「Austro-Hungarian」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 398件
| is fourth confirmed win on 13 July downed | Austro-Hungarian ace Ferdinand Udvardy; although Hallonqui |
| On 1 June 1918, Hand was shot down by | Austro-Hungarian ace Frank Linke-Crawford. |
| The trio shot down | Austro-Hungarian ace Julius Kowalczik in his Albatros D.II |
| Austro-Hungarian Aces of World War 1. pp. 65-66. | |
| Austro-Hungarian Aces of World War 1. pp. 76-78. | |
| Austro-Hungarian Aces of World War 1. p. 78. | |
| Austro-Hungarian Aces of World War I. Osprey Publishing. | |
| The importance and extent of | Austro-Hungarian agitation remains a debated subject: it h |
| pen until mid 1917, being used by several | Austro-Hungarian air aces such as Godwin Brumowski and Fra |
| as the most successful fighter ace of the | Austro-Hungarian Air Force during World War I. |
| ceived credit for the destruction of four | Austro-Hungarian aircraft with an additional one unconfirm |
| aders were pleading with their German and | Austro-Hungarian allies to send submarines to the Dardanel |
| mic Legion and took part in disarming the | Austro-Hungarian and German soldiers remaining on Polish t |
| When the fourth, combined German, | Austro-Hungarian, and Bulgarian invasion force attacked Se |
| Observer Aces, and the Belgian, Italian, | Austro-Hungarian and Russian Fighter Aces, 1914-1918. |
| arch 12, 1880 - November 22, 1923) was an | Austro-Hungarian and Romanian lawyer and politician, who b |
| y 1, 1917 the Russian troops attacked the | Austro-Hungarian and German forces in Galicia, pushing tow |
| gime, was constructed as a project of the | Austro-Hungarian architect Angiolo Mazzoni. |
| -14 June 1885, Vienna) was a 19th-century | Austro-Hungarian architect, whose style was a combination |
| d south of Vienna, by the Payer-Weyprecht | Austro-Hungarian Arctic expedition. |
| erve and home guard battalions within the | Austro-Hungarian armed forces. |
| In 1916 he was captured by | Austro-Hungarian armed forces, but he managed to flee to t |
| On August 12 the | Austro-Hungarian armies crossed the border, the Drina Rive |
| l "Gal", he had been conscripted into the | Austro-Hungarian army during World War I, and subsequently |
| The | Austro-Hungarian Army was very pleased with its large sieg |
| his matura at age 18, he enrolled in the | Austro-Hungarian Army and took part in World War I, being |
| the First World War, he was drafted into | Austro-Hungarian Army where he took part in the fighting a |
| He enlisted for the | Austro-Hungarian army in 1914. |
| Rozvan was drafted in the | Austro-Hungarian Army during World War I, and fell prisone |
| The | Austro-Hungarian army of the Napoleonic wars. |
| On January 25, 1916 the | Austro-Hungarian Army attacked Montenegro which quickly su |
| ski-Trzaska (1849-1935) was an officer in | Austro-Hungarian Army and later, Polish Army. |
| It was developed for the | Austro-Hungarian Army and adopted in 1912 as the M1912. |
| As an officer in the | Austro-Hungarian Army he was decorated with the Golden Bra |
| broke out in 1914, he was interned by the | Austro-Hungarian army in Neusiedl am See and later in Buda |
| they tried to drive the Germans from the | Austro-Hungarian army out of the region. |
| -German General, artillery officer in the | Austro-Hungarian Army during World War I |
| George, served in the 11th Hussars of the | Austro-Hungarian army reaching the rank of captain. |
| une 1944) was an artillery officer in the | Austro-Hungarian Army during World War I, the Austrian Bun |
| ted at the Battle of Vittorio Veneto, the | Austro-Hungarian Army found itself in such a state that it |
| He served in the | Austro-Hungarian Army in World War I, and fought in the Ea |
| being ordained in 1889, he went into the | Austro-Hungarian Army and spent the following decade servi |
| was initially adopted and employed by the | Austro-Hungarian army throughout World War I, and retained |
| of the Legions were drafted into the main | Austro-Hungarian Army or the German Polnische Wehrmacht. |
| He served in the | Austro-Hungarian Army on the Russian front and in the pres |
| r the Oath Crisis he was drafted into the | Austro-Hungarian Army and sent to the Italian front, where |
| Pauker served in the | Austro-Hungarian army in World War I and was taken as a pr |
| Jewish officers of the defunct | Austro-Hungarian army joined the West Ukrainian military, |
| ecome one of the youngest Colonels in the | Austro-Hungarian Army and one of the most powerful Protest |
| Army for use in repelling attacks by the | Austro-Hungarian Army, although the turrets were left aboa |
| Born 1881, Prich in his youth joined the | Austro-Hungarian Army, where he served with distinction du |
| I, he commanded an artillery unit of the | Austro-Hungarian Army, and fought in Albania. |
