homes (www.Parkmont.com) and Dale Ross of RE/MAX Fry Road. See: www.HoustonRealEstateTODAY.com
Photos sponsored by Connie Parson of Lasting Impressions Home Management (www.LastingImpressionsHomeManagement.com)
Show produced and marketed by Steven Kay Media and Marketing Dynamics
Sponsored by urbanFINANCIAL (www.urbanfinancial.com)
This is all that's left of the Barony Colliery a coal mine of yesteryear. My Dad was a miner here for many years.
Our Daily Challenge - YESTERYEAR
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Parcevall Hall Gardens are a lasting testament to the remarkable insight of Sir William Milner (1893-1960), 8th Baronet of Nun Appleton, nr York; who in 1927 began on a project to rebuild the derelict 16th /early 17th century shell of Parcevall Hall at Skyreholme, near Appletreewick in North Yorkshire.
Sir William, although standing at a formidable 6’7”, had the reputation of being a gentle giant and despite his title, and having HRH Queen Mary, a frequent visitor to Parcevall Hall, as his Godmother, he was a reluctant socialite.
The final major project of Sir William’s lifetime was as a founder member and second Honorary Director of the Northern Horticultural Society (1955-60), pioneering the establishment and development of Harlow Carr Gardens, near Harrogate.
Once completed, the Hall was to become Sir William’s home for thirty years and he continued to develop the gardens up to his death. Sir William took full advantage of the geography to create a unique garden that provides year round interest.
As a gardener Sir William chose his site wisely. At the top of the gardens the alkaline soil overlays the limestone rock and at the foot of the hill the soil is acid over gritstone, which makes it ideal for a wide range of species and many of Sir William’s hybrid rhododendrons.
For the horticulturist an extensive range of specialist plants flourish throughout the year. This includes an interesting collection of old apple varieties. A wide variety of alpine and woodland plants, unusual perennials and many specimen trees and shrubs.
Visitors will find formal terraces provide vantage points from where they can pause to appreciate the stunning rocky outcrop of Simons Seat
The structured areas are balanced with woodlands that are a haven for wildlife, inter-linked with many garden rooms to discover on the way. For the energetic, a Cliff Walk overlooking the limestone valley of Trollers Gill provides a dramatic vista.
After Sir William’s death the gardens declined up to the mid 1980s. A restoration program commenced; forever changing the gardens are enjoying a vibrant renaissance having been returned to its former glory
But the work does not stop there, the gardens continue to evolve.
The Hall itself is not open to garden visitors and since 1963, has been used by the Bradford Diocese as a retreat house and conference centre; its architectural features can be appreciated at close range from several vantage points.
Una texture corposa, super nera e avvolgente renderà le vostre ciglia un SOGNO!
Questo mascara trasgredisce la legge di gravità sollevando le ciglia e incurvandole.
Grazie all’applicatore in silicone il prodotto viene disteso in modo omogeneo riuscendo a raggiungere anche le ciglia più piccole e sottili per un risultato super preciso.
La sua formulazione è ricchissima di ingredienti funzionali!
Cera d’api e cera carnauba BIO garantiscono sostegno alle ciglia, mentre l’estratto di fiordaliso, l’olio di argan e l’olio di ricinio BIO nutrono le ciglia grazie alle proprietà rinforzanti e nutritive.
Il prodotto è Nickel tested ed è certificato biologico da ccpb.
PREZZO: 14,90 euro
a nostra matita Long Lasting ha una mina morbida, extra black e delinea in modo intenso e preciso lo sguardo per tutta la giornata.
La sua composizione è ricca di pigmenti, oli vegetali, cere vegetali e dura fino ad otto ore senza bisogno di ritocco.
Arricchita da Vitamina E, è ideale per chi utilizza lenti a contatto e per chi ha gli occhi sensibili.
Ottima da usare come eyeliner e anche per creare delle sfumature in combinazione con gli ombretti. Può essere utilizzata anche come kajal.
Il suo nero è elegante e semi opaco.
Il prodotto è Nickel tested, vegan Ok ed è certificato biologico da ccpb
PREZZO: 7,90 euro ma al MOMENTO è in REGALO con l'acquisto del Mascara
Enlarge this photo to see an original Devon General 75 years centenary sticker left on the window which i think used to be part of the Exeter minibus office when the red and yellow unit first started in 1984. This will soon be history when the main bus station building is demolished.
I will show you how any man with erection problems can maintain a longer erection by means of simple steps that will not only lead to a stronger and longer lasting erection but also help you improve sexual power. Best of all without taking pills like viagra.
How to get an erection...
howtogetbacktomyex.com/have-strong-prolonged-and-lasting-...
