Responses: 4
Alexander Nevsky - Fight at the Neva River
Alexander Yaroslavich Rurickovich, nick name NevskyBorn in Pereslavl-Zalessky, Alexander was the second son of Prince Yaroslav Vsevolodovich and seemed to ha...
Thank you friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on July 15, 1240, a Novgorodian army led by Alexander Nevsky defeated the Swedes in the Battle of the Neva.
Alexander Nevsky - Fight at the Neva River
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZkmUsNy4IY
Images:
1. 'Alexander Nevsky striking Birger Jarl' painted by Nikolai Konstantinovich Rerikh
2. Alexander Nevsky Battle of the Nerva 1240
3. Whoever Shall Come to Us with Sword Shall Perish by the Sword [Alexander Nevsky) pianted by Sergei Prisekin, 1983
4. 1240 TheTeutonic Knights were led by the Prince-Bishop Herman of Dorpat, a German knight who had been rampaging through Estonia and Lithuania
1. Background from {[https://www.prlib.ru/en/history/619385]}
On July 15, 1240 at the confluence of Izhora and Neva rivers took place a battle between Novgorod volunteer corps under the commandment of Prince Alexander Yaroslavich and Swedish army.
In the summer of 1240 on the Neva, at the mouth of Izhora River, appeared the ships of Swedish troops which included Swedes, Norwegians, representatives of Finnish tribes, all commanded by duke Birger jarl. Seizure of Neva River mouth and the town of Ladoga opened the access to the governance over the most important part of the trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks. Having disembarked, the Swedes and their allies set their tents and marquees at the confluence of Izahora and Neva.
Having received the news on the enemy’s apparition, Novgorod Prince Alexander Yaroslavich decided to take a sudden attack against him. There was no time for gathering an army, so Alexander did now wait for the armed forces sent by his father Yaroslav and for warriors from Novgorod lands. He chose to take field against Swedes with his own armed force, having strengthened it only by Novgorod volunteer troops.
Before the campaign the warriors gathered in front of St. Sophia cathedral according to custom, where they were blessed by archbishop Spiridon. Then Alexander came in front of his small force and said: “There are not many of us here, the enemy is strong, but the God is not with force, He is with truth, so follow your Prince”.
Thus, after the blessing, the Russian armed force took field. A young prince directed his force down the Volkhov River toward the Lake of Ladoga where he was joined by a force of Ladoga citizens.
The Swedish camp, set up at Izhora mouth, was not guarded because the Swedes had no idea about the approaching Russian army. On July 15 at 11 a.m. Novgorod people attacked suddenly the Swedes. A stubborn struggle lasted until night. Russian cavalry pounced upon the center of the Swedish camp while the infantry attacked the flank situated along the bank and seized three ships. During the battle it was the force of Alexander which took up the initiative. Prince himself, according to chronicles, “left a seal on the face of Birger”. The rest of the defeated Swedish army ran away on the survived ships. Novgorod people lost only 20 men.
After the battle Prince Alexander Yaroslavich was named Nevsky for his generalship and courage.
The victory in the Battle of the Neva had a great military and political meaning. Russian army did not let Swedes to cut Novgorod off the sea and occupy the banks of Neva and the Gulf of Finland. Having repulsed the Swedish attack from North, the Russian army prevented possible cooperation of Swedish and German conquerors.
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Thomas Vick SGT Denny Espinosa LTC (Join to see)Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SSG Franklin Briant SPC Michael Terrell SFC Chuck Martinez CSM Charles HaydenMSgt James Clark-Rosa SMSgt Tom Burns 1SG Dan Capri MGySgt (Join to see) SFC Ralph E Kelley
Alexander Nevsky - Fight at the Neva River
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZkmUsNy4IY
Images:
1. 'Alexander Nevsky striking Birger Jarl' painted by Nikolai Konstantinovich Rerikh
2. Alexander Nevsky Battle of the Nerva 1240
3. Whoever Shall Come to Us with Sword Shall Perish by the Sword [Alexander Nevsky) pianted by Sergei Prisekin, 1983
4. 1240 TheTeutonic Knights were led by the Prince-Bishop Herman of Dorpat, a German knight who had been rampaging through Estonia and Lithuania
1. Background from {[https://www.prlib.ru/en/history/619385]}
On July 15, 1240 at the confluence of Izhora and Neva rivers took place a battle between Novgorod volunteer corps under the commandment of Prince Alexander Yaroslavich and Swedish army.
