The Royal Military Chronicle VOL.IV May,18121812 |
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Side 5
... effect . Their loss , however , certainly bore no comparison to that of the enemy . After this affair Marshal Beresford threw a bridge over the Guadiana at Jurumenta , and in the course of the 4th and 9th of April he crossed with his ...
... effect . Their loss , however , certainly bore no comparison to that of the enemy . After this affair Marshal Beresford threw a bridge over the Guadiana at Jurumenta , and in the course of the 4th and 9th of April he crossed with his ...
Side 7
... effect . It had been arranged by his Lordship , that as Soult advanced with this immense force upon the allied army , that Blake with his corps should avail himself of the opportunity to endeavour to get round his flanks , and proceed ...
... effect . It had been arranged by his Lordship , that as Soult advanced with this immense force upon the allied army , that Blake with his corps should avail himself of the opportunity to endeavour to get round his flanks , and proceed ...
Side 12
... effects . Much pleasant and agreeable intercourse took place between the officers and the families of the town . And as the opera was open every night , it was crowded with officers as well as ladies , who not only invited the English ...
... effects . Much pleasant and agreeable intercourse took place between the officers and the families of the town . And as the opera was open every night , it was crowded with officers as well as ladies , who not only invited the English ...
Side 16
... effect to a stranger on entering it is the altar piece . The altar is advanced from the window , and through the arch openings is seen the sun in full splendour , painted on the glass . There are two large rooms , the roofs of which are ...
... effect to a stranger on entering it is the altar piece . The altar is advanced from the window , and through the arch openings is seen the sun in full splendour , painted on the glass . There are two large rooms , the roofs of which are ...
Side 18
... effect this , many were obliged to pro- ceed four and five miles further , with a miserable prospect of obtaining some kind of covering during a tempestuous night , and then not one thing prepared for them to eat or drink . The other ...
... effect this , many were obliged to pro- ceed four and five miles further , with a miserable prospect of obtaining some kind of covering during a tempestuous night , and then not one thing prepared for them to eat or drink . The other ...
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The Royal Military Chronicle Vol. IV May,1812 The Duke of York Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
1st battalion 2d battalion 38th foot 60th foot adjutant appointed army arrived artillery assistant-surgeon attack August Badajoz battle bridge brigade brigadier-general British Buonaparte captain cavalry Charles the Twelfth Charles XII Colonel command cornet corps czar deceased detachment ditto division Douro Duke emperor enemy enemy's ensign file killed file wounded fire flank foot force France and Russia French garrison gent guards Hill honour horses hussars infantry James Janissaries John king Augustus king of Sweden king's German legion leagues lieutenant-colonel Lieutenant-General light dragoons London Gazette.-Dispatches LORD LIEUTENANT Lord Wellington lordship Major major-general Marshal miles Military Chronicle Military Promotions militia morning mountains Muscovites night officers Oporto passed Poland Portuguese Prince prisoners purchase rank and file received resigned retired retreat river road Royal Russia Salamanca Salamonde sent serjeant side slightly soldiers Spain Spanish Thomas town troops vice victory village West India regiment William
Populære avsnitt
Side 290 - By command of his Royal Highness the Prince Regent, in the name and on the behalf of his majesty.
Side 381 - D'Urban's cavalry, were left at Cabrerizes, on the right of the Tormes, as the enemy had still a large corps on the heights above Babilafuente, on the same side of the river ; and I considered it not improbable that finding our army prepared for them in the morning, on the left of the Tormes, they would alter their plan, and manoeuvre by the other bank. " In the course of the night of the 21st I received intelligence, of the truth of which I •could not doubt, that General...
Side 289 - ... This pension, being granted as a compensation for the injury sustained, is to be held together with any other pay and allowances to which such officer may be otherwise entitled, without any deduction on account thereof. Officers who shall have lost more than one limb or eye, shall be entitled to the pension for each eye or limb so lost. And as the pension is not to commence till the expiration of a year and...
Side 374 - I have the honour to transmit to your lordship a copy of a letter I have received from Colonel Cox, late governor of Almeida, and a copy of the capitulation of that place.
Side 382 - Dos Arapiles, which the enemy held. The 1st and light divisions occupied the ground on the left, and were in reserve. " The attack upon the enemy's left was made in the manner above described, and completely succeeded.
Side 88 - Pacha of Bender, who had no mind to offer violence to the Swedish Monarch, received with eagerness the offers of these two Ministers. They had two conferences at Bender, in -which they were assisted by the Usher of the Seraglio and the Grand Master of the horse, who had brought the Sultan's order and the Mufti's Fetfa.
Side 300 - Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the army under the command of his Excellency General Viscount Wellington, K B.
Side 382 - I placed behind the village of Arapiles, on the right of the 4th division, and with the 6th and 7th divisions in reserve ; and as soon as these troops had taken their stations...
Side 248 - Were it permitted for a soldier to regret any one who has fallen in the service of his country, I might be excused for lamenting him, more than any other person; but it is some consolation to those who tenderly loved him, that as his life was honourable, so was his death glorious. His memory will be recorded in the annals of his country — will be sacred to every British soldier, and embalmed in the recollection of a grateful posterity.
Side 114 - "'Well," replied the king, "what has the bomb to do with the letter I am dictating to you? Go on.