On Thursday, May 19, more than 70 guests joined United Way for a reception and exclusive look at innovative technology and educational programs that are changing the St. Louis region for the better. Randy Schilling from OPO Startups, Bruce Sowatsky from Community and Children’s Resource Board of St. Charles County and Julie Russell from United Way spoke on exciting programs leading the way in creating lasting change to help local people. The event was held at OPO Startups in St. Charles, MO and also provided delicious food and beverages to attendees.
The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe was built on a sloping field in the Friedrichstadt precinct in Berlin, Germany. The memorial was inaugurated on 10 May 2005, sixty years after the end of World War II.
This picture was taken in the back yard of the house David used to live in in Gibsons. David's family made these hand prints at the time this cement was laid. A bit of time has passed since then. The smallest hand print belonged to his daughter, Reba, who is now well into adulthood.
Monday, August 22 we were off to Gibsons, a town that David used to live in.
Summer in Canada with Panda.
Mason is having the experience of a lifetime. THIS is why we work hard...So we can give our kids things we never dreamed of when we were kids ourselves.
©2013 Jamie A. MacDonald
Vans, Old Skool Logo Repeat Racing Red, Men’s Size 13, True White, VN0A4U3BW35, 2017, UPC 194116272182, EAN 0194116272182, Women’s Size: 14.5, canvas and Suede upper, durable canvas, vans logos on the sides, Signature Leather sidestripe, padded collars, UltraCush insoles for long-lasting comfort, Synthetic Lining, weather-resistant, re-enforced toecaps, rubber construction, classic shoes, signature waffle outsole, vulcanised midsole, Vulcanized rubber construction, classic shoes, weather-resistant, Paul Van Doren, 777, reddealsonline, eBay shoes, Authenticate, Authenticity Guarantee
Sheela Gowda, Loss, 2008. One of six inkjet prints, one with watercolor additions, dimensions variable. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Guggenheim UBS MAP Purchase Fund 2013.5.1–6 © Sheela Gowda
Lasting Images
October 14, 2013–January 12, 2014
5th Ave at 89th St
New York City
Lasting Images brings together a selection of works from the Guggenheim’s collection of global contemporary art, featuring pieces by Simryn Gill, Sheela Gowda, Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Jorge, Mona Hatoum, and Doris Salcedo. These works suggest that truly lasting images—those that are most affecting—rarely convey direct messages. Instead, the pieces in this exhibition use ephemeral materials to define spaces for the viewer that invite open-ended contemplation.
To learn more, visit www.guggenheim.org/lastingimages.
Jan Matzeliger was the son of a Dutch engineer and a Surinamese slave. He emigrated to the United States as a sailor and worked in the shoe industry where he developed and patented a machine that automatically sewed the upper shoe to the soles, a process (called hand lasting) that had been performed in a slow hand process. The shoe lasting machine could outperform the work of ten shoe lasters. Unfortunately Jan died at 37 from tuberculosis and never realized any profit or recognition for his discovery which was said to be "a great step forward" for New England industry. (What a great pun) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Ernst_Matzeliger
NEW LONDON, Conn. - The Coast Guard Academy held the 2017 Eclipse Week Awards Ceremony, April 7 2018.
Eclipse Awards are part of the Academy's Informal Recognition Program and were created to recognize the significant efforts made by individuals in mentoring and inspiring cadets to excel and prepare for lasting careers as inclusive Coast Guard officers.
U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Lauren Laughlin
Developing Lasting Partnerships Between Law Enforcement, Community Coalitions, and Prevention Resource Centers to Advance Enviromental Prevention
Photos make Lasting Memories. Hopefully these Memories will last me through a Long winter.
Happy October weekend to all!
SOOC..........Cropped ....................Cosmos
Fredericksburg, TX
April 26, 2012
©Dale Haussner
"Lasting Friendship" Bronze sculpture at Peace Garden.
"John O. Meusebach, German settler and founder of Friedericksburg, and Penateka Comanche Chief Santanna share a peace pipe May 9, 1847 at the signing of the treaty between the People of Fredericksburg and the Comanche Nation. The standing Comance represents more than 20 other chiefs also participating in the treaty. This treaty is the only known peace treaty with Native Americans in United Stated history thought never to be broken. The spirit of this treaty continues in Fredericksburg today.
This bronze was presented to the City of Fredericksburg by the Fredericksburg 150th Anniversary Committee dedicated May 24, 1997."
By J. Hester
- From an inscription at the sculpture.
Lasting only a few hours. A Stinkhorn, Phallus rubicundus, no longer attractive to flies and on its way out. Como NSW Australia, April 2012.