In the summer of 1240 on the Neva, at the mouth of Izhora River, appeared the ships of Swedish troops which included Swedes, Norwegians, representatives of Finnish tribes, all commanded by duke Birger jarl. Seizure of Neva River mouth and the town of Ladoga opened the access to the governance over the most important part of the trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks. Having disembarked, the Swedes and their allies set their tents and marquees at the confluence of Izahora and Neva.
Having received the news on the enemy’s apparition, Novgorod Prince Alexander Yaroslavich decided to take a sudden attack against him. There was no time for gathering an army, so Alexander did now wait for the armed forces sent by his father Yaroslav and for warriors from Novgorod lands. He chose to take field against Swedes with his own armed force, having strengthened it only by Novgorod volunteer troops.
Before the campaign the warriors gathered in front of St. Sophia cathedral according to custom, where they were blessed by archbishop Spiridon. Then Alexander came in front of his small force and said: “There are not many of us here, the enemy is strong, but the God is not with force, He is with truth, so follow your Prince”.
Thus, after the blessing, the Russian armed force took field. A young prince directed his force down the Volkhov River toward the Lake of Ladoga where he was joined by a force of Ladoga citizens.
The Swedish camp, set up at Izhora mouth, was not guarded because the Swedes had no idea about the approaching Russian army. On July 15 at 11 a.m. Novgorod people attacked suddenly the Swedes. A stubborn struggle lasted until night. Russian cavalry pounced upon the center of the Swedish camp while the infantry attacked the flank situated along the bank and seized three ships. During the battle it was the force of Alexander which took up the initiative. Prince himself, according to chronicles, “left a seal on the face of Birger”. The rest of the defeated Swedish army ran away on the survived ships. Novgorod people lost only 20 men.
After the battle Prince Alexander Yaroslavich was named Nevsky for his generalship and courage.
The victory in the Battle of the Neva had a great military and political meaning. Russian army did not let Swedes to cut Novgorod off the sea and occupy the banks of Neva and the Gulf of Finland. Having repulsed the Swedish attack from North, the Russian army prevented possible cooperation of Swedish and German conquerors.
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Thomas Vick SGT Denny Espinosa LTC (Join to see)Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SSG Franklin Briant SPC Michael Terrell SFC Chuck Martinez CSM Charles HaydenMSgt James Clark-Rosa SMSgt Tom Burns 1SG Dan Capri MGySgt (Join to see) SFC Ralph E Kelley
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LTC Stephen F.
Medieval battle of Neva - Army of Novgorod battle Swedish army
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6KdE2KE95g
Images:
1. Alexander Nevsky Fighting the Swedes, by Boris Chorikov.
2. After The Battle On The Neva painted by Pavel Viktorovich Ryzhenko (1970-2014)
3. After the July 15, 1242 Battle of the Neva, Alexander Nevsky pays homage to the dead painted by Pavel Ryzhenko.
4. Alexander Nevsky monument in Ust-Izhora marks the supposed location of the battle
Background from {[https://military.wikia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Neva]}
Battle of the Neva
Date July 15, 1240
Location Neva River, Russia
Result Novgorodian victory
Belligerents
Novgorod Republic Supported by: People of Ladoga Commander Alexander Nevsky
Kingdom of Sweden Supported by: Finns; Tavastians; Commander Birger Jarl
The Battle of the Neva (Russian: Невская битва, Nevskaya bitva, Swedish language: slaget vid Neva ) was fought between the Novgorod Republic and Swedish armies on the Neva River, near the settlement of Ust-Izhora, on July 15, 1240. The purpose of the Swedish invasion was probably to gain control over the mouth of the Neva and the city of Ladoga and, hence, seize the most important part of the Trade Route from the Varangians to the Greeks, which had been under Novgorod's control for more than a hundred years. The battle was part of the medieval Swedish-Novgorodian Wars.
