your soviet Russian momma lol by joe T
The German Eight Army lost about 40,000 men and the Russian First Army lost 125,000 along with 45,000 captured.
The Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes, also known as the Winter Battle of the Masurian Lakes, was the northern part of the Central Powers' offensive on the Eastern Front in the winter of 1915. The offensive was intended to advance beyond the Vistula River and perhaps knock Russia out of the war. On the 7th of February, in the middle of a snowstorm, Below's Eighth Army launched a surprise attack against Sievers and advanced 70 miles within the week, inflicting severe casualties on the Russians. The Russian withdrawal was disorderly and many of them were taken prisoner. The greatest loss came when the Russian XX Corps, under General Bulgakov, had become surrounded by the German Tenth Army in the Augustow Forest; on February 21 the entire corps surrendered. Yet even though the Russians had lost an entire corps, its heroic stand had enabled the rest of the Russian Tenth Army to form a new defensive position. On February 22, the next day, Plehve's Russian Twelfth Army counterattacked and checked the German advance. The counterattack ended any further German advances and brought the battle to an end.
Gumbinnen, Tannenberg & the Masurian Lakes set the standard fare for the Russians in the First World War in the East. Despite the effects of the Brusilov offensive against the Austro/Hungarian forces by the time of Riga, in which poison gas shells wer used for the first time, the Russians were defeated. Poor leadership & technological inferiority typify the Russian war effort. As for a turning point ? It's just one defeat after another by and large. I suspect you meant to type WW2 and therefore the answer is Stalingrad, but that's another story.
· Hannibal Hamlin (Lincoln's Vice President during the war)· Hatteras Inlet Batteries (North Carolina), battle of· Hoke's Run (Missouri), battle of· Hooker, Joseph (Union General)· Hunley, H.L. (submarine of the Confederate States of America)· Hannibal Hamlin (Lincoln's Vice President during the war)· Hatteras Inlet Batteries (North Carolina), battle of· Hoke's Run (Missouri), battle of· Hooker, Joseph (Union General)· Hunley, H.L. (submarine of the Confederate States of America)· Hannibal Hamlin (Lincoln's Vice President during the war)· Hatteras Inlet Batteries (North Carolina), battle of· Hoke's Run (Missouri), battle of· Hooker, Joseph (Union General)· Hunley, H.L. (submarine of the Confederate States of America)· Hannibal Hamlin (Lincoln's Vice President during the war)· Hatteras Inlet Batteries (North Carolina), battle of· Hoke's Run (Missouri), battle of· Hooker, Joseph (Union General)· Hunley, H.L. (submarine of the Confederate States of America)
For their leadership of German troops in the First World War on the Eastern Front against the Russians. They defeated the Russians in the battles of Tannenberg, Masurian Lakes & Lodz. They then assumed command of all German troops on the Western & Eastern Fronts for the rest of the war.
Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes happened on 1915-02-22.
The German Eight Army lost about 40,000 men and the Russian First Army lost 125,000 along with 45,000 captured.
The Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes, also known as the Winter Battle of the Masurian Lakes, was the northern part of the Central Powers' offensive on the Eastern Front in the winter of 1915. The offensive was intended to advance beyond the Vistula River and perhaps knock Russia out of the war. On the 7th of February, in the middle of a snowstorm, Below's Eighth Army launched a surprise attack against Sievers and advanced 70 miles within the week, inflicting severe casualties on the Russians. The Russian withdrawal was disorderly and many of them were taken prisoner. The greatest loss came when the Russian XX Corps, under General Bulgakov, had become surrounded by the German Tenth Army in the Augustow Forest; on February 21 the entire corps surrendered. Yet even though the Russians had lost an entire corps, its heroic stand had enabled the rest of the Russian Tenth Army to form a new defensive position. On February 22, the next day, Plehve's Russian Twelfth Army counterattacked and checked the German advance. The counterattack ended any further German advances and brought the battle to an end.
· MacArthur, Douglas (US General) · Mark W. Clark (US General) · Marshall, George (US General) · Midway, Battle of · Mineichi Koga, Admiral (commander in chief of the Japanese Combined Fleet) · Montgomery, Bernard (British Field Marshal) · Moscow, Battle of · Mussolini, Benito
Białowieża Forest (European bisons), Tatra Mountains, Masurian Lakes, Stołowe Mountains, sand dunes of Łeba.
Battle of Bitter Lakes happened in -925.
Gumbinnen, Tannenberg & the Masurian Lakes set the standard fare for the Russians in the First World War in the East. Despite the effects of the Brusilov offensive against the Austro/Hungarian forces by the time of Riga, in which poison gas shells wer used for the first time, the Russians were defeated. Poor leadership & technological inferiority typify the Russian war effort. As for a turning point ? It's just one defeat after another by and large. I suspect you meant to type WW2 and therefore the answer is Stalingrad, but that's another story.
· Hannibal Hamlin (Lincoln's Vice President during the war)· Hatteras Inlet Batteries (North Carolina), battle of· Hoke's Run (Missouri), battle of· Hooker, Joseph (Union General)· Hunley, H.L. (submarine of the Confederate States of America)· Hannibal Hamlin (Lincoln's Vice President during the war)· Hatteras Inlet Batteries (North Carolina), battle of· Hoke's Run (Missouri), battle of· Hooker, Joseph (Union General)· Hunley, H.L. (submarine of the Confederate States of America)· Hannibal Hamlin (Lincoln's Vice President during the war)· Hatteras Inlet Batteries (North Carolina), battle of· Hoke's Run (Missouri), battle of· Hooker, Joseph (Union General)· Hunley, H.L. (submarine of the Confederate States of America)· Hannibal Hamlin (Lincoln's Vice President during the war)· Hatteras Inlet Batteries (North Carolina), battle of· Hoke's Run (Missouri), battle of· Hooker, Joseph (Union General)· Hunley, H.L. (submarine of the Confederate States of America)
there wasnt alot of lakes
The terms are sometimes used as synonyms, but in general usage ponds are smaller than lakes.
It depends which river. Some flow into lakes, others flow into the Ocean.
some advisors were send to the Turkish front, they were fighting on the balkan front, the Russian front the western front the front of the German African colonies the front of the German pacific colonies