The kit and its assembly:
This is another chapter in the long-lasting series of “Things to make and do with a BAe Hawk” builds, and this one is a very thorough conversion. This fictional aircraft had two inspirations, and both are real-world projects: One was the British SABA project, outlined in the background above, for a light attack aircraft that could be deployed against the Soviet Cold War threat in continental Europe, primarily against tanks and helicopters. It underwent a lot of iterations but eventually came to nothing. The other inspiration, which influenced the layout and look of my build, is the similar American Northrop N-308/312 project, with a layout reminiscent of the LearAvia Lear Fan business jet, which was conceived at the time of the A-X competition (that eventually led to the A-10). The fusion of both led to my fictional Panavia ASABA build.
I had kept the idea for this in the back of my mind for ages, at least 10 years, but never found the courage to tackle this build because of so many uncertainties and tons of PSR. But here it is now!
The basis is an Italeri 1:72 BAe Hawk Mk. 100 trainer kit, and it underwent massive mods. First thing that was changed was the deletion of the air intakes – I stunt I had done before. The areas were cut out, filled with styrene sheet, and PSRed flush. Next came the cockpit, which was to be reduced to a single seat, together with a modern bubble canopy and a less pronounced dorsal hump. My plan: use the cockpit fairing and a matching canopy from an F-16 single-seater and put it over the Hawk’s opening – which extends beyond the cockpit, because there’s an extra part with 3D intakes that goes there. I had F-16 parts from a (shabby) Trumpeter kit. The clear part is quite bulbous and thick, but the cockpit would remain closed, anyway, and while the fuselage section was too wide for the Hawk it could be easily bent and clipped into shape to fit over the Hawk’s fuselage opening, with the new canopy over the OOB front cockpit tub and seat. The excess material was simply trimmed away and later blended into the Hawk’s hull through more PSR. Looks really good, and more dynamic than the Hawk 200’s solution with the rear cockpit and a relatively long slanted nose, which give the attack variant a rather ungainly profile.
In parallel I already assembled the Hawk’s wing section, which was taken OOB, outfitted with wing tip launch rails and an extra (outer) pair of hardpoints, AIM-9 launch rails from an F-16 (the vintage Revell kit).
The ordnance would consist of four OOB AIM-9J Sidewinders from the Hawk kit, plus an ACMI pod and a “camera egg” on the inner wing stations. The ventral gun pod also came from the Hawk, but it was slightly reduced in height to represent a different gun inside.
The landing gear wells in wings and hull were slightly extended to accept longer struts, due to the tail prop configuration. Speaking of these, the main struts were taken from a Hasegawa J7W (but shortened), the front leg is from a Hasegawa F5U (also shortened). The wheels all came from an ESCI Ka-34 (fictional) Hokum kit, which also provided the engine nacelles, which received more massive pylons. The contraprop came from a NOVO Avro Shackleton and combining it with the slender Hawk hull was not easy. At first, I had hoped that I could cut off and reverse the OOB jet tailpipe, using that as an adapter for the propeller, but that did not work – the spinner was much wider. The Shackleton contraprop also comes with a peculiar internal axis design that lets both propellers rotate independently, and since I wanted to retain that (and avoid my own construction) I also used a front end from the Shack’s Griffon engine nacelle and trimmed it down to match the Hawk’s hull shape. The latter was cut back and a 2C putty plug created an intersection between these two unlikely parts. But with some PSR this turned out better than expected.
Once that was settled I started to create the tail surfaces, with the engine nacelles on the flanks as benchmark for their relative position since I wanted to avoid a placement of the butterfly tail surfaces directly in the exhaust efflux. The tail surfaces came from a Heller Potez Magister, and I was able to place the high enough in clean air and above the internal drivetrain. More PSR blended them into the rear hull.
The ventral fin is a piece from a Matchbox Ju 87 outer wing, trimmed down at both ends, and just long enough to allow enough ground clearance for the stalky extended landing gear. Thanks to tons of lead and steel beads in the nose the model actually stands properly on its three feet.
After the wings were mated with the hull I had to create LERXs to fill the gaps the Hawk’s deleted air intakes had left – I found wing rests from an Academy MiG-21F that were trimmed down and PSRed into place, for an elegant wing leading edge shape.
The cockpit was taken OOB, I just added an ejection trigger made from thin wire and a Matchbox pilot figure, then the canopy was secured with white glue. Horrible fit, though, despite using its respective base plate from the Trumpeter F-16 kit. But the idea is good and might find use again for an alternative Hawk single seater.
The Franco-Prussian War or Franco-German War, often referred to in France as the War of 1870, was a conflict between the Second French Empire and the North German Confederation led by the Kingdom of Prussia. Lasting from 19 July 1870 to 28 January 1871, the conflict was caused primarily by France's determination to reassert its dominant position in continental Europe, which appeared in question following the decisive Prussian victory over Austria in 1866.
According to some historians, Prussian chancellor Otto von Bismarck deliberately provoked the French into declaring war on Prussia in order to induce four independent southern German states—Baden, Württemberg, Bavaria and Hesse-Darmstadt—to join the North German Confederation. Other historians contend that Bismarck exploited the circumstances as they unfolded. All agree that Bismarck recognized the potential for new German alliances, given the situation as a whole.