Russian sources
The existence of the battle is only known from Russian sources. The first source to mention the battle is the Novgorod First Chronicle from the 14th century.[1] According to the chronicle, on receiving the news of the advancing Swedish fleet, the 20-year-old Prince Alexander Yaroslavich of Novgorod quickly moved his small army to face the enemy before they had reached Lake Ladoga. The chronicle described the battle as follows:
"Swedes came with a great army, and Norwegians and Finns and Tavastians with ships in great numbers, Swedes with their prince and bishops, and they stayed on the Neva, at the mouth of the Izhora, willing to take Ladoga, and to put it short, Novgorod and all of its lands. But still protected the merciful, man-loving God us and sheltered us from the foreign people, and the word came to Novgorod that Swedes were sailing to Ladoga; but prince Alexander did not hesitate at all, but went against them with Novgorodians and people of Ladoga and overcame them with the help of Saint Sophia and through prayers of our lady, the Mother of God and Virgin Mary, July 15, in the memory of Kirik and Ulita, on Sunday, (the same day that) the 630 holy fathers[2] held a meeting in Chalcedon; and there was a great gathering of the Swedes; and their leader called Spiridon[3] was killed there; but some claimed that even the bishop was slain;[4] and a great number of them fell; and when they had loaded two ships with the bodies of high-born men, they let them sail to the sea; but the others, that were unnumbered, they cast to a pit, that they buried, and many others were wounded; and that same night they fled, without waiting for the Monday light, with shame. Of Novgorodians there fell: Konstantin Lugotinitch, Yuryata Pinyashchinich, Namest Drochilo, Nesdylov son of Kozhevnik, but including the people of Ladoga 20 men or less, God knows. But prince Alexander came back home with Novgorodians and people of Ladoga, all well, protected by God and Saint Sophia and all the prayers of the holy men."
A 16th-century version of the battle gave plenty of additional details, expanding the conflict to biblical proportions, but otherwise following the earlier described developments.[5]
Later, Prince Alexander Yaroslavich was nicknamed "Nevsky" (of Neva) for his first significant victory. Two years later, Alexander stalled an invasion of the Livonian Knights during the Battle on the Ice. Despite the victories, there were no Novgorodian advances further west to Finland or Estonia.
Swedish sources
All references of a battle of the Neva are missing from the Swedish sources. There may be one or several reasons for that.
Situation in Sweden
Since the death of King John in 1222, Sweden was in a de facto state of civil war until 1248 when Birger Jarl managed to seize power in the kingdom. Unrest was due to the struggle between those who wanted to keep the old tribal structure,[6] the folkung party, and the king, who was assisted by the church. Folkungs, who were mainly from Uppland, heavily resisted the centralization of power,[7] taxation of the Swedes of Uppland,[6] and church privileges.[7] They had temporarily succeeded in deposing the king in 1229, but were forced to give in five years later, but were far from defeated yet. Uppland remained largely independent of the king, and its northern areas continued to be in folkung hands. An uneasy truce continued until 1247, when the folkung rebellion was put to an end at the Battle of Sparrsätra and its leader beheaded a year later.
Furthermore, the official Sweden was on the brink of war with Norway ever since the Norwegians' infamous Värmland expedition in 1225.[8] Relations improved only after the Treaty of Lödöse in 1249, which was forged by the newly empowered Birger Jarl.[9] Before the treaty, Norway remained an ally of the folkungs, giving them refuge and providing men and arms.
In this situation, it seems unlikely that Sweden could have been able to organize a major expedition against Novgorod. Swedes are not known to have carried out any other military campaigns between 1222 and 1249, making the claims about their forceful appearance at the Neva with Norwegians as their allies seem questionable.