| and moved to an infantry regiment of the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| in Budapest) was a Colonel General in the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| Stefaniv rose to the rank of major in the | Austro-Hungarian army. |
| Gebirtig served for five years in the | Austro-Hungarian army. |
| also became a Generalfeldmarschall in the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| ront, where he fought as a soldier in the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| Austria-Hungary, he was drafted into the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| During the World War I he served in | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| where her husband was an officer with the | Austro-Hungarian army. |
| utbreak of World War I he enlisted in the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| During World War I he was drafted in the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| ussian Army, while 250,000 fought for the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| y was the seat of the high command of the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| ne 1917 and October 1918 he served in the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| the Italian front as a lieutenant of the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| inventor, technician, and officer of the | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| Hungary during World War I for use by the | Austro-Hungarian army. |
| d hope the Russians could defeat the main | Austro-Hungarian Army. |
| Francis Singer and Nicholas Stacey, both | Austro-Hungarian, at 36 Chesham Place, Belgravia, with the |
| nk check' promising German support for an | Austro-Hungarian attack on Serbia. |
| the ultimatum but the one that permitted | Austro-Hungarian authorities to participate in the investi |
| 1914 and held up to 400 men of German or | Austro-Hungarian background or crew members of enemy ships |
| Austro-Hungarian Badge of Honour of the Red Ctoss (2nd cla | |
| Standing by the | Austro-Hungarian Bank, Mehmedbasic lost his nerve and allo |
| me highly prestigious award, who sank the | Austro-Hungarian battleship Szent Istvan). |
| The main objectives were to take the | Austro-Hungarian bridgeheads at Bovec (Plezzo in Italian) |
| Austro-Hungarian built D.IIs featured revised, enlarged ai | |
| ment of Montenegro was part of the larger | Austro-Hungarian campaign against the Kingdoms of Monteneg |
| In 1913 he studied promotion law in the | Austro-Hungarian capital of Vienna and completed his docto |
| Eight former | Austro-Hungarian cargo ships thus became the property of t |
| The 7th | Austro-Hungarian cavalry division. |
| M.5 seaplane on August 21, 1918, off the | Austro-Hungarian coast, he dived down and landed next to a |
| The | Austro-Hungarian command promptly sent many trained reinfo |
| Prior to World War I, she served as the | Austro-Hungarian commercial cargo ship Virginia. |
| , by J. L. Thompson and Sons, Ltd. as the | Austro-Hungarian commercial cargo ship SS Morawitz. |
| h consisted of all parties hostile to the | Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. |
| After the | Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, in 1870 his remains w |
| e creation of Austria-Hungary through the | Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. |
| Following the | Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, Csemegi became a high |
| Oppose but support | Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 as per above. |
| tics from 1861, he was a supporter of the | Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. |
| After the | Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, the territory and nam |
| After the | Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 the town prospered, bu |
| In 1885-87 he directed the | Austro-Hungarian Congo Expedition, which involved crossing |
| oprano role of Elisabetta for the popular | Austro-Hungarian contralto, Caroline Ungher. |
| Ferley was born in | Austro-Hungarian controlled Ukraine, and educated at the K |
| f Kostanjevica na Krasu, then part of the | Austro-Hungarian County of Gorizia and Gradisca, now in Sl |
| r was born in Gorizia, the capital of the | Austro-Hungarian County of Gorizia and Gradisca, as the yo |
| ruary 14, 1912 in Brixen, in what was the | Austro-Hungarian county of Tyrol - December 3, 2004 in Hoh |
| Austro-Hungarian crown lands | |
| Crown Prince Rudolf, the heir to the | Austro-Hungarian crown, died in the area in a case that is |
| He also commanded the | Austro-Hungarian cruiser "Panther" in a voyage to Australi |
| On the night of 14/15 May, the | Austro-Hungarian cruisers Helgoland, Saida, and Novara att |
| destroyers joined the battle against the | Austro-Hungarian cruisers on 15 May. |
| It was broken within three days by | Austro-Hungarian cryptanalyst Hermann Pokorny. |
