Jaeger's Anetia was created in 1832.
Hunter Jaegers was created in 2003.
Albert Jaegers died in 1925.
Albert Jaegers was born in 1869.
the Jaegers are an AWESOME family!!! Who are totally RAD!!! I am so proud i know who they are!!
Sorry we do not know what you mean by "jaegers", did you spell it correctly.
Arctic foxes, jaegers, dogs, grey wolves, ermine, weasels, prairie dogs, other avian predators, and humans.
Aquascutum and Maxmara I would have thught are Jaegers main competitors, although they are designing for a younger market so I would also compare them to Zara.
William J. Maher has written: 'Ecology of Pomarine, Parasitic, and Long-tailed Jaegers in northern Alaska' -- subject(s): Birds, Charadriiformes
Arctic Foxes, arctic wolves, gulls, jaegers, gyrfalcons, and ravens
We're not sure- but it MAY have been called a Jaegerbuchsen. Rifled barrels began appearing in the mid 15th century in Europe. They were rare, and difficult to load. Professional hunters in Germany (Jaegers) used some of the first. Jaegerbuchsen roughly translates as "hunter's flintlock rifle.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern -AEG---. That is, seven letter words with 2nd letter A and 3rd letter E and 4th letter G. In alphabetical order, they are: jaegers
The best singe resource I know of for Jaegers is "Jaeger rifles" by George Shumway, It includes the collected articles of author and historian George Shumway from his study of the Germanic Jaeger rifle. The original articles were published over a four year period in the magazine Muzzle Blasts. Arms are grouped based on their place of manufacture to facilitate the study of common details. Most illustrated firearms date from the 18th century, with a few from the last decades of the 17th. Particular attention is paid to the artistic styles, including Mannerist, Baroque, Rococo and Neo-Classical, with which these beautiful firearms were decorated. Hundreds of illustrations, including multiple views of most firearms. Also try http://www.flintlocks.de/en/content.htm there is some history and many photos of early Jaegers among others.