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Al Nofi's CIC
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Issue #329, January 17th, 2011 |
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This Issue...
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Infinite Wisdom
"Everyday, ordinary defending Japanese soldiers routinely did things that would have earned them a medal for valor in any Allied army."
La Triviata
- After the Emperor Constantine seized Rome from his rival Maxentius, in AD 312, he razed the barracks of the
Imperial Guard Cavalry, which had supported his rival, and on the ruins erected
the Church of St. John in Lateran, possibly the oldest
Christian house of worship in continuous use.
- In 1913 the French Army had 4.8 field guns per thousand
men, plus 4.9 field howitzers, while the figures for the German Army were 5.8
and 6.6.
- Curiously, although King George II (1727-1760) had a very
distinguished military career, he refused to permit his son, Prince Frederick
or his grandson, the later George III
(1760-1820), to serve, despite repeated attempts by both to do so.
- During the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905), nearly 21
percent of Japanese majors and lieutenant colonels were killed in action (263
of 1,260) as were 15 percent of lieutenants and captains (1,453 of 9,694).
- The 14,412 Regulars who formed the core of the
approximately 17,000-strong V Corps that landed in Cuba in 1898 was the largest group
of American Regulars ever assembled under one tactical command until 1916.
- No British regiment carries battle honors for service
in the American Revolution.
- Of some 3.7 million American troops committed to combat
in France,
Belgium,
and Germany
from D-Day to the end of the war, 43 percent landed across the beaches in Normandy, or by way of
the British Mulberry harbor.
- It wasn't until 1537 that French army surgeon Ambroise
Pare, the "Father of Military Medicine," observed that gunshot wounds
healed faster when treated with salve than when they were cauterized with hot
oil, and that amputees had a better chance of survival if exposed blood vessels
were tied off, a practice that had fallen out of favor for 1,000 years.
More...
Portions
of "Al Nofi's CIC" have appeared previously in Military Chronicles,
Copyright
© 2005-2010 Military Chronicles (www.militarychronicles.com), used with permission, all rights reserved.
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