Showing posts with label Romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romance. Show all posts

Sunday, September 27, 2020

Bio of General der Infanterie Karl von Roques

Generalleutnant der Luftwaffe Karl von Roques with his spouse.

Karl von Roques (7 May 1880 – 24 December 1949) was a German general and war criminal during the Second World War, who commanded the Army Group Rear Area behind Army Group South. Following the war, Roques was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment in the High Command Trial. He died in 1949 while serving his sentence.

Karl von Roques was born in a German noble family of Huguenot descent. He entered the German Imperial Army in 1899. During the First World War, Roques served in staff roles in several divisions. By the end of the war he was promoted to major. After the armistice, Roques remained in the Reichswehr, serving in the Ministry of War, and then in staff and command roles in the army. Starting in 1934, Roques served as chief of staff and then the president of the Reichsluftschutzbund. In October 1938 he was recalled to active duty and in the Luftwaffe with the rank of lieutenant-general. In June 1939, Roques left the Luftwaffe with the rank of general.

During the Second World War, Roques served as an active officer in the Wehrmacht. In December 1939, he was given command of the new 142nd Infantry Division. From 15 March 1941 to October 1941, he was commander of the rear areas of Army Group South. On 1 July 1941, Roques was promoted to General der Infanterie.

As commander of the rear areas, Roques carried extermination policies against the Soviet partisans, Slavic and Jewish population. In October 1941, Roques was transferred to the Führerreserve. In June 1942 he assumed command of the rear areas of Army Group South, and after the dividing of the army group in Army Group A and Army Group B, he commanded the rear areas of the former. On 1 January 1943, Roques was again placed in the Führerreserve and on 31 March 1943 he was again pensioned off. In August 1943 he went to Warsaw as a representative of the German Red Cross.

After the German capitulation, Roques was arrested and tried in the High Command Trial. He was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment. Moved for reasons of bad health from the Landsberg prison to a hospital in Nürnberg, he died there on 24 December 1949.


Source :

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_von_Roques

https://www.sammlermarkt-nord.net/shop/generalleutnant-karl-roques-with-german-social-welfare-decor-p-13193.html?language=en

Sunday, July 5, 2020

Wedding of Alois Dotter from LSSAH

Wedding of SS-Unterscharführer Alois Dotter from LSSAH (Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler)

Source :
https://germanmilitaryrelics.com/index.php/papers-books-photos/german-ss-lah-cufflinks-honor-gift-wedding-gift-wwii-ss-lah-manschettenknopfe-ehrengeschenk-hochzeitsgeschenk-2-wk.html

Friday, May 22, 2020

Leutnant August Ségur-Cabanac with his wife

Leutnant August Ségur-Cabanac (June 1, 1922, Mödling near Vienna - March 4, 2011, Vienna) with his wife in 1944


August Ségur-Cabanac was born on June 1, 1922 in Mödling near Vienna.

His great-great-grandfather August Franz Graf Ségur-Cabanac (1771–1847), who came from an old French family with a long military tradition, found refuge in Austria during the French Revolution and became the progenitor of the Austrian branch of the family. He started his career as a second lieutenant, distinguished himself as a major at Wagram in 1809, and in 1844 he achieved the rank of major general. His great-grandson August Ségur-Cabanac (1881-1931), lawyer and financial specialist, was Minister of Finance of the Republic of Austria from May to November 1922.

August Ségur-Cabanac graduated from Vienna in 1941 and was called up to the German Armed Forces immediately afterwards.

After his front assignment in spring and summer 1942, he graduated from the Dresden War School in the fall of that year.

This was followed - after being promoted to lieutenant in December 1942 - in the first months of 1943 by a company leadership course at the Döberitz infantry school. From April 15 he was deployed as a platoon leader and soon also as a company leader in the 156th Infantry Regiment in the southern section of the Eastern Front. On July 21, 1943, he was seriously wounded at Stalino. Reasonably restored after almost a year in hospital, he took part in the retreat in northern France and Belgium as far as Aachen as a company commander in the 116th Panzer Division in autumn 1944. Wounded again in the battle in the Hürtgenwald, he experienced the end of the war as a first lieutenant in a hospital.