Theories
Taking these facts into consideration, it has been suggested in a recent book aimed at a wide readership,[10] that the Swedish expedition may have been an indirect result of the papal letter in 1237 that was sent to the Swedish Archbishop of Uppsala.[11] The letter eloquently called for a crusade, not against Novgorod, but against Tavastians in Finland, who had allegedly started hostilities against the church. In his defunct position, the king may not have been willing or able to act, but the letter may have provided the frustrated folkungs an opportunity to regain part of their Viking Age glory. Mostly free to act without interference from the king, folkungs would have been able to raise an army of their own, get volunteers from Norway and even assistance from Thomas, the independent Bishop of Finland, who needed to constantly worry about attacks from the east. Instead of Tavastia, this mixed set of interests and nationalities would have headed for the more lucrative Neva and there met its fate at the hands of Alexander.[ In the possible aftermath of the said battle, the King of Norway approached his Swedish counterpart for peace talks in 1241, but was turned down at the time.
However, some recent research has fundamentally questioned the importance of the battle, seeing it as an ordinary border skirmish that was exaggerated for political purposes, thus also explaining its absence from Swedish and other western sources.[12] It is noteworthy that any exact numbers of Russian or Swedish losses in the battle were exceptionally small.
Additional theories are numerous. Some historians have suggested that the Swedish army was already under the command of the very young Birger Jarl, eight years before his appointment to the position of jarl.[13] It has also been suggested that the suspicious information on Norwegians', Finns' and Tavastians' participation was made up in the 14th century, the time of writing of the First Novgorod Chronicle, when Sweden was in control of Norway, Finland and Tavastia.
Consequences
All in all, the first known Swedish military expedition against Novgorod after the events at the Neva took place in 1256, following folkungs' demise, peace with Norway and conquest of Finland. If the battle of the Neva had any long-term consequences, it was in Sweden's determination to take over Finland first before attempting to proceed further east.[
References
1. ↑ "Description of the battle in the First Novgorod Chronicle". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27.; in Swedish. Hosted by the narc.fi. See Arkistolaitos/sahkoiset and Diplomatarium Fennicum from the menu. See also original text; in Russian.
2. ↑ Actually the meeting was held between October 8 and November 1, not on July 15.
3. ↑ In the later version of the battle, "Spiridon" also appears as the name of the Archbishop of Novgorod, who blessed Alexander before the battle.
4. ↑ No Scandinavian bishop is known to have died in 1240.
5. ↑ "Battle on the Neva" 16th century version of the battle, provided by the Slavic Interest Group of the Society for Creative Anachronism. In English.
6. ↑ Jump up to:6.0 6.1 Larsson 2002, p. 178.
7. ↑ Jump up to:7.0 7.1 Kari 2004, p. 117.
8. ↑ Värmland expedition by the Svenskt Militärhistoriskt Bibliotek.
9. ↑ Treaty of Lödöse.
10. ↑ Kari, Risto. Suomalaisten keskiaika. WS Bookwell Oy. Porvoo 2004. ISBN 951-0-28321-5. See page 107.
11. ↑ "Letter by Pope Gregory IX about an uprising against the church in Tavastia". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27.. In Latin. Hosted by the National Archive of Finland. See [1] and Diplomatarium Fennicum from the menu.
12. ↑ Alexander Nevskij and the Holy War. Based on presentations in the Leeds International Medieval Conference. Hosted by the Tampere University.
13. ↑ Even if Spiridon was said to have died in the battle, some historians still associate him with Birger. See e.g. Riasanovsky, Nicholas V.: A History of Russia. Oxford 1993.
Bibliography
"Suomalaisten keskiaika". WSOY. 2004. ISBN 951-0-28321-5.