France mobilised its army on 15 July 1870, leading the North German Confederation to respond with its own mobilisation later that day. On 16 July 1870, the French parliament voted to declare war on Prussia; France invaded German territory on 2 August. The German coalition mobilised its troops much more effectively than the French and invaded northeastern France on 4 August. German forces were superior in numbers, training, and leadership and made more effective use of modern technology, particularly railways and artillery.
A series of hard-fought Prussian and German victories in eastern France, culminating in the Siege of Metz and the Battle of Sedan, resulted in the capture of the French Emperor Napoleon III and the decisive defeat of the army of the Second Empire; a Government of National Defense was formed in Paris on 4 September and continued the war for another five months. German forces fought and defeated new French armies in northern France, then besieged Paris for over four months before it fell on 28 January 1871, effectively ending the war.
In the final days of the war, with German victory all but assured, the German states proclaimed their union as the German Empire under the Prussian king Wilhelm I and Chancellor Bismarck. With the notable exceptions of Austria and German Switzerland, the vast majority of German-speakers were united under a nation-state for the first time. Following an armistice with France, the Treaty of Frankfurt was signed on 10 May 1871, giving Germany billions of francs in war indemnity, as well as most of Alsace and parts of Lorraine, which became the Imperial Territory of Alsace-Lorraine (Reichsland Elsaß-Lothringen).
The war had a lasting impact on Europe. By hastening German unification, the war significantly altered the balance of power on the continent, with the new German state supplanting France as the dominant European land power. Bismarck maintained great authority in international affairs for two decades, developing a reputation for Realpolitik that raised Germany's global stature and influence. In France, it brought a final end to imperial rule and began the first lasting republican government. Resentment over the French government's handling of the war and its aftermath triggered the Paris Commune, a revolutionary uprising which seized and held power for two months before its suppression; the event would influence the politics and policies of the Third Republic.
The causes of the Franco-Prussian War are rooted in the events surrounding the lead up to the unification of the German states under Otto von Bismarck. France had gained the status of being the dominant power of continental Europe as a result of the Franco-Austrian War of 1859. During the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, the Empress Eugénie, Foreign Minister Drouyn de Lhuys and War Minister Jacques Louis Randon were concerned that the power of Prussia might overtake that of France. They unsuccessfully urged Napoleon to mass troops at France's eastern borders while the bulk of the Prussian armies were still engaged in Bohemia as a warning that no territorial changes could be effected in Germany without consulting France.
As a result of Prussia's annexation of several German states which had sided with Austria during the war and the formation of the North German Confederation under Prussia's aegis, French public opinion stiffened and now demanded more firmness as well as territorial compensations. As a result, Napoleon demanded from Prussia a return to the French borders of 1814, with the annexation of Luxembourg, most of Saarland, and the Bavarian Palatinate. Bismarck flatly refused what he disdainfully termed France's politique des pourboires ("tipping policy"). He then communicated Napoleon III's written territorial demands to Bavaria and the other southern German states of Württemberg, Baden and Hesse-Darmstadt, which hastened the conclusion of defensive military alliances with these states. France had been strongly opposed to any further alliance of German states, which would have threatened French continental dominance.
In Prussia, some officials considered a war against France both inevitable and necessary to arouse German nationalism in those states that would allow the unification of a great German empire. This aim was epitomized by Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck's later statement: "I did not doubt that a Franco-German war must take place before the construction of a United Germany could be realised."
Bismarck also knew that France should be the aggressor in the conflict to bring the four southern German states to side with Prussia, hence giving Germans numerical superiority. He was convinced that France would not find any allies in her war against Germany for the simple reason that "France, the victor, would be a danger to everybody—Prussia to nobody," and he added, "That is our strong point." Many Germans also viewed the French as the traditional destabilizer of Europe, and sought to weaken France to prevent further breaches of the peace.
The Ems telegram of 13 July 1870 had exactly the effect on French public opinion that Bismarck had intended. "This text produced the effect of a red flag on the Gallic bull”, Bismarck later wrote. Gramont, the French foreign minister, declared that he felt "he had just received a slap". The leader of the monarchists in Parliament, Adolphe Thiers, spoke for moderation, arguing that France had won the diplomatic battle and there was no reason for war, but he was drowned out by cries that he was a traitor and a Prussian. Napoleon's new prime minister, Emile Ollivier, declared that France had done all that it could humanly and honorably do to prevent the war, and that he accepted the responsibility "with a light heart". A crowd of 15,000–20,000 people, carrying flags and patriotic banners, marched through the streets of Paris, demanding war. French mobilization was ordered early on 15 July. Upon receiving news of the French mobilization, the North German Confederation mobilized on the night of 15–16 July, while Bavaria and Baden did likewise on 16 July and Württemberg on 17 July. On 19 July 1870, the French sent a declaration of war to the Prussian government. The southern German states immediately sided with Prussia.
