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Bullethead

1 September

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Today, 1 September 2010, is the 140th anniversary of the battle of Sedan, which set the stage for our favorite conflict, WW1. Regardless of your view of how things have turned out since, none of us would be playing OFF and talking about our mutual interests today without it. So here's to the fall of the 2nd Empire :drinks: .

 

In that spirit, I offer the following piece of music, one of my all-time favorites. It was penned by a veteran of 1870-71 to welcome home the troops, and IMHO it is one of the best marches ever written. I have it on a CD in my fire engine and play it on the way home from successful operations to let my troops know I'm pleased with them. I give you "Preussens Gloria". This forum wouldn't be here but for the events it celebrates.

 

 

But let us not forget that the Franco-Prussian War started when it did on the off chance of the Spanish asking a junior Hohenzollern prince to be their king. But for that, despite Europe being primed for a Franco-German showdown, things doubtless would have played out differently. So, if you don't like the world today, blame the Spanish, not those who actually wanted to fight :lol:.

 

1 September is also the day Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939 to kick off WW2 in Europe, and also when Hurricane Gustav leveled my part of the world in 2008. Thus, 1 September is not just a good day for this forum, but a very bad day in the living memory of millions of others, not to mention all those who died in the Franco-Prussian War. So, the oracles are mixed. Best thing is to drink and be thankful that the Powers have taken this particular 1 September off, instead of lobbing a world-changing grenade into our midst :drinks:

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Today, 1 September 2010, is the 140th anniversary of the battle of Sedan, which set the stage for our favorite conflict, WW1. Regardless of your view of how things have turned out since, none of us would be playing OFF and talking about our mutual interests today without it. So here's to the fall of the 2nd Empire :drinks: .

 

In that spirit, I offer the following piece of music, one of my all-time favorites. It was penned by a veteran of 1870-71 to welcome home the troops, and IMHO it is one of the best marches ever written. I have it on a CD in my fire engine and play it on the way home from successful operations to let my troops know I'm pleased with them. I give you "Preussens Gloria". This forum wouldn't be here but for the events it celebrates.

 

http://www.dailymoti...ns-gloria_music

 

But let us not forget that the Franco-Prussian War started when it did on the off chance of the Spanish asking a junior Hohenzollern prince to be their king. But for that, despite Europe being primed for a Franco-German showdown, things doubtless would have played out differently. So, if you don't like the world today, blame the Spanish, not those who actually wanted to fight :lol:.

 

1 September is also the day Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939 to kick off WW2 in Europe, and also when Hurricane Gustav leveled my part of the world in 2008. Thus, 1 September is not just a good day for this forum, but a very bad day in the living memory of millions of others, not to mention all those who died in the Franco-Prussian War. So, the oracles are mixed. Best thing is to drink and be thankful that the Powers have taken this particular 1 September off, instead of lobbing a world-changing grenade into our midst :drinks:

 

Excellent history lesson BH! Greatly enjoyed it.

 

PS: Is it wrong that Preussens Gloria makes me feel like I'm back playing the Hell's Angels mod for Red Baron? I believe Otto included this march on some of the editions of his mod (or UOP if you really want to be old school about it).

 

Gads, seriously need to stop typing for one night...

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Almost every politically and militarily important thing that happened in Europe in the late 19th century, including the Franco-Prussian war, can be explained with this one man:

 

Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-R29818%2C_Otto_von_Bismarck.jpg

 

:grin:

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Good historical lesson, Bullethead; thank you. Here is another Prussian march you might like.

The "7th Cavallery", which I like, is a bit similar. (In both, the beginning is the best IMHO).

 

Edited by Olham

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.

 

In my own little corner of the world on September 1st, 1894, the Great Hinckley Fire swept through the small Minnesota town of Hinckley, killing over 400 people and destroying an area of nearly 500 square miles before it was finally contained.

 

Excellent marches both, Bullethead and Olham.

 

Also, Hasse Wind, I prefer my bismarcks freshly baked, with white frosting on top.

.

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Almost every politically and militarily important thing that happened in Europe in the late 19th century, including the Franco-Prussian war, can be explained with this one man:

:grin:

 

Ahhhh!, the realpolitik. For best and for worst a true statesman. Nowadays, we Europeans are in need of true statesman.

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Also, Hasse Wind, I prefer my bismarcks freshly baked, with white frosting on top.

 

What the heck do you Americans regard as Bismarks??? Is that a donut?

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.

 

Yuppers, similar to what you might call a berliner, Olham. Which reminds me of John F. Kennedy's famous quote made in West Berlin on June 26, 1963, when he stated, “Ich bin ein Berliner”. He learned a short time later that could mean two very different things. :grin:

 

.

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Well, in Berlin, Kennedy's words did not sound funny, cause the Berliners call the "Berliner" a "Pfannkuchen".