Larsson, Mats G (2002). Götarnas Riken : Upptäcktsfärder Till Sveriges Enande. Bokförlaget Atlantis AB ISBN 978-91-7486-641-4
This article incorporates material from the public domain 1906 Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6KdE2KE95g
Images:
1. Alexander Nevsky Fighting the Swedes, by Boris Chorikov.
2. After The Battle On The Neva painted by Pavel Viktorovich Ryzhenko (1970-2014)
3. After the July 15, 1242 Battle of the Neva, Alexander Nevsky pays homage to the dead painted by Pavel Ryzhenko.
4. Alexander Nevsky monument in Ust-Izhora marks the supposed location of the battle
Background from {[https://military.wikia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Neva]}
Battle of the Neva
Date July 15, 1240
Location Neva River, Russia
Result Novgorodian victory
Belligerents
Novgorod Republic Supported by: People of Ladoga Commander Alexander Nevsky
Kingdom of Sweden Supported by: Finns; Tavastians; Commander Birger Jarl
The Battle of the Neva (Russian: Невская битва, Nevskaya bitva, Swedish language: slaget vid Neva ) was fought between the Novgorod Republic and Swedish armies on the Neva River, near the settlement of Ust-Izhora, on July 15, 1240. The purpose of the Swedish invasion was probably to gain control over the mouth of the Neva and the city of Ladoga and, hence, seize the most important part of the Trade Route from the Varangians to the Greeks, which had been under Novgorod's control for more than a hundred years. The battle was part of the medieval Swedish-Novgorodian Wars.
Russian sources
The existence of the battle is only known from Russian sources. The first source to mention the battle is the Novgorod First Chronicle from the 14th century.[1] According to the chronicle, on receiving the news of the advancing Swedish fleet, the 20-year-old Prince Alexander Yaroslavich of Novgorod quickly moved his small army to face the enemy before they had reached Lake Ladoga. The chronicle described the battle as follows:
"Swedes came with a great army, and Norwegians and Finns and Tavastians with ships in great numbers, Swedes with their prince and bishops, and they stayed on the Neva, at the mouth of the Izhora, willing to take Ladoga, and to put it short, Novgorod and all of its lands. But still protected the merciful, man-loving God us and sheltered us from the foreign people, and the word came to Novgorod that Swedes were sailing to Ladoga; but prince Alexander did not hesitate at all, but went against them with Novgorodians and people of Ladoga and overcame them with the help of Saint Sophia and through prayers of our lady, the Mother of God and Virgin Mary, July 15, in the memory of Kirik and Ulita, on Sunday, (the same day that) the 630 holy fathers[2] held a meeting in Chalcedon; and there was a great gathering of the Swedes; and their leader called Spiridon[3] was killed there; but some claimed that even the bishop was slain;[4] and a great number of them fell; and when they had loaded two ships with the bodies of high-born men, they let them sail to the sea; but the others, that were unnumbered, they cast to a pit, that they buried, and many others were wounded; and that same night they fled, without waiting for the Monday light, with shame. Of Novgorodians there fell: Konstantin Lugotinitch, Yuryata Pinyashchinich, Namest Drochilo, Nesdylov son of Kozhevnik, but including the people of Ladoga 20 men or less, God knows. But prince Alexander came back home with Novgorodians and people of Ladoga, all well, protected by God and Saint Sophia and all the prayers of the holy men."
A 16th-century version of the battle gave plenty of additional details, expanding the conflict to biblical proportions, but otherwise following the earlier described developments.[5]
Later, Prince Alexander Yaroslavich was nicknamed "Nevsky" (of Neva) for his first significant victory. Two years later, Alexander stalled an invasion of the Livonian Knights during the Battle on the Ice. Despite the victories, there were no Novgorodian advances further west to Finland or Estonia.
Swedish sources
All references of a battle of the Neva are missing from the Swedish sources. There may be one or several reasons for that.
Situation in Sweden
Since the death of King John in 1222, Sweden was in a de facto state of civil war until 1248 when Birger Jarl managed to seize power in the kingdom. Unrest was due to the struggle between those who wanted to keep the old tribal structure,[6] the folkung party, and the king, who was assisted by the church. Folkungs, who were mainly from Uppland, heavily resisted the centralization of power,[7] taxation of the Swedes of Uppland,[6] and church privileges.[7] They had temporarily succeeded in deposing the king in 1229, but were forced to give in five years later, but were far from defeated yet. Uppland remained largely independent of the king, and its northern areas continued to be in folkung hands. An uneasy truce continued until 1247, when the folkung rebellion was put to an end at the Battle of Sparrsätra and its leader beheaded a year later.
