Wikipedia:Obtaining geographic coordinates

Undiscovered Zhoushan: Dongji Islands

[1]

East Pole Islands or Dongji Dao

Qingbangdao

Nimori Genichiro

Lisbon Maru (りすぼん丸) was a Japanese freighter which was used as a troopship and prisoner-of-war transport between China and Japan. On 1 October 1942, while carrying almost 2,000 British and Commonwealth prisoners, she was torpedoed by a US Navy submarine and sank the following day. More than 800 of these men died, many of whom were shot or otherwise killed by the Japanese while they were seeking rescue.

After the capture of Hong Kong by the Imperial Japanese Army on 25 December 1941, some 11,000 British, Canadian, Indian and locally recruited troops became prisoners of war.[1] During 1942, the Japanese found that they had a worsening shortage of labour in their home islands, so they began the transfer of Allied prisoners of war to Japan for forced labour in mines, construction, industry and agriculture.[2]

References edit

Anthony Eden; "The uniform is to consist of one suit of overalls of design similar to that of battle dress, a field service cap, and an armlet bearing the letters 'L.D.V.'".[1]

Anthony Eden; "I am glad to be able to inform my hon. Friend that members of the Home Guard are to be supplied with boots." [2]

Weapons edit

On 23 May 1940, Richard May, Financial Secretary to the War Office, appealed for shotguns and rifles to be handed in at police stations.[3]

Fleming, Peter Operation Sea Lion: Hitler's Plot to Invade England (p. 200) - initial organisation and improvised weapons.

Ralph Eastwood

Robert Bridgeman, 2nd Viscount Bridgeman

[2]

he Defence of the United Kingdom (History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series)

References edit

Jackson, Robert (2013), Churchill's Channel War: 1939-45, Osprey Publishing, ISBN: 9781472800671

Jewell, Brian (1981), British Battledress, 1937-61, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 0-85045-387-9 (p. 6)]


Lords of Parliament: Manners, Rituals and Politics By Emma Crewe



Comparison 1911 & 1937 Naval Reviews [3]

1911 Empire Parliamentary Association [4]

Boy Scouts help line the route [5]


Osprey - Men at Arms 107 - British Infantry Equipment (1)

MissSmithandherfamily.pdf - Colchester Castle

References edit


Background edit

The British corps, under the command of Lieutenant-General Sir Ralph Abercromby, had been sent to Egypt to remove the French garrison from the region, following Napoleon's departure in August 1799. On 1 March 1801, the British corps, originally consisting of 15,300 men but much affected by disease, carried by a fleet of 175 ships, arrived at the natural harbour of Abu Qir, (known to the British as "Aboukir Bay"), some 23 kilometres (14 miles) from the port city of Alexandria. On 8 March, the British vanguard of 5,500 came ashore by boat, opposed by a French force of some 2,000 drawn up on the sand dunes overlooking the landing beach, an action known as the Second Battle of Abukir. The French were forced to retreat and the whole British corps had landed by nightfall.

Having established a depot and field hospital on the beach, the British besieged and captured Aboukir Castle from the French and began a cautious advance towards Alexandria along the narrow isthmus between the sea and Lake Aboukir, also known as "Lake Maadie". By 12 March, the British had reached a feature called Mandora Tower, where they made camp for the night.


End of the Affair: The Collapse of the Anglo-French Alliance, 1939-40 By Eleanor M. Gates

Duke of Brunswick The Edinburgh Annual Register for 1809


Tour through the Eastern counties of England, 1722, by Defoe, Daniel

SAINTS’ RELICS IN MEDIEVAL ENGLISH LITERATURE Pilgrimage in England

Pilgrimage in Medieval England edit

Christian pilgrimage was an important feature of religion in Medieval England. Pilgrims travelled to venerate shrines, relics or artistic depictions of Jesus or the saints, which they believed would bring physical healing or forgiveness of sin. The practice of pilgrimage ended with the Reformation in England.


BEF Air Component edit


Timeline of British Army uniforms and equipment edit

This is a Timeline of British Army uniforms and equipment. For an overview, see History of the British Army

17th Century edit

  • 1645: the New Model Army of England was created by Parliament in the English Civil War. The regiments of foot were provided with red coats using Venetian red which was the least expensive dye.
  • 1660: the Restoration of the monarchy established a standing English army; colonels of regiments made their own arrangements for the manufacture of uniforms under their command, although red was a commonly used colour.

18th century edit

  • 1707: establishment of a Board of General Officers which regulated the clothing of the army by a "sealed pattern" of uniform. Long red coats were lined with contrasting colours and turned out to provide distinctive regimental facings.
  • 1747: the first of a series of clothing regulations and royal warrants that set out the various facing colours and distinctions to be borne by each regiment. The long coat was worn with a white or buff coloured waistcoat.
  • 1797: the long tailcoat and waistcoat were replaced by a tightly fitting coatee.
  • 1799: the traditional tricorne hat was replaced by a tall "stovepipe" shako.

