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Thread: " Years Of Peace"
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03-09-03, 05:21 PM #1
" Years Of Peace"
It is often said in history books that after the Crimean War Britain enjoyed a half-century of peace.It is true that there were no major wars,but during this period somewhere in the World the Royal Marines were policing the Globe,Royal Marines fought in India,China,New Zealand,Gambia,Nigeria,Japan,Abyssinia,Gold Coast (Now Ghana),Malaya,Zululand,Egypt,Crete,and South Africa,thereby justifying the choice of the Globe as the emblem of the Corps.They also took part in a Civil War in Spain and put down a rebellion in Canada.They fought the Argentinians in Uruguay,and the Burmese in Burma.They bombarded the Arabs in Algiers,fought for the Turks in Syria,and against the Turks in Greece,defended the forts on the Gold Coast; they attacked the forts in Nicaragua and the Yemen.They destroyed the pirates in the West Indies and in the East Indies.They fought against the slave traders on the Atlantic and the Opium traders in China.they took part in the conquests of Aden and Hong Kong.All this during the Victorian era.well earned the Motto "Per Mare Per Terram".Aye JR
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03-11-03, 01:18 AM #2
Royal Marine Geography
Was Abyssinia part of (or all of) Ethiopia?
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03-11-03, 01:21 AM #3
http://www.abyssiniacybergateway.net/
About The Abyssinia Cyberspace Gateway
First things first; ``Abyssinia'' as a term is used here to celebrate the collective cutures and peoples encompassed under the broadest region generally associated with the term. ``Abyssinia'' as definable by the information available here, is the geographic region in East Africa bound by the present day borders of the nations (given alphabetically); Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia, and Somaliland.
You are invited to add to the contents of this web site. Send your info, art (poems, music, gifs), humour, comments, suggestions, complaints, to the email address below. The only criteria for submissions is that the material be of a nonpolitical nature. Remember, this site is an information directory, at a lonely crossroads on the Information Super Highway...
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03-11-03, 04:17 AM #4
Regards to all.abyssinia in Victorian times was all of ethiopia.
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03-11-03, 08:15 AM #5
See! I knew 3Badge'd get us straightened out!
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03-11-03, 09:35 AM #6
Bones! Aw Shucks!Brother
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03-12-03, 01:58 AM #7
Abyssinia
Did the "Skinnies" inhabit Abyssinia in Victorian times?
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03-12-03, 04:18 AM #8
Chris! "Skinnies" Hell brother you've lost me there?.Aye JR
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03-12-03, 09:17 AM #9
Skinnies
An ill attempt at humor, 3-Badge. A "Skinnie" would be a victim of famine.:o
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03-12-03, 09:49 AM #10
Chris,Now I'm in the picture,Hell I should have known better after all the US of A,and the UK have been feeding the hungry masses for years,and has been the same for years Biting the hand that feeds ya. Aye Jr
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03-14-03, 03:13 PM #11
D'ya hear there. 3 Badge Bootneck will be joining his friends on the charity 30 miler across Dartmoor in May. JR will be leading from the front, carrying the safety bergen and generally goading us along, using his leadership skills and flamboyant character.
We are doomed!
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03-22-03, 03:48 PM #12
3Badge...
Grid to mag add! Mag to grid get rid
Now repeat it 300 times!
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03-23-03, 01:51 PM #13
Land Nav Jingles
Sticky blueGrid to mag add! Mag to grid get rid
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03-23-03, 02:07 PM #14
Lurchenstein... There are loads like that one!! I would have thought you'd know that one... it makes life easier if you remember it. I remember one of my instructors told me about map reading. He was called Bill:
"Lads, on my first juniors I was as fit as a greyhound and did the night navigation exercise. I didn't have a clue how to read a map properly but I could run! I ran all night and found the check points by covering all the possible ground. When I completed the course I got an old salt to teach me how to map read and navigate. On my seniors I was confident and still fit. I ran from one check point to the next and didn't miss a single one. I was back and in bed before anyone else. I'd used half the energy of my first one and done it in a quarter of the time. My advice guy it to trust your compass, count your paces and read your map! It worked for me.
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03-23-03, 02:22 PM #15
Navigation
Good info, Sticky Blue!
I must confess that I did not (or had forgotten). Being a radio tech (& Marine Air Wing), I "rode in" to operating sites. Didn't get much chance to work land nav skills. Recently, bought a lensatic compass and now figuring out (all over again) how to work it correctly. Had some chances to operate GPS receivers when I worked a defense job in the 90's. That renewed my interest in the lensatic compass. (What happens when the GPS link is down?)
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