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#Landwehr
tatmanblue · 6 months
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VOX ARIANE prb20- by Andreas Muhl Via Flickr: Hooper Dredger, NOK Landwehr 08.03.2024.
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“La Malédiction de Raven’s Hollow” de Christopher Hatton - inspiré du poème “Le Corbeau (The Raven)” d'Edgar Allan Poe (1845) - avec William Moseley, Melanie Zanetti, Kate Dickie, David Hayman, Oberon K. A. Adjepong, Callum Woodhouse, Mathis Landwehr et Toms Treinis, mars 2023.
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cloacacarnage · 6 months
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vintagepromotions · 1 year
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Poster advertising Firmit washing powder and soap cleaner, featuring a girl and her cat going off to do the laundry (c. 1920). Artwork by Ernst Landwehr.
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luegootravez · 7 months
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Mara Landwehrs by © Dennis Kilch
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beerwanderer · 10 months
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A military assault on Rothenburg ob der Tauber
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so-sexy-and-hot · 2 years
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geekynerfherder · 1 year
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Corey Helford Gallery presents 'Because I Wanted You To Know', a solo art exhibition of new works by Mark Landwehr and Sven Waschk [coarse].
The opening night is on Saturday October 7 from 7pm-11pm PT in the Main Gallery at Corey Helford Gallery, 571 S. Anderson St. Los Angeles, CA 90033 and on the Corey Helford Gallery website until November 11 2023.
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theanticool · 1 year
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Dan Ige gets the UD over Nate Landwehr.
Not a lot of finishes tonight. Some solid action though. Makes me wonder about the main and co-main.
Ige and Landwehr have themselves a nice scrap. Ige wins out on power, dropping Landwehr twice (at the end of the 1st and 2nd round). Landwehr is tough as hell, cause dude should have probably been stopped after that 2nd round. But he battled back in that final round. Fun fight!
Josh Taylor and Teofimo Lopez are walking out now for people who want to cut over to boxing for a bit!
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moviemosaics · 2 years
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Raven’s Hollow
directed by Christopher Hatton, 2022
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wausaupilot · 2 months
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Business Spotlight: Central Wisconsin Weight Loss and Wellness
So many people are talking about these services. Learn all about Central Wisconsin Weight Loss Solutions and what they have to offer, in this business spotlight!
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themmaniacs · 2 years
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UFC on ESPN 43: Nate Landwehr vs. Austin Lingo - Fight Walkthrough
#UFC #MMA #UFConESPN43
On March 25, 2023, UFC on ESPN 43 took place at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas, United States. The event featured numerous good fighters, and fans were eager to witness an exciting show. Fortunately, the event didn’t disappoint, as it delivered in almost all fights. The main event of the night was the bantamweight bout between Cory Sandhagen and Marlon Vera. It was a closely contested…
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Callum Woodhouse, Mathis Landwehr, Oberon K. A. Adjepong et William Moseley dans "La Malédiction de Raven's Hollow" de Christopher Hatton - inspiré du poème "Le Corbeau (The Raven)" d'Edgar Allan Poe (1845) - mars 2023.
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German soldiers of Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 80 in the Vosges Mountains, late 1916.
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whencyclopedia · 4 months
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Battle of Wagram
The Battle of Wagram (5-6 July 1809) was one of the largest and bloodiest battles of the Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815). It resulted in a pyrrhic victory for French Emperor Napoleon I (r. 1804-1814; 1815) whose army crossed the Danube River to defeat Archduke Charles' Austrian army. Wagram ultimately allowed Napoleon to win the War of the Fifth Coalition (1809).
Background
Ever since its defeat at the Battle of Austerlitz (2 December 1805), the Austrian Empire itched to exact revenge upon Napoleon and recover its status as a major power in Central Europe. In the three years that followed the battle, Austria bided its time as its army was modernized by Archduke Charles, brother of the emperor and commander-in-chief of the Austrian forces. Charles' reforms included a system of mass conscription through the Landwehr militia and a reorganization of the army into nine line and two reserve corps, copying the corps d'armee system that had contributed to Napoleon's success.
By early 1809, hundreds of thousands of French soldiers were off in Iberia fighting the Peninsular War (1807-1814) against Spain and Portugal. This greatly reduced France's military presence in Germany, an opportunity that Austrian Emperor Francis I was keen to take advantage of. Francis ordered his brother to prepare for war, and on 10 April 1809, Archduke Charles sparked the War of the Fifth Coalition when he invaded France's ally of Bavaria with 200,000 men. Napoleon was prepared; having noticed the build-up of Austrian forces, the French emperor had raised a new Army of Germany that consisted mainly of French conscripts and allied German soldiers from the Confederation of the Rhine. Since Archduke Charles' invasion got off to a slow start, Napoleon was able to launch a rapid counteroffensive. In the ensuing Landshut campaign, Napoleon's Army of Germany won a string of battles and forced Archduke Charles back across the Danube. Charles' retreat left the road to Vienna wide open, and Napoleon occupied the Austrian capital on 13 May.
Emperor Francis had evacuated Vienna before the French occupation, and Archduke Charles had rallied his forces and was currently sitting on the opposite bank of the Danube. Since all the major bridges across the river had been destroyed, Napoleon needed to build his own. He chose the floodplain of Lobau Island, south of Vienna, as the ideal location for his river crossing. By midday on 20 May, the pontoon bridge was completed, and the first elements of the French army crossed over to occupy the towns of Aspern and Essling. By the next morning, Napoleon had gotten 25,000 troops across the river, but efforts to get the rest of his army across were frustrated by the Austrians, who floated flaming barges down the river to punch holes in the French bridge.
At 1 p.m. on 21 May, Archduke Charles ordered an attack. The French were surprised by the sudden Austrian assault, and brutal fighting erupted around Aspern and Essling that lasted well into the night, at which point the French retained control of both towns. The battle resumed on the morning of 22 May; while the Austrian wings were embroiled in the struggle for the towns, French Marshal Jean Lannes led a charge against the vulnerable Austrian center. His attack came close to success but was stopped by the personal intervention of Archduke Charles, who led a spirited counterattack. As the day wore on, the French were pushed out of Essling, and the bridge was repeatedly damaged, preventing Napoleon from getting the rest of his army across. At 3 p.m., the French emperor decided to cut his losses and ordered a withdrawal to Lobau. The Battle of Aspern-Essling marked Napoleon's first major defeat in a decade and had cost him between 20-23,000 casualties including the irreplaceable Marshal Lannes, who was mortally wounded. The Austrians also suffered around 23,000 casualties but achieved victory, having denied the river crossing to Napoleon.
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luegootravez · 7 months
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Mara Landwehrs by © Alex Heitz
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