| ajor Russian victory, and the greatest of | Austro-Hungarian defeats. |
| ine for an offensive against the weakened | Austro-Hungarian defenses. |
| In 1907, Szilassy was a member of the | Austro-Hungarian delegation to the Second Hague Peace Conf |
| In 1907, he was a member of the | Austro-Hungarian delegation to the Second Hague Peace Conf |
| nternational embassy staff as well as the | Austro-Hungarian delegation. |
| (23 February 1859 - 1 April 1945), was an | Austro-Hungarian diplomat active before and during World W |
| ducts of the 19th century nobility in the | Austro-Hungarian diplomatic corps. |
| Battle of Caporetto by German reinforced | Austro-Hungarian divisions. |
| ter and later Major in the 11th "Moravia" | Austro-Hungarian Dragoons. |
| enta during the successful defence of the | Austro-Hungarian Embassy in Peiking. |
| y situation is based on the defeat of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire in World War I and its subsequent |
| ed its distribution to other towns of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire which include Budapest, Ostrava an |
| ritories following the dissolution of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire - Romania, Poland, Yugoslavia and |
| tries in Europe that once belonged to the | Austro-Hungarian empire (1867-1918). |
| ht each other, with the German Empire and | Austro-Hungarian Empire aligned against the Russian Empire |
| hat time the Czech lands were part of the | Austro-Hungarian empire and there was a large German minor |
| the | Austro-Hungarian Empire of 1867-1918 |
| In 1918 the | Austro-Hungarian Empire was breaking up. |
| Agnon was born in Galicia, | Austro-Hungarian Empire (today Ukraine), later immigrated |
| This area was part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire until its dissolution in 1918, at |
| d the mediterranean regions of the former | Austro-Hungarian Empire (mainly Croatia and Bosnia). |
| king-inhabited areas (in rose) in western | Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1911 |
| and his wife discuss that the end of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire is near. |
| bject people of the Hungarians within the | Austro-Hungarian Empire and that Hungarian priests may hav |
| - which formed part of the nucleus of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire - was defeated by the Allied Power |
| By 1918, when the | Austro-Hungarian Empire fell, he was a lieutenant colonel. |
| War against the | Austro-Hungarian Empire was declared on May 24, 1915. |
| For the trade conflict between the | Austro-Hungarian Empire and Serbia, see Pig War (Serbia). |
| with sections under the influence of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire for some time, The wines of the re |
| d in Austria after the dissolution of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire along national/ethnic lines after |
| so fully confessed his admiration for the | Austro-Hungarian Empire there. |
| Games over Amsterdam and Lyon, but as the | Austro-Hungarian Empire had been a German ally in the Firs |
| uard Steuermann (June 18, 1892 in Sambor, | Austro-Hungarian Empire (now part of Ukraine) - November 1 |
| Following the dissolution of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire at the end of 1918, the area aroun |
| ak of World War I, being a subject of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire resident in Great Britain, he beca |
| departed for combat on August 6, the day | Austro-Hungarian Empire declared war on Russian Empire. |
| the largest and most populous part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire between 1772 to 1918. |
| Sima was born in Saifnitz, | Austro-Hungarian Empire (today Camporosso, Val Canale (Ger |
| Born in Bohemia in the | Austro-Hungarian Empire in November 1875, Kahn came to the |
| Empire concluded another agreements with | Austro-Hungarian Empire a few days later disregarding this |
| pron, Hungary prior to the breakup of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918. |
| on fighting against the foreign forces of | Austro-Hungarian Empire and Italy in Dubrovnik. |
| les were fought between the armies of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Kingdom of Italy for contr |
| World War I. Apart from the armies of the | Austro-Hungarian empire (8mm caliber) it was adopted by th |
| Orthodox priest, and was executed by the | Austro-Hungarian Empire as a russophile. |
| o the republic of Venice and later to the | Austro-Hungarian empire until 1918. |
| popular during the Baroque period of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Spanish reference is due t |
| an Smeterlin (7 February 1892 in Bielsko, | Austro-Hungarian Empire - 18 January 1967 in London) was a |
| In 1772, it was seized by the | Austro-Hungarian Empire together with the province of Gali |
