They were given first aid, then transported to field hospitals, then either back to fighting, or sent home for further treatment and recovery, or sent home released from service, if injuries were bad enough. Many died due to poor hygiene and insufficient medical resources.
Hisser mean that they like to hiss people.It mean that they are ....
what does trench mean
it mean spiderman is dead
it means - superior beauty- or it can mean -beautiful moon- in Japanese :)
Cordt von Brandis has written: 'Baltikumer, Schicksal eines Freikorps' -- subject(s): Germany, Germany. Heer. Freikorps von Brandis
The "British Freikorps" is a false name given to the "British Free Corps" and is incorrect.The "British Free Corps" was a small unit in the "Waffen SS" made up of prisoners of war.A detailed description and information is available on the link below.____The Freikorps were bands of right-wing mercenaries active in 1919-1920 and later. They fought against Communists and people they thought were Communists.The most notorious was the Marine brigade or Ehrhardt brigade which was also rabidly anti-Jewish.Others were "Freikorps von Oven" Freikorps Görlitz" and "Freikorps Hülsen".Note that in 1813-14 the Freikorps fighting as units of the Prussian army against Napoleonic France were something quite different and perfectly honourable -volunteers who fought without pay and provided their own weapons. The best known was Lützow's Freikorps.
because he is a fgt
The Freikorps were paramilitary groups in Germany formed after World War I. They fought against communist uprisings and supported right-wing nationalist movements. They were also involved in suppressing rebellions, such as the Spartacist Uprising in 1919.
Von Seeckt
the Freikorps
Ex-soldiers in Germany after the First World War who supported right-wing political parties
No. They were German communists. In early 1919, they tried to start a communist revolution in Germany, which failed, in part because right-wing ex-soldiers called Freikorps attacked them. Interestingly, many early members of the Nazi Party were part of the Freikorps.
Oh, dude, the Freikorps were a right-wing paramilitary group in post-World War I Germany. They were all about blaming Jews for their problems because, you know, that's totally logical and not at all ridiculous. They basically just needed someone to blame for their issues, and unfortunately, they chose to target the Jewish population. Like, come on, guys, get it together.
The Kapp Putsch took place in Weimar Germany in March 1920. Wolfgang Kapp was a right-wing journalist.
The Freikorps were originally just volunteer militias formed before and during the Napoleonic era. Presumably you are referring to the post-World War I Freikorps. They were groups of German war veterans who came back from the war and didn't like how things were. They often fell into believing the "Stab in the back" legend- they believed that communists and socialists had caused Germany to quit the war even though the German Army wasn't defeated (yet- it was definitely on its way to losing). A lot of them were unable to adjust to civilian life after the horrors they had just experienced, so they banded together into these paramilitary groups and fought mainly against communists. Most held right-wing political beliefs, and became valuable members of right-wing political parties, including the Nazi Party especially in its early days (during the Night of the Long Knives in summer 1934, some of the former Freikorps leaders were killed).
Rainer Kriebel was the son of a professional officer Hermann Kriebel , a Freikorps leader of the 1920s, co-organizer of the Hitler putsch of November 8, 1923 NSDAP politician and diplomat .