Napoleonic France had no documented alliance with other powers and entered the war virtually without allies. The calculation was for a victorious offensive, which, as the French Foreign Minister Gramont stated, was "the only way for France to lure the wary Austrians, Italians and Danes into the French alliance". The involvement of Russia on the side of France was not considered by her at all, since Russia made the lifting of restrictions on its naval construction on the Black Sea imposed on Russia by the Treaty of Paris following the Crimean War a precondition for the union. But Imperial France was not ready to do this. "Bonaparte did not dare to encroach on the Paris Treaty: the worse things turned out in the present, the more precious the heritage of the past became".
The French Army consisted in peacetime of approximately 426,000 soldiers, some of them regulars, others conscripts who until March 1869 were selected by ballot and served for the comparatively long period of seven years. Some of them were veterans of previous French campaigns in the Crimean War, Algeria, the Franco-Austrian War in Italy, and in the Mexican campaign. However, following the "Seven Weeks War" between Prussia and Austria four years earlier, it had been calculated that, with commitments in Algeria and elsewhere, the French Army could field only 288,000 men to face the Prussian Army, when potentially 1,000,000 would be required. Under Marshal Adolphe Niel, urgent reforms were made. Universal conscription and a shorter period of service gave increased numbers of reservists, who would swell the army to a planned strength of 800,000 on mobilisation. Those who for any reason were not conscripted were to be enrolled in the Garde Mobile, a militia with a nominal strength of 400,000. However, the Franco-Prussian War broke out before these reforms could be completely implemented. The mobilisation of reservists was chaotic and resulted in large numbers of stragglers, while the Garde Mobile were generally untrained and often mutinous.[31]
French infantry were equipped with the breech-loading Chassepot rifle, one of the most modern mass-produced firearms in the world at the time, with 1,037,555 available in French inventories. With a rubber ring seal and a smaller bullet, the Chassepot had a maximum effective range of some 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) with a short reloading time.[32] French tactics emphasised the defensive use of the Chassepot rifle in trench-warfare style fighting—the so-called feu de bataillon.[33] The artillery was equipped with rifled, muzzle-loaded La Hitte guns.[34] The army also possessed a precursor to the machine-gun: the mitrailleuse, which could unleash significant, concentrated firepower but nevertheless lacked range and was comparatively immobile, and thus prone to being easily overrun. The mitrailleuse was mounted on an artillery gun carriage and grouped in batteries in a similar fashion to cannon.[32]
The army was nominally led by Napoleon III, with Marshals François Achille Bazaine and Patrice de MacMahon in command of the field armies.[35] However, there was no previously arranged plan of campaign in place. The only campaign plan prepared between 1866 and 1870 was a defensive one.[16]
Prussians/Germans
Prussian field artillery column at Torcy in September 1870
The German army comprised that of the North German Confederation led by the Kingdom of Prussia, and the South German states drawn in under the secret clause of the preliminary peace of Nikolsburg, 26 July 1866,[36] and formalised in the Treaty of Prague, 23 August 1866.[37]
Recruitment and organisation of the various armies were almost identical, and based on the concept of conscripting annual classes of men who then served in the regular regiments for a fixed term before being moved to the reserves. This process gave a theoretical peace time strength of 382,000 and a wartime strength of about 1,189,000.[38]
German tactics emphasised encirclement battles like Cannae and using artillery offensively whenever possible. Rather than advancing in a column or line formation, Prussian infantry moved in small groups that were harder to target by artillery or French defensive fire.[39] The sheer number of soldiers available made encirclement en masse and destruction of French formations relatively easy.[40]
The army was equipped with the Dreyse needle gun renowned for its use at the Battle of Königgrätz, which was by this time showing the age of its 25-year-old design.[32] The rifle had a range of only 600 m (2,000 ft) and lacked the rubber breech seal that permitted aimed shots.[41] The deficiencies of the needle gun were more than compensated for by the famous Krupp 6-pounder (6 kg despite the gun being called a 6-pounder, the rifling technology enabled guns to fire twice the weight of projectiles in the same calibre) steel breech-loading cannons being issued to Prussian artillery batteries.[42] Firing a contact-detonated shell, the Krupp gun had a longer range and a higher rate of fire than the French bronze muzzle loading cannon, which relied on time fuses.[43]
The Prussian army was controlled by the General Staff, under General Helmuth von Moltke. The Prussian army was unique in Europe for having the only such organisation in existence, whose purpose in peacetime was to prepare the overall war strategy, and in wartime to direct operational movement and organise logistics and communications.[44] The officers of the General Staff were hand-picked from the Prussian Kriegsakademie (War Academy). Moltke embraced new technology, particularly the railroad and telegraph, to coordinate and accelerate mobilisation of large forces.[45]
French Army incursion
Preparations for the offensive
Map of the German and French armies near the common border on 31 July 1870