19th century edit



Losses edit

 
Lancastria sinking off Saint-Nazaire

A fresh air raid began before 16:00. Lancastria was bombed at 15:48 by Junkers Ju 88 aircraft from Kampfgeschwader 30. Three direct hits caused the ship to list first to starboard then to port, while a fourth bomb fell down the ship's smokestack, detonating inside the engine room and releasing more than 1,200 tons of crude oil into the Loire estuary. Fifteen minutes after being hit, Lancastria began to capsize and some of those who were still on board managed to scramble over the ship's railing to sit on the ship's underside. Lancastria sank within twenty minutes.[citation needed]

When German aircraft began strafing survivors in the water[citation needed], the fuel oil which had leaked into the sea ignited, and was quickly transformed into a flaming inferno[citation needed]. Many drowned; others were choked by the oil, or were shot by strafing German aircraft.[citation needed]

Survivors were taken aboard other evacuation vessels, the trawler HMT Cambridgeshire rescuing 900.[1] There were 2,477 survivors, of whom about 100 were still alive in 2011.[2] Many families of the dead knew only that they died with the British Expeditionary Force (BEF); the death toll accounted for roughly a third of the total losses of the BEF in France.[2] She sank around 5 nmi (9.3 km) south of Chémoulin Point in the Charpentier roads, around 9 nmi (17 km) from St. Nazaire. The Lancastria Association names 1,738 people known to have been killed.[3] In 2005, Fenby wrote that estimates of the death toll vary from fewer than 3,000 to 5,800 people although it is also estimated that as many as 6,500 people perished, the largest loss of life in British maritime history.[4]

Rudolph Sharp survived the sinking and went on to command the RMS Laconia, losing his life on 12 September 1942 in the Laconia incident off West Africa.[5]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Sebag was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference BBC was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ "Victim list". Lancastria.org.uk. 17 June 1940. Retrieved 3 June 2015. List of those found and buried ashore, or reported to be on board at the time of the sinking and presumed lost in the action
  4. ^ Fenby 2005, p. 247.
  5. ^ "Rudolph Sharp (British) – Crew lists of Ships hit by U-boats". uboat.net. Retrieved 2019-06-17. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)


Leyton History Society

French Fortifications, 1715-1815: An Illustrated History


The Breaking Point: Sedan and the Fall of France, 1940 Doughty.

Battle for the Escaut, 1940: The France and Flanders Campaign Murland.

Napoleon's Defeat of the Habsburgs: Volume III: Wagram and Znaim

With Eagles to Glory: Napoleon and His German Allies in the 1809 Campaign

Der Schwarze Herzog: Friedrich Wilhelm von Braunschweig-Oels – Eine Biographie

Frederick William, duke of Brunswick, 1771-1815, r.1806-7, 1813-15

Des Herzogs Friedrich Wilhelm von Braunschweig Zug durch Norddeutchland

Unter der Fahne des schwarzen Herzogs anno 1809

When the War of the Fifth Coalition broke out in 1809, Frederick William used this opportunity to create a Freikorps of partisans with the support of the Austrian Empire. This corps was called the Black Brunswickers because they wore black uniforms in mourning for their occupied country. He financed the corps independently by mortgaging his principality in Oels. After a spell in defensive positions, The Brunswick corps was attached to an Austrian force under Lieutenant field marshal Karl Friedrich am Ende, which was tasked with making a diversionary expedition into French-occupied Saxony in the hope of inspiring an insurrection.


[VCH Leyton: Churches

An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought, Volume 2

Leytonstone and its history; with especial reference to the establishment and development of church services therein, and a short account of former residents and residences, etc

A History of the Parish of Leyton, Essex p. 72

The religious life of London p. 364

William Cotton Oswell, Hunter and Explorer: The Story of His Life

English Coronation Records

A Precarious Existence: British Submariners in World War One


St Leonard's Church, Lexden edit

Church of St Leonard, Lexden
 
Church of St Leonard from the north
 
 
Church of St Leonard, Lexden
Location in Essex
51°53′23″N 0°51′48″E / 51.889595°N 0.863445°E / 51.889595; 0.863445
LocationLexden, Essex, England
DenominationChurch of England
Websitewww.stleonardslexden.org.uk
History
DedicationSaint Leonard of Noblac
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade II
Designated19 February 1959
Architect(s)Mark Greystone Thompson
StyleNeo-Early English and Perpendicular gothic
Years built1820-21
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseChelmsford
ArchdeaconryColchester
DeaneryColchester
BeneficeLexden

The Church of Saint Leonard is a Church of England parish church in Lexden, a suburb of Colchester in Essex, England. Originating in the early 12th century, the medieval building became unsafe and was demolished in 1820. A new church building was completed in 1821, with an extension added in 1892. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a Grade II listed building,[1]

History edit

 
Old St Leonard's Church, before its demolition in 1820.

The first record of a church at Lexden was when Eudo Dapifer, the Castellan of Colchester Castle who died in 1120, gave a part of the tithes (a local tax to support the parish church) to St John's Abbey. In 1254, the advowson, the right to appoint a parish priest, was held by John de Burgh, the lord of the manor of Lexden; this right continued with the manor through the FitzWalter, Lucas, Rawstorn, and Papillon families, until 1978. The names of the Rectors of Lexden are rocrded since 1291. The rector's income from the parish was the richest in the Liberty of Colchester, valued at 40 shillings (£2) in 1254.

The turbulent times following the Reformation in England affected St Leonards; in 1574, the rector resigned after being accused of failing to preach regular sermons and in 1586, Robert Searle was threatened with removal for Nonconformist practices. In contrast, his successor, Stephen Nettles, wrote tracts against the Puritans and continued to use the Book of Common Prayer, leading to him being deprived of his income in 1644, although he refused to yield the rectory until he was forced out in 1647; the imposed Puritan rector was harrassed by angry parishioners and finally left in 1650 to be replaced another member of the Nettles family.



References edit