| Polish region of Galicia then part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire to a Hasidic family, Schorr began |
| Since most of the territories of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire were now ceded either to existing |
| During the rule of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire until 1918, the town belonged to t |
| John Kiesler (Czernowitz or Tschernovitz, | Austro-Hungarian Empire (now Chernivtsi, Ukraine), Septemb |
| Along with several other nations, the | Austro-Hungarian Empire maintained its own post offices in |
| s family in Gorizia, in what was then the | Austro-Hungarian Empire (now in Italy). |
| Born in Prague, at that time part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire and now capital of the Czech Repub |
| born on 7 April 1829 in Prague, Bohemia, | Austro-Hungarian Empire which is now in the modern-day Cze |
| Following the | Austro-Hungarian Empire's defeat in the war her father was |
| came with her family to Vienna, then the | Austro-Hungarian Empire's capital, and home to a Czech mig |
| ia and Herzegovina then still part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire) was a Serbian international footb |
| h population in the kingdom of Galicia of | Austro-Hungarian Empire), and studied at the Breslau Jewis |
| Born in Prague (then part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire), Werfel was the first of three ch |
| new states formed from the breakup of the | Austro-Hungarian empire, replacements had to be procured. |
| tical parties in the Austrian part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, demanding the formation of a unif |
| ian peninsula, which was then part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, and where city of Pula is situate |
| He was born in Buchach, then in the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, now in the Ukraine. |
| near Drohobych, at that time part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, in the province of Galicia (now s |
| In 1916, as a prosecutor for the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, he played a role in the sentencin |
| National Party, founded in 1907 under the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, which never again succeeded in se |
| was built, Ljubljana was then part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the bridge was dedicated to F |
| born in Drohobych in Galicia (then of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, now in Ukraine). |
| -Herzegovina which was then a part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, and died on June 24, 1984 in Fojn |
| at was then the Kingdom of Hungary in the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, as the son of the village tailor |
| table southwestern region administered by | Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the border dating to the Cong |
| reb, which at the time was located in the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, but is currently the capital city |
| onsisted mainly of the German Empire, the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdo |
| Other areas of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, especially Vienna, the Czech Land |
| erzl shows how developments in his native | Austro-Hungarian Empire, rather than the Dreyfus Affair in |
| it until feudalism ceased to exist in the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Kingdom of Hungary. |
| As Chernivsti was part of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, it was closely related to the emp |
| e of the war, which ended the war for the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, and caused the German Empire to e |
| e in Vienna during the waning days of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire, under the Viennese master Otto Wa |
| m 1401 to 1918 it was a possession of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
| ts, in the Carpatho-Russian region of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
| He was born in Lemberg, | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
| Czerny was born in Trutnov, Bohemia, | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
| rectorate of military intelligence of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
| His parents were from Russia and the | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
| then part of the county of Istria in the | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
| ns, Doukhobors, and other groups from the | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
| He was one of only two naval aces of the | Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
|
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると
|
こんにちは ゲスト さん
|
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると
|