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German 1914

A blog about Imperial Germany in 1914 during the Great War, Prussia, Bavaria, Wurt., and Saxony. Army Navy Aviation.

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    August 15, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 15, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Liège

    August 15, 1914The 21-centimeter mortars and infantry continued to engage Liège’s remaining forts. Forts Boncelles and Lantin surrendered. The 42-centimeter mortars joined the 21-centimeter in the destruction of Fort Loncin.…

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    August 14, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 14, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Cavalry/Liège

    August 14, 1914Using the 21-centimeter mortars, two additional forts were destroyed—Forts Fleron and Liers fell. The disabling of these fortresses settled into a pattern as infantry closed off the forts…

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    August 13, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 13, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Liège

    August 13, 1914Forts Çhaudfontaine, Embourg, and Pontisse fell. Adding to the fire of the 21-centimeter guns, the 42-centimeter monsters continued shelling Fort Pontisse, firing another forty-three rounds. The shocked Belgian…

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    August 12, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 12, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Cavalry/Liège

    August 12, 1914German aerial reconnaissance now focused on the Meuse between Namur and Givet: the area from which relief attempts for Liège could be expected. No activity was observed on…

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    August 11, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 11, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Cavalry/Liège

    Click edit button toAugust 11, 1914By late afternoon of August 11, the 21-centimeter mortars had pounded Fort d’Evegnée into submission. Even before the arrival of the main body of the…

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    August 10, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 9, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Liège

    August 10, 1914Now under Einem, Ninth Army Corps (General von Quast) had been assigned the capture of the northern and eastern fronts of Liège: Forts Liers, Pontisse, and Fléron. In…

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    August 9, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 9, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Liège

    August 9, 1914Einem succeeded in establishing telephonic communication with the city and sent the welcome news to the army commander that the German troops were safe. Five days after invading,…

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    August 8, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 8, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Liège

    August 8, 1914On the ground, the Liège operation seemed to be falling into place. The 21-centimeter mortars from the Twenty-Seventh and Fourteenth Brigades together shelled Fort Barchon. The guns of…

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    August 7, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 7, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Liège

    August 7, 1914There was no allowance for signal troops of any kind to be assigned to establish and maintain communication between Emmich and his higher HQs. As the commander of…

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    August 6, 1914

    • Post author:joerookery
    • Post published:August 6, 2019
    • Post category:August 1914/Liège

    August 6,1914   Luftschiff ZVI supported of the ground forces. By 0300 hours on August 6, it was over Liège. There, the crew dropped a load of 15- and 21-centimeter…

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    Past Blogs

    • Belgian army les chasseurs a Pied / jagers te voet
    • Maxim gun
    • Doughboys on duty in 1918 part one
    • German hand search light units oder ‘ sheinwerferzuge’
    • German pow dying in France
    • The grenadiers ( Belgian army)at Steenstraete
    • A German ID tag ( erkennugmarken),
    • Sister Ursula’s diary for Nieuwkerke
    • British atrocities on the 25th of October 1914
    • A British POW buried in Torhout in 1917.
    • M1883 Reichsrevolver
    • Tool kit for the Chauchat automatic rifle
    • Turkish Mauser M1893
    • Italian Adrian based helmet, Lippman Model 1916
    • Italian Adrian helmet
    • Adrian helmets, these are Belgian
    • The helmet worn by the Metropolitan Infantry.
    • A very rare bayonet with quite a strange history
    • Some ephemera
    • French Engineer’s helmet
    • French Adrian Zouave helmet
    • Soldbuch and Wherpass
    • The infamous German Paris gun
    • French Adrian Chasseur helmet
    • The Stein of a Bavarian Hero
    • 25 pull fuses
    • French Adrian artillery helmet
    • Roth Steyr M1907
    • captured German A7V 542 ‘Elfriede’ holding the mounted MG08.
    • Imperial German Nahkampfmesser
    • T-Gewehr
    • German infantryman in late-war uniform
    • A bit of an enigma
    • Bayern Buckle Number 3.
    • M1892 12cm Howitzer
    • French soldiers preparing to execute a German POW.
    • Askaris of the 4th Field Company in German East Africa
    • Second Bavarian Buckle
    • Two Stormtroopers pose with their tools of trade
    • Two Stormtroopers pose with their tools of trade
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