The Flickr Säbel Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

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ArchivTappen3(C)verb.028 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, Säbel, 1920er by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.028 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, Säbel, 1920er

Bildrückseite:
Kollege Ernst Zinter, 1920er.

Picture back:
Colleague Ernst Zinter, 1920s.

Portrait, soldier, uniform, sabre, 1920s.
Wer kann bitte den Säbel mit der Krone zuordnen?
Who can please identify the sabre with the crown?
Freikorps?

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.022 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.022 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, WWI 1914-1918

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.020 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.020 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, WWI 1914-1918

ich hoffe, die Zuordung ist korrekt.
Bitte: Wer kann genauere Angaben machen?

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.021 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.021 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, WWI 1914-1918

ich hoffe, die Zuordung ist korrekt.
Bitte: Wer kann genauere Angaben machen?

I hope the assignment is correct.
Please: Who can provide more precise information?

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.019 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.019 Porträt, Soldat, Uniform, WWI 1914-1918

ich hoffe, die Zuordung ist korrekt.
Bitte: Wer kann genauere Angaben machen?

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.018 Porträt, Soldat, Feldgraue, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen3(C)verb.018 Porträt, Soldat, Feldgraue, WWI 1914-1918

Bildrückseite:
Kollege Chibiacz.

Ich hoffe, die Zuordnung ist korrekt.

Stand to attention by Silanov

© Silanov, all rights reserved.

Stand to attention

A guardsman in front of the entrance of the city of Lisbons Museu da Guarda Nacional Republicana (in English: "Museum of the Republican National Guard"), Lisbon, Portugal

Some background information:

Located in the historic in the city of Lisbon’s historic quarter Carmo, the Museu da Guarda Nacional Republicana offers a unique glimpse into the evolution of the Guarda Nacional Republicana, showcasing important artifacts, uniforms, and memorabilia that tell the story of this vital institution in Portuguese history. The Guarda Nacional Republicana or GNR is the national gendarmerie force of Portugal. Members of the GNR are military personnel, subject to military law and organisation, unlike the agents of the civilian Public Security Police (PSP).

The building of today’s museum served as an abbey of the Carmelite Order, to which it was handed over in the 15th century. It was heavily damaged during the devastating Lisbon earthquake of 1755. After the dissolution of the religious orders in 1834, the remaining part of the convent was repurposed for military use. From 1801, it served as a barracks and later as headquarters for various police forces

Since the establishment of the First Portuguese Republic in 1910, it has been the headquarters of the Guarda Nacional Republicana. The building played a central role in Portuguese history. On April 25, 1974, during the Carnation Revolution), it was the place where then-Prime Minister Marcello Caetano sought refuge after the fall of the Estado Novo regime. His surrender there marked the end of the dictatorship and the transition to democracy.

With an estimated population of almost 568,000 within its administrative limits and 2,961,177 within its metropolitan area, Lisbon is the capital and largest city of Portugal. It is mainland Europe's westernmost capital city and the only one along the Atlantic coast. Situated on the northern shore of the Tejo river near its estuary, Lisbon’s port can be called at by ships of any size.

Lisbon is one of the oldest cities in the world and the second-oldest European capital city (after Athens). Although the first fortifications on Lisbon's castle hill are known to be no older than the 2nd century BC, recent archaeological finds have shown that Iron Age people already occupied the site from the 8th to 6th centuries BC. The Phoenicians and later the Carthaginians, are said to have called the place Alis Ubbo and used it as the only major natural harbor on the Iberian Atlantic coast. There are also evidences that Lisbon once was a Greek city, but its Greek name is unknown.

Under Roman rule, starting around 205 BC, the city was initially called Olisipo. In 48 BC, the town was granted Roman municipal rights and subsequently became known as Colonia Felicitas Iulia, growing into a larger town in the province of Lusitania. From 409 AD, barbarian tribes advanced onto the Iberian Peninsula from Gaul. During the late antique migration period, Alans, Suebi, Vandals, and Visigoths tried to occupy Lisbon.

In 719, Lisbon was conquered by Muslim Moors and later became part of the Emirate of Córdoba. The city, now known as al-Ushbuna, experienced its first major boom. During the Caliphate of Córdoba, the city was one of the most important ports, while Christian Galicians and Leonese repeatedly attempted to seize it. In 844, Vikings ravaged Lisbon and its surroundings.

In the 11th century, Lisbon was part of the Moorish Emirate of the Aftasids from Badajoz. Starting in 1093, Count Raymond of Armous, a younger son of Duke William I of Burgundy, was given rule over Galicia by King Alfonso VI of León. From there, he launched campaigns against the Moors in the south, temporarily managing to occupy Lisbon.