On 28 July 1870 Napoleon III left Paris for Metz and assumed command of the newly titled Army of the Rhine, some 202,448 strong and expected to grow as the French mobilization progressed.[46] Marshal MacMahon took command of I Corps (4 infantry divisions) near Wissembourg; Marshal François Canrobert brought VI Corps (4 infantry divisions) to Châlons-sur-Marne in northern France as a reserve and to guard against a Prussian advance through Belgium.[47]
A pre-war plan laid down by the late Marshal Niel called for a strong French offensive from Thionville towards Trier and into the Prussian Rhineland. This plan was discarded in favour of a defensive plan by Generals Charles Frossard and Bartélemy Lebrun, which called for the Army of the Rhine to remain in a defensive posture near the German border and repel any Prussian offensive. As Austria, along with Bavaria, Württemberg, and Baden were expected to join in a revenge war against Prussia, I Corps would invade the Bavarian Palatinate and proceed to "free" the four South German states in concert with Austro-Hungarian forces. VI Corps would reinforce either army as needed.[48]
Unfortunately for Frossard's plan, the Prussian army mobilised far more rapidly than expected. The Austro-Hungarians, still reeling after their defeat by Prussia in the Austro-Prussian War, were treading carefully before stating that they would only side with France if the south Germans viewed the French positively. This did not materialize as the four South German states had come to Prussia's aid and were mobilizing their armies against France.[49]
Occupation of Saarbrücken
Main article: Battle of Saarbrücken
Course of the first phase of the war up to the Battle of Sedan on 1 September 1870
Napoleon III was under substantial domestic pressure to launch an offensive before the full might of Moltke's forces was mobilized and deployed. Reconnaissance by Frossard's forces had identified only the Prussian 16th Infantry Division guarding the border town of Saarbrücken, right before the entire Army of the Rhine. Accordingly, on 31 July the Army marched forward toward the Saar River to seize Saarbrücken.[50]
General Frossard's II Corps and Marshal Bazaine's III Corps crossed the German border on 2 August, and began to force the Prussian 40th Regiment of the 16th Infantry Division from the town of Saarbrücken with a series of direct attacks. The Chassepot rifle proved its worth against the Dreyse rifle, with French riflemen regularly outdistancing their Prussian counterparts in the skirmishing around Saarbrücken. However the Prussians resisted strongly, and the French suffered 86 casualties to the Prussian 83 casualties. Saarbrücken also proved to be a major obstacle in terms of logistics. Only one railway there led to the German hinterland but could be easily defended by a single force, and the only river systems in the region ran along the border instead of inland.[51] While the French hailed the invasion as the first step towards the Rhineland and later Berlin, General Edmond Le Bœuf and Napoleon III were receiving alarming reports from foreign news sources of Prussian and Bavarian armies massing to the southeast in addition to the forces to the north and northeast.[52]
Moltke had indeed massed three armies in the area—the Prussian First Army with 50,000 men, commanded by General Karl von Steinmetz opposite Saarlouis, the Prussian Second Army with 134,000 men commanded by Prince Friedrich Karl opposite the line Forbach-Spicheren, and the Prussian Third Army with 120,000 men commanded by Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm, poised to cross the border at Wissembourg.[53]
Prussian Army advance
Battle of Wissembourg
Main article: Battle of Wissembourg (1870)
Bavarian infantry at the Battle of Wissembourg, 1870
Upon learning from captured Prussian soldiers and a local area police chief that the Prussian Crown Prince's Third Army was just 30 miles (48 km) north from Saarbrücken near the Rhine river town Wissembourg, General Le Bœuf and Napoleon III decided to retreat to defensive positions. General Frossard, without instructions, hastily withdrew his elements of the Army of the Rhine in Saarbrücken back across the river to Spicheren and Forbach.[54]
Marshal MacMahon, now closest to Wissembourg, spread his four divisions 20 miles (32 km) to react to any Prussian-Bavarian invasion. This organization was due to a lack of supplies, forcing each division to seek out food and forage from the countryside and from the representatives of the army supply arm that was supposed to furnish them with provisions. What made a bad situation much worse was the conduct of General Auguste-Alexandre Ducrot, commander of the 1st Division. He told General Abel Douay, commander of the 2nd Division, on 1 August that "The information I have received makes me suppose that the enemy has no considerable forces very near his advance posts, and has no desire to take the offensive".[55] Two days later, he told MacMahon that he had not found "a single enemy post ... it looks to me as if the menace of the Bavarians is simply bluff". Even though Ducrot shrugged off the possibility of an attack by the Germans, MacMahon tried to warn his other three division commanders, without success.[56]
The first action of the Franco-Prussian War took place on 4 August 1870. This battle saw the unsupported division of General Douay of I Corps, with some attached cavalry, which was posted to watch the border, attacked in overwhelming but uncoordinated fashion by the German 3rd Army. During the day, elements of a Bavarian and two Prussian corps became engaged and were aided by Prussian artillery, which blasted holes in the city defenses. Douay held a very strong position initially, thanks to the accurate long-range rapid fire of the Chassepot rifles, but his force was too thinly stretched to hold it. Douay was killed in the late morning when a caisson of the divisional mitrailleuse battery exploded near him; the encirclement of the town by the Prussians then threatened the French avenue of retreat.[57]
