Rickasaurus

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Rickasaurus

Rickasaurus

@Rickasaurusx

Tham gia Eylül 2024
938 Đang theo dõi2.2K Người theo dõi
NerfNoodle
NerfNoodle@nerfnoodle·
Woke up like dis
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Lexi
Lexi@CuutieeLexii·
summer ready
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Hans-Joachim Marseille
Hans-Joachim Marseille@MarseilleH41515·
Miervaldis Ādamsons (Latvian language: [Miervaldis Ādamsons] 29 June 1910 – 23 August 1946) Latvian military officer who during World War II Joined the Waffen SS and got the rank of Hauptsturmführer. He was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross,
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Emma St. James
Emma St. James@st_james25521·
No make up, no filter, just a natural mommy in a bikini
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sums
sums@melkieteeth·
anyone want a pretty fat girlfriend
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Clint Warren-Davey
Clint Warren-Davey@Clint_Davey1·
In Normandy in 1944 the Germans had "static" divisions along the coast. No transport, except maybe some horses and wagons. Their orders were to basically die in place and act as a speedbump. A lot of these units were Czechs, Ukrainians, Poles and other nationalities that had been prisoners of war but pressed into service on the front line. Naturally, they surrendered pretty easily.
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Rickasaurus
Rickasaurus@Rickasaurusx·
@HistoryArcs They were attached to the 11th SS Nordland division for that battle The French in Berlin knew they that it was either win or die They fought like maniacs ✊
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History Arc
History Arc@HistoryArcs·
The Frenchmen Who Defended Berlin to The Last 400 men willingly volunteered to enter a besieged Berlin to fulfill their oath and fight to the very end. 300 Frenchmen of the SS-Charlemagne perished in the final battle. This fact was suppressed for decades until the early 2000s.
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Stallyn19
Stallyn19@stallyn19·
Kevin Brennan vs Keanu Thompson Outside of Rodney’s (Uncensored) - 5/2/26
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Rickasaurus
Rickasaurus@Rickasaurusx·
Don’t mess with a TEXAAZ home - EVER
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ustonymc
ustonymc@ustonymc·
Parade of the Vanquished Moscow, Russia July 17 1944 About 57,000 German prisoners of war were paraded through the streets of Moscow. A very small percentage would return home years later...
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Voices of WW2
Voices of WW2@VoicesofWW2·
WW2 German tanks vs Soviet tanks
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Rickasaurus
Rickasaurus@Rickasaurusx·
@RapperPandit True, but the Western Allies kept the Red Army at the Elbe and not further West
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Rickasaurus
Rickasaurus@Rickasaurusx·
@WarMonitorClips Probably a Flak helper. Doubt that he was in a Luftwaffe field division - too young
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War Monitor Clips
War Monitor Clips@WarMonitorClips·
A young German soldier cries after being captured by the US forces
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
On September 14, 1812, Napoleon Bonaparte led his Grande Armée into Moscow, expecting to receive the city's formal surrender and force Tsar Alexander I to the negotiating table. Instead, he found a city largely abandoned by its population, an eerie and unsettling sight for a commander accustomed to triumphant entries into conquered capitals. Within hours of the French arrival, fires began breaking out across the city, a act of deliberate destruction ordered by Moscow's governor, Count Feodor Rostopchin. The fires spread rapidly over the following days, consuming warehouses, mansions, markets, and the vast stores of food and supplies Napoleon had desperately counted on to sustain his army through the Russian winter. Estimates suggest that roughly three quarters of the city was reduced to ash, leaving the French in control of little more than smoldering ruins. Napoleon himself was forced to temporarily flee the Kremlin as flames closed in around it, a humiliating image far removed from the glorious victory he had imagined. He waited in the devastated city for six weeks, still hoping Alexander would negotiate, but no offer ever came. The Tsar, reading the political situation with cold clarity, understood that time and winter were his greatest weapons. Without adequate shelter, food, or fodder for horses, the French army began to deteriorate rapidly even before a single battle was fought in Moscow. Napoleon finally ordered the retreat on October 19, 1812, beginning one of the most catastrophic military withdrawals in history. The burning of Moscow signaled to all of Europe that Russia would sacrifice everything rather than submit to Napoleon's empire. The burning of Moscow shattered Napoleon's core strategy for the 1812 campaign, which had depended entirely on capturing the Russian capital and forcing a swift peace settlement, and without that leverage his massive invasion force was left stranded deep inside a hostile country with no supply lines, no shelter, and a brutal winter closing in rapidly, ultimately turning what had been the largest army ever assembled in European history into a broken column of freezing and starving survivors who lost hundreds of thousands of men during the catastrophic retreat to the Russian border, a defeat so total and so public that it permanently fractured the myth of Napoleonic invincibility, emboldened Prussia and Austria to re-enter the war against France, and set in motion the chain of events that would lead directly to Napoleon's first abdication just two years later in 1814. #archaeohistories
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