Al Nofi's CIC
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Issue #316, October 10th, 2010 |
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This Issue...
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Infinite Wisdom
What age has not been plagued by barbarian troubles?"
-- | Cho Kyongnam,
Korean Historian,
c. 1618
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La Triviata
- In 1865 the budget for the personnel and operations of
the Austrian Imperial Army headquarters in Vienna was 3.15 million florins, while that for all 81 infantry regiments in the army was
3.8 million
- Although the Royal Navy has been the backbone of the defense
of England since time immemorial, it was not until 1797 that a naval officer
was made a Knight of the Garter, Sir Richard Howe, who had commanded the
British fleet for some time during the American Revolution and was later First
Lord of the Admiralty, and was the man who settled the Spithead Mutiny on 1797.
- Although Americans referred to Maj. Gen. Anthony Wayne”
as “Mad Anthony” for battlefield heroics during the Revolutionary War, the
northwestern Indians had perhaps a better nickname for him, reflecting the
extraordinary energy and speed with which he conducted operations, “The
Whirlwind.”
- In 408, the Roman Emperor Theodosius II barred
pagans from military service, and in 416 prohibited providing arms or military
training to pagans.
- During King Philip’s War (1675–1676), Massachusetts military
regulations required that men found to have threatened or struck an officer, or
had committed mutiny, murder, rape, adultery, or “unnatural acts” were to be
put to death, while blasphemers were to have their tongues bored through with a
hot iron, but anyone guilty of fornication was to be punished at the discretion
of his commanding officer.
- In 1973 a group of British and German historians and
military officers, including some senior veterans of World War II, played a series
of wargames at Sandhurst, the Royal Military College, to evaluate offensive and
defensive plans if Hitler actually had attempted Operation Sea Lion, the
invasion of Britain, and concluded that, while the defenders would have taken
serious losses beating off the attack, perhaps as few as 15,000 of the initial
90,000 troops in the landing force would have escaped death or capture.
- Among the Mexican military supplies found at Matamoros when American
forces under Zachary Taylor occupied the town on May 18, 1846, were the usual stocks of muskets
and gunpowder and rations, as well as some 200,000 cigars, which the general
ordered distributed to his troops.
- An old tradition in the Royal Navy required that when
mess cooks were preparing a Christmas pudding, the ship's captain was given the
honor of stirring it, using a oar.
More...
Portions of "Al
Nofi's CIC" have appeared previously in Military Chronicles,
Copyright © 2009 Military
Chronicles (www.militarychronicles.com), used with permission, all rights
reserved.
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