The fighting within the town had become extremely intense, becoming a door to door battle of survival. Despite an unceasing attack from Prussian infantry, the soldiers of the 2nd Division kept to their positions. The people of the town of Wissembourg finally surrendered to the Germans. The French troops who did not surrender retreated westward, leaving behind 1,000 dead and wounded and another 1,000 prisoners and all of their remaining ammunition.[58] The final attack by the Prussian troops also cost c. 1,000 casualties. The German cavalry then failed to pursue the French and lost touch with them. The attackers had an initial superiority of numbers, a broad deployment which made envelopment highly likely but the effectiveness of French Chassepot-rifle fire inflicted costly repulses on infantry attacks, until the French infantry had been extensively bombarded by the Prussian artillery.[59]
Battle of Spicheren
Main article: Battle of Spicheren
Map of the Prussian and German offensives, 5–6 August 1870
The Battle of Spicheren on 5 August was the second of three critical French defeats. Moltke had originally planned to keep Bazaine's army on the Saar River until he could attack it with the 2nd Army in front and the 1st Army on its left flank, while the 3rd Army closed towards the rear. The aging General von Steinmetz made an overzealous, unplanned move, leading the 1st Army south from his position on the Moselle. He moved straight toward the town of Spicheren, cutting off Prince Frederick Charles from his forward cavalry units in the process.[60]
On the French side, planning after the disaster at Wissembourg had become essential. General Le Bœuf, flushed with anger, was intent upon going on the offensive over the Saar and countering their loss. However, planning for the next encounter was more based upon the reality of unfolding events rather than emotion or pride, as Intendant General Wolff told him and his staff that supply beyond the Saar would be impossible. Therefore, the armies of France would take up a defensive position that would protect against every possible attack point, but also left the armies unable to support each other.[61]
While the French army under General MacMahon engaged the German 3rd Army at the Battle of Wörth, the German 1st Army under Steinmetz finished their advance west from Saarbrücken. A patrol from the German 2nd Army under Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia spotted decoy fires nearby and Frossard's army farther off on a distant plateau south of the town of Spicheren, and took this as a sign of Frossard's retreat. Ignoring Moltke's plan again, both German armies attacked Frossard's French 2nd Corps, fortified between Spicheren and Forbach.[62]
The French were unaware of German numerical superiority at the beginning of the battle as the German 2nd Army did not attack all at once. Treating the oncoming attacks as merely skirmishes, Frossard did not request additional support from other units. By the time he realized what kind of a force he was opposing, it was too late. Seriously flawed communications between Frossard and those in reserve under Bazaine slowed down so much that by the time the reserves received orders to move out to Spicheren, German soldiers from the 1st and 2nd armies had charged up the heights.[63] Because the reserves had not arrived, Frossard erroneously believed that he was in grave danger of being outflanked, as German soldiers under General von Glume were spotted in Forbach. Instead of continuing to defend the heights, by the close of battle after dusk he retreated to the south. The German casualties were relatively high due to the advance and the effectiveness of the Chassepot rifle. They were quite startled in the morning when they had found out that their efforts were not in vain—Frossard had abandoned his position on the heights.[64]
Battle of Wörth
Main article: Battle of Wörth
The Battle of Wörth began when the two armies clashed again on 6 August near Wörth in the town of Frœschwiller, about 10 miles (16 km) from Wissembourg. The Crown Prince of Prussia's 3rd army had, on the quick reaction of his Chief of Staff General von Blumenthal, drawn reinforcements which brought its strength up to 140,000 troops. The French had been slowly reinforced and their force numbered only 35,000. Although badly outnumbered, the French defended their position just outside Frœschwiller. By afternoon, the Germans had suffered c. 10,500 killed or wounded and the French had lost a similar number of casualties and another c. 9,200 men taken prisoner, a loss of about 50%. The Germans captured Fröschwiller which sat on a hilltop in the centre of the French line. Having lost any hope for victory and facing a massacre, the French army disengaged and retreated in a westerly direction towards Bitche and Saverne, hoping to join French forces on the other side of the Vosges mountains. The German 3rd army did not pursue the French but remained in Alsace and moved slowly south, attacking and destroying the French garrisons in the vicinity.[65]
About 160,000 French soldiers were besieged in the fortress of Metz following the defeats on the frontier. A retirement from Metz to link up with French forces at Châlons was ordered on 15 August and spotted by a Prussian cavalry patrol under Major Oskar von Blumenthal. Next day a grossly outnumbered Prussian force of 30,000 men of III Corps (of the 2nd Army) under General Constantin von Alvensleben, found the French Army near Vionville, east of Mars-la-Tour.