At the beginning of the 11th century, the south of the Iberian Peninsula was still under Moorish control. But in 1147, in the course of the so-called Reconquista, the Siege of Lisbon led to the city's final capture by the Portuguese under Alfonso I. In 1255, Lisbon became the capital city of the new Portuguese territory and in 1290, the first Portuguese university was founded in the town. During the last centuries of the Middle Ages, Lisbon expanded substantially and became an important trading post with both Northern European and Mediterranean cities.

When the Spaniards had expelled the Jews from Spanish territory, many of them fled to Lisbon. But even in Portugal they either had to convert to Christianity or leave. In 1506, an anti-semitic movement among the Old Christians of Lisbon culminated in a massacre lasting four days in which some 1,000 to 4,000 New Christian residents, converted descendants of Sephardic Jews, are estimated to have been killed.

Most of the Portuguese expeditions of the Age of Discovery set out from Lisbon during the period from the end of the 15th century to the beginning of the 17th century, including Vasco da Gama's expedition to India in 1498. In the 16th century, Lisbon’s golden era began: The city was the European hub of commerce between Africa, India, the Far East and later, Brazil, and acquired great riches by exploiting the trade of spices, slaves, sugar, textiles and other goods. This period also saw the rise of the exuberant Manueline style in architecture, which left its mark in many 16th-century monuments, including the Belém Tower and the Jerónimos Monastery.

The succession crisis of 1580 initiated a sixty-year period of dual monarchy in Portugal and Spain under the Spanish Habsburgs. In 1589, Lisbon was the target of an incursion by the English Armada led by Francis Drake. The Portuguese Restoration War, which began with a coup d'état organised by the nobility and bourgeoisie in Lisbon in 1640 amd ended with the Treaty of Lisbon in 1668, restored Portuguese independence.

In the early 18th century, gold from Brazil allowed King John V to sponsor the building of several Baroque churches and theatres in the city. Prior to the 18th century, Lisbon had experienced several significant earthquakes: eight in the 14th century, five in the 16th century, and three in the 17th century. But the earthquake of 1755 was the most davastating one. It destroyed 85 percent of the city's structures, including the Ribeira Palace and the hospital Real de Todos os Santos. An an estimated 30,000 to 40,000 Lisbon residents of a total population estimated of 200,000 to 275,000 wer killed. And in the coastal areas north of Lisbon even more people were killed by the following tsunami.

This catastrophic event shocked the whole of Europe and left a deep impression on its collective psyche. However, the city was rebuilt quickly and largely according to the plans of prime minister Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, the 1st Marquis of Pombal. He decided to demolish what remained after the earthquake and rebuild the city centre in accordance with principles of modern urban design. It was reconstructed in an open rectangular plan with two great squares: the Praça do Rossio and the Praça do Comércio.

In the first years of the 19th century, Portugal was invaded by the troops of Napoléon Bonaparte, forcing Queen Maria I and Prince-Regent John to flee temporarily to Brazil. By the time the new King John VI returned to Lisbon, many of the buildings and properties were pillaged, sacked or destroyed by the invaders. The development of industry and commerce determined the growth of the city and Lisbon grew farther from the Tejo river.

In 1911, Lisbon refounded its university after centuries of inactivity. In the 20th century, the city was also the site of three revolutions. The first ond of 1910 brought an end to the Portuguese monarchy and established the highly unstable and corrupt Portuguese First Republic. The second one of 1926 ended the first republic and firmly established the Portuguese Second Republic. And the third revolution of 1974, the so-called Carnation Revolution, put an end to the right-wing regime and reformed the country to what it is still today, the Portuguese Third Republic.

Modern Lisbon is the political centre of the country and hosts the government, the National Assembly, the Supreme Court of Justice and the Armed Forces. It is also the residence of the head of state and the centre of Portuguese diplomacy, with ambassadors from 86 countries residing in the city, as well as representations from Taiwan and Palestine. About 2.96 million people, who live in the Lisbon metropolitan area (representing almost 28 % of the Portugal's population), make Lisbon the third largest metropolitan area in the Iberian Peninsula after Madrid and Barcelona.

ArchivTappen45 44 Porträt, Soldat, Leutnant, Bayern, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen45 44 Porträt, Soldat, Leutnant, Bayern, WWI 1914-1918

Bildrückseite:
Leutnant Franz Gambs,
Bayer. Infanterie-Regiment,
4. Kompagnie,
Bayer. Infanterie-Division.