Only all other Germans outside Berlin call them "Berliners", whilst for them, a Pfannkuchen" is a pancake,

a flat thing like an omelette. Dizzy?

:grin:

 

PS: now you may ask, what the Berliners call a pancake - I admit, I don't know.

Edited by Olham

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.

 

mmmmmmmmmmmm...pancakes

 

or, in German

mmmpancakes1.jpg

 

.

Edited by RAF_Louvert

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Almost right, Lou. All subjects are written with a capital letter in German.

I know from my Donald Duck books, that pancakes seem to be something you eat for breakfast

in America? Tick, Trick and Track loved them, with sirup.

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.

 

Thanks Olham, I have corrected my faux pas. Now I can sleep tonight. :biggrin:

 

.

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Yeah, it's hard to be like us "Korinthenkacker".

A German word for someone who always wants to get everything painstakingly exact.

You would say "nitpicker". Directly translated, it would mean "currant pooper".

Don't take it as an insult, please. I am much the same very often.

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Only all other Germans outside Berlin call them "Berliners", whilst for them, a Pfannkuchen" is a pancake,

 

PS: now you may ask, what the Berliners call a pancake - I admit, I don't know.

 

no way olham. in bavaria and frankonia nobody says berliner. and if so, he would earn a strange look. here it's called "krapfen" :drinks:

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in bavaria and frankonia nobody says berliner. and if so, he would earn a strange look. here it's called "krapfen"

 

There you see, Lou - it's even more complicated !

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Hmm, the multi-quote thingy seems busted so I'll have to do this the hard way:

 

@Hasse: While Bismarck definitely had a lot to do with 19th Century events, don't forget several other key players. Besides the obvious suspect of Moltke the Great, there are also Napolean III who, although largely forgotten this side of the ocean, had important fingers in many pots. Also, King Vittorio Emanuele II, who caused as much commotion in Italy as Bismarck did in Germany. And don't forget the long string of Victorians who shaped much of the world outside Europe itself.

 

@Ohlam: Great music. It contains a snippet of "Preussens Gloria" towards the end--perhaps they were written by the same guy? I don't know for sure. The author of "Preussens Gloria" was named Piefke but the wiki doesn't list all his works. It does, however, mention that "Piefke" is "an unpleasant nickname for Germans in Austria", which provides a retrospective justification for this thread straying off into German names for various items.

 

So, what's "unpleansant" about "Piefke"? Does it have a specific definition, or are the Austrians just mad at him because he wrote the

to celebrate Prussia's victory over them?

 

@Lou: I just saw a History Channel show about that Hinckley Fire. Damn, what a mess! Glad I wasn't in the local fire department :).

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and in bavaria you say piefke (not so much use though) to small brats.

 

btw., germany is the only country i'm aware of, where you have in german news often subtitles when a german is talking, because the dialects are so various and extreme sometimes.

 

 

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Piefke comes from old Slavonian and Polonian "piwo" (beer); old Polonian forms were Piwka and

Piwke for families, who had something to do with beer.

 

According to German Wikipedia, it seems really to come from the composer Johann Gottfried Piefke,

who composed the "Königgrätzer Marsch" for the celebration of the Prussian victory over Austria 1866.

The composer was present at the vicory parade and conducted the music himself.

He and his tall brother were marching at the head of the parade, and the Austrians shouted "The

Piefkes are coming!"

 

Among Piefke's works are „Preußens Gloria“, „Düppeler Schanzen-Marsch“ and the „Königgrätzer Marsch“.

The "Revue-Marsch" was composed by August Reckling.

 

Here is a big German Wikipedia list of marches, which you may not get in English:

 

http://de.wikipedia....emarschsammlung

Edited by Olham

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Yeah, it's hard to be like us "Korinthenkacker".

A German word for someone who always wants to get everything painstakingly exact.

You would say "nitpicker". Directly translated, it would mean "currant pooper".

Don't take it as an insult, please. I am much the same very often.

 

That's why I love idioms in language... 'currant pooper'. What a splendid anal - ogy :grin:

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In Finnish, there are at least two words for such a person, one of them rather rude. Pilkunviilaaja and pilkunnussija. Pilkun is the genitive form of pilkku (a comma or a dot), while viilaaja is harder to translate, but I guess in English it would somebody who fiddles, in the sense of adjusting something. So pilkunviilaaja would be somebody who adjusts dots or commas (ie. pays attention to insignicant things - nitpicks). However, pilkunnussija is the rude one. It means somebody who doesn't just adjust commas but f**** them. To be used only of really annoying nitpickers.

 

Ain't languages funny? :grin:

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.

 

Start by bringing it flowers, then share a nice bottle of wine with it. And be sure you're punctual.

 

Now if it's a colon...well...that take's an entirely different approach.

 

.

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Raaaahhhh - from 1 September to sex with commas in 24 posts! Raaaaahhhhh!!!!!!

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