As early as October 11, 1944, he had married Christine Bennier during a short front vacation.

In 1946 he got a job with the American occupation forces, but already in 1954 he registered for the B-gendarmerie. On October 1 of this year he was assigned to the Gendarmerie Oberleutnant at the Gendarmerie School Upper Austria III. From May 1955 he worked at the Gendarmerieabteilung K, which would later become the Military Academy, in Enns. As class officer, he took over class B until it was retired in January 1957, then class 13, which was retired in December of that year. Finally, he led the 3rd company of the Academic Battalion until its retirement in March 1959, which already took place in the old home of the Military Academy, in the castle in Wiener Neustadt. In these years he had already earned an army-wide reputation as a demanding but nevertheless popular instructor for his officer candidates as a first lieutenant. After he had taken over another year in 1959, he was called up for the 3rd general staff course in December of that year. He completed this course with rank 1.

Already during his practical use in the training department of the Federal Ministry of Defense in 1962, he was commissioned to publish a specialist magazine. He founded the "Troop Service" working group to publish the magazine with their support. He thus became the founder of the training magazine "Troop Service", which soon became one of the most renowned publications in the field of military training.

After he was taken on as a major of the general staff in the higher service on December 15, 1962, he was assigned as a tactics teacher at the Theresian military academy. Relocated to the operations department on May 15, 1965, he worked on seven possible operations there. That happened for the first time in the second army and decisively determined the deployment planning of the army for the following years. On December 12, 1967 he was transferred to Group Command I as G 3. Under the chief of the Colonel, Colonel Karl Wohlgemuth, he was involved in the planning of the security measures during the invasion of the Warsaw Pact troops into Czechoslovakia in 1968, as well as in the preparation and execution of the largest military maneuver to date known as "Bärentatze" in the autumn 1969.

As early as 1968 he was promoted to colonel of the general staff. From March 22, 1971 to March 19, 1973, he was chief of staff of the Vienna Military Command and then deputy head of the organization department of the ministry. On March 19, 1973, he became head of the training department, during which he took numerous initiatives in all areas of military training and further education over the following eight years. In 1980 he became a brigadier. As his last assignment in active service, he assumed command of the 1st Panzer Grenadier Division in Baden, now as a divisional. He led this association from November 1, 1982 until his retirement on November 1, 1987. Shortly before, he was promoted to general in recognition of his services to the army.

August Ségur-Cabanac died on March 4, 2011 and rests in the family grave in Mödling.

His sons Christian Ségur-Cabanac and René Segur-Cabanac also opted for a military career, as did his grandson Philipp.



Source :
https://austria-forum.org/af/Biographien/S%C3%A9gur-Cabanac%2C_August
http://kultur-pool.at/plugins/kulturpool/showitem.action?itemId=124554826150&kupoContext=default
http://kultur-pool.at/plugins/kulturpool/showitem.action?itemId=124554826151&kupoContext=default

Friday, May 8, 2020

Newly Wed Couple with Gas Car

Düsseldorf, Germany during World War II. Newly wed couple with their strange looking car. The vehicle is a Mercedes-Benz 170V converted for pressurised gas.


Sumber :
https://www.flickr.com/photos/123629787@N04/
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?f=47&t=73232&start=11280

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Young French Woman with German Soldier

A young French woman, who began a romantic relationship with a German Wehrmacht soldier during the German occupation of France, refuses to leave his side as he and other German soldiers were taken as prisoners after the Allies had liberated the area around Orléans. Near Orléans, Loiret, France. August 1944.


Source :
 http://bag-of-dirt.tumblr.com/post/141508924635/a-young-french-woman-who-began-a-romantic