Der deutsche Soldat von 1860 bis 1918 kommentiert:

Franz Gambs
geboren am 8.12.1896 in Bamberg
Gymnasialabiturient
Ledig.
Leutnant in der 4.Kompanie Infanterie Regiment Nr 7
Schönes Foto

ArchivTappen45 43 Feldgraue, Erinnerungsfoto, Kameraden, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen45 43 Feldgraue, Erinnerungsfoto, Kameraden, WWI 1914-1918

Wer weiß ob wir uns wiedersehen!
Kriegsjahr 1914 16 +

ArchivTappen25(5A)verb.469 Lazarettzeit (front), Halle a.d. Saale, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen25(5A)verb.469 Lazarettzeit (front), Halle a.d. Saale, WWI 1914-1918

[front von 468]

Feldpost
Poststempel Halle an der Saale, 18. April 1916.

Absender:
Inft. Stanislaus Hubel
Res. Laz. Francksche Stiftung in Halle a.d. Saale

S.W.
Frau Marie Neumaier
Maurersgattin
München Ost
Flurstr. 5/I. l. Rgb. [Flurstrasse 5 /I. Stock linkes Rückgebäude]

. by Kaïopai°

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

.

ArchivTappen45 23 Gruppenfoto (back), Soldatenleben, Feldgraue, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen45 23 Gruppenfoto (back), Soldatenleben, Feldgraue, WWI 1914-1918

Text:
[?Striesa oder Riesa?] 29. 11. [19]17
Liebe Schwägerin!
Die besten Grüße vom Soldatenleben, bezüglich unsers Alters Riege welche bereits wieder aufgelöst ist.
Bester Gruß Schwager Richard.

ArchivTappen45 13 Gruppenfoto (front), Soldaten, Friedenszeit, 1910er by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen45 13 Gruppenfoto (front), Soldaten, Friedenszeit, 1910er

[front von 11]

Nürnberg, 21. Dezember 1913.

Bitte, meine Frage:
Ist es möglich, daß der auf dem Bild ganz rechts stehende Soldat eine "8" auf der Schulterklappe hat?
Wer kann das Bild zuordnen?
Was sind das für "Helme"?

Der deutsche Soldat von 1860 bis 1918 kommentierte, siehe unten:
"Die Soldaten sind vom Königlich Bayerischen 8. Feldartillerie Regiment Prinz Heinrich von Preußen.
Garnison Nürnberg.
Sie tragen den Helm mit Paradebusch.
Die Soldaten mit dem Säbel gehören zu den Reitenden Mannschaften und die mit dem Seitengewehr sind Geschützbedienungsmannschaften."

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.973A Soldaten, Feldgraue, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.973A Soldaten, Feldgraue, WWI 1914-1918

xiphophilos sagte seinerzeit:
Möglicherweise zur Ordensvergabe angetreten. Ich sehe Angehörige drei verschiedener Regimenter, IR 177, IR 171, und L1.

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.949A K.u.K.-Armee, Soldatenuniform, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.949A K.u.K.-Armee, Soldatenuniform, WWI 1914-1918

Bildrückseite beschriftet:
Bildrückseite:
"Milusa [weiblicher Vorname z. B. in Serbien]
v. Brué, 7. Juli 1919."

Bitte:
Wer kann mehr zum Bild sagen?
k.u.k-Kaiserjäger-Mützen?

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.915A Porträt, Feldgraue, Soldat, Säbel, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.915A Porträt, Feldgraue, Soldat, Säbel, WWI 1914-1918

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.748A Porträt, Soldat, Säbel, k.u.k.-Zeit, 1910er by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.748A Porträt, Soldat, Säbel, k.u.k.-Zeit, 1910er

Frage: k.u.k. Landsturm?

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.746A Portrait, Soldat (front), Neujahrsgrüße, Frankreich, WWI 1914-1918 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.746A Portrait, Soldat (front), Neujahrsgrüße, Frankreich, WWI 1914-1918

Bonne Année.

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.742A Soldat, Helm und Säbel, Kaiserreich, 1910er by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.742A Soldat, Helm und Säbel, Kaiserreich, 1910er

Porträt, Soldat mit Helm und Säbel, 1910er.

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.045 Familienfoto, Berlin, WWII 1939-1945 by Hans-Michael Tappen

ArchivTappen27(7A)verb.045 Familienfoto, Berlin, WWII 1939-1945

Bildrückseite:
"Photogr. Otto Scholz, Berlin SW, 29, Friesenstr. 17"