Despite odds of four to one, the III Corps launched a risky attack. The French were routed and the III Corps captured Vionville, blocking any further escape attempts to the west. Once blocked from retreat, the French in the fortress of Metz had no choice but to engage in a fight that would see the last major cavalry engagement in Western Europe. The battle soon erupted, and III Corps was shattered by incessant cavalry charges, losing over half its soldiers. The German Official History recorded 15,780 casualties and French casualties of 13,761 men.
On 16 August, the French had a chance to sweep away the key Prussian defense, and to escape. Two Prussian corps had attacked the French advance guard, thinking that it was the rearguard of the retreat of the French Army of the Meuse. Despite this misjudgment the two Prussian corps held the entire French army for the whole day. Outnumbered 5 to 1, the extraordinary élan of the Prussians prevailed over gross indecision by the French. The French had lost the opportunity to win a decisive victory.
Although Austria-Hungary and Denmark had both wished to avenge their recent military defeats against Prussia, they chose not to intervene in the war due to a lack of confidence in the French. These countries did not have a documented alliance with France, and they were too late to start a war. After the rapid and stunning victories of Prussia, they preferred to abandon any plans to intervene in the war altogether. Napoleon III also failed to cultivate alliances with the Russian Empire and the United Kingdom, partially due to the diplomatic efforts of the Prussian chancellor Otto von Bismarck. Bismarck had bought Tsar Alexander II's complicity by promising to help restore his naval access to the Black Sea and Mediterranean (cut off by the treaties ending the Crimean War), other powers were less biddable.
The United Kingdom saw nothing wrong with the strengthening of Prussia on the European continent, viewing France as its traditional rival in international affairs. Lord Palmerston, the head of the British cabinet in 1865, wrote: "The current Prussia is too weak to be honest and independent in its actions. And, taking into account the interests of the future, it is highly desirable for Germany as a whole became strong, so she was able to keep the ambitious and warlike nation, France, and Russia, which compress it from the West and the East". English historians criticize the then British policy, pointing out that Palmerston misunderstood Bismarck's policy due to his adherence to outdated ideas. Over time, Britain began to understand that the military defeat of France meant a radical change in the European balance of power. In the future, the development of historical events is characterized by a gradual increase in Anglo-German contradictions. "The colonial quarrels, naval rivalry and disagreement over the European balance of power which drove Britain and Germany apart, were in effect the strategical and geopolitical manifestations of the relative shift in the economic power of these two countries between 1860 and 1914".
After the Peace of Prague in 1866, the nominally independent German states of Saxony, Bavaria, Württemberg, Baden and Hesse-Darmstadt (the southern part that was not included in the North German Union) remained. Despite the fact that there was a strong opposition to Prussia in the ruling circles and in the war of 1866 they participated on the side of Austria against Prussia, they were forced to reckon with a broad popular movement in favor of German unity and were also afraid of angering their strong neighbor in the form of Prussia. After the diplomatic provocation in Bad Ems, these states had no room for maneuver, the war was presented by Bismarck as a war for national independence against an external enemy. All these states joined the Prussian war from the very beginning of hostilities. In January 1871, these states became part of the German Empire.
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This picture is dedicated to one of my best friends.
This is actually her ring, but the occasional time i will also wear it, we trade it back and forth.
I wanted to take a picture of it but also in a creative way, so i thought this worked out pretty well
hope you like it :)
Exploring The UNESCO World Heritage in Korea
1st Program – ‘The Healing Festival Lasting 1,000 years’ Gangneung Danoje Festival & Jangneung(One of Royal Tombs of Joseon Dynasty)
Jangneung – The Royal Tomb of King Danjong, the 6th King of Joseon Dynasty
Lotus in Jangneung
May 31, 2014
Jangneung, Yeongwol-gun, Gangwon-do
Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism
Korean Culture and Information Service
Korea.net (www.korea.net)
Official Photographer: Jeon Han
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유네스코 세계문화유산 등재 유•무형 한국문화유산 심층탐방
첫 번째 프로그램 - ‘천년을 이어온 힐링 축제’ 강릉단오제와 장릉
장릉(莊陵) 연못에 핀 연꽃
2014-05-31
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