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The German Mauser M1918 13.2 mm bolt action rifle?... in 1918 I'd assume...
redleafjumper said:Thanks mo-litia, I've been a military history buff since I was a wee lad and long before there were such things as search engines!
redleafjumper said:What is the largest officer corps in the Canadian Forces?
redleafjumper said:That's the ATR! The Mauser 13mm T-Gewehr of 1918 was the first anti-tank rifle. Gosh, I'm going to have to come up with another hard one again...
What is the largest officer corps in the Canadian Forces?
What was Operation Sea Lion and what date was it set to begin on?
big bad john said:Commanded 25 Platoon at Caen Canal Bridge (Pegesus Bridge)...BTW It was 25 Platoon , D Company 2nd Batallion The Oxford and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry. 6 June 1944
What was the significance of the battle of Crecy?
PPCLI MCpl said:Here's one that's not to hard, but informative none the less: What is the name and history of the snake and rod on the MedA/Tech capbadge?
Professional and patient centred organisations (such as the NZMA, in fact most medical Associations around the world including the World Health Organization) use the "correct" and traditional symbol of medicine, the staff of Asclepius with a single serpent encircling a staff, classically a rough-hewn knotty tree limb. Asclepius (an ancient greek physician deified as the god of medicine) is traditionally depicted as a bearded man wearing a robe that leaves his chest uncovered and holding a staff with his sacred single serpent coiled around it, (example right) symbolizing renewal of youth as the serpent casts off its skin. The single serpent staff also appears on a Sumerian vase of c. 2000 B.C. representing the healing god Ningishita, the prototype of the Greek Asklepios.
The probable medical origin of the single serpent around a rod: In ancient times infection by parasitic worms was common. The filarial worm Dracunculus medinensis aka "the fiery serpent", aka "the dragon of Medina" aka "the guinea worm" crawled around the victim's body, just under the skin. Physicians treated this infection by cutting a slit in the patient's skin, just in front of the worm's path. As the worm crawled out the cut, the physician carefully wound the pest around a stick until the entire animal had been removed. It is believed that because this type of infection was so common, physicians advertised their services by displaying a sign with the worm on a stick.
redleafjumper said:In November 1939 the British and French governments came into possession of secret plans. What were these plans, how did these governments obtain them and what was done with the information?
redleafjumper said:In November 1939 the British and French governments came into possession of secret plans. What were these plans, how did these governments obtain them and what was done with the information?