Furthermore, the official Sweden was on the brink of war with Norway ever since the Norwegians' infamous Värmland expedition in 1225.[8] Relations improved only after the Treaty of Lödöse in 1249, which was forged by the newly empowered Birger Jarl.[9] Before the treaty, Norway remained an ally of the folkungs, giving them refuge and providing men and arms.
In this situation, it seems unlikely that Sweden could have been able to organize a major expedition against Novgorod. Swedes are not known to have carried out any other military campaigns between 1222 and 1249, making the claims about their forceful appearance at the Neva with Norwegians as their allies seem questionable.
Theories
Taking these facts into consideration, it has been suggested in a recent book aimed at a wide readership,[10] that the Swedish expedition may have been an indirect result of the papal letter in 1237 that was sent to the Swedish Archbishop of Uppsala.[11] The letter eloquently called for a crusade, not against Novgorod, but against Tavastians in Finland, who had allegedly started hostilities against the church. In his defunct position, the king may not have been willing or able to act, but the letter may have provided the frustrated folkungs an opportunity to regain part of their Viking Age glory. Mostly free to act without interference from the king, folkungs would have been able to raise an army of their own, get volunteers from Norway and even assistance from Thomas, the independent Bishop of Finland, who needed to constantly worry about attacks from the east. Instead of Tavastia, this mixed set of interests and nationalities would have headed for the more lucrative Neva and there met its fate at the hands of Alexander.[ In the possible aftermath of the said battle, the King of Norway approached his Swedish counterpart for peace talks in 1241, but was turned down at the time.
However, some recent research has fundamentally questioned the importance of the battle, seeing it as an ordinary border skirmish that was exaggerated for political purposes, thus also explaining its absence from Swedish and other western sources.[12] It is noteworthy that any exact numbers of Russian or Swedish losses in the battle were exceptionally small.
Additional theories are numerous. Some historians have suggested that the Swedish army was already under the command of the very young Birger Jarl, eight years before his appointment to the position of jarl.[13] It has also been suggested that the suspicious information on Norwegians', Finns' and Tavastians' participation was made up in the 14th century, the time of writing of the First Novgorod Chronicle, when Sweden was in control of Norway, Finland and Tavastia.
Consequences
All in all, the first known Swedish military expedition against Novgorod after the events at the Neva took place in 1256, following folkungs' demise, peace with Norway and conquest of Finland. If the battle of the Neva had any long-term consequences, it was in Sweden's determination to take over Finland first before attempting to proceed further east.[
References
1. ↑ "Description of the battle in the First Novgorod Chronicle". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27.; in Swedish. Hosted by the narc.fi. See Arkistolaitos/sahkoiset and Diplomatarium Fennicum from the menu. See also original text; in Russian.
2. ↑ Actually the meeting was held between October 8 and November 1, not on July 15.
3. ↑ In the later version of the battle, "Spiridon" also appears as the name of the Archbishop of Novgorod, who blessed Alexander before the battle.
4. ↑ No Scandinavian bishop is known to have died in 1240.
5. ↑ "Battle on the Neva" 16th century version of the battle, provided by the Slavic Interest Group of the Society for Creative Anachronism. In English.
6. ↑ Jump up to:6.0 6.1 Larsson 2002, p. 178.
7. ↑ Jump up to:7.0 7.1 Kari 2004, p. 117.
8. ↑ Värmland expedition by the Svenskt Militärhistoriskt Bibliotek.
9. ↑ Treaty of Lödöse.
10. ↑ Kari, Risto. Suomalaisten keskiaika. WS Bookwell Oy. Porvoo 2004. ISBN 951-0-28321-5. See page 107.
11. ↑ "Letter by Pope Gregory IX about an uprising against the church in Tavastia". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27.. In Latin. Hosted by the National Archive of Finland. See [1] and Diplomatarium Fennicum from the menu.
12. ↑ Alexander Nevskij and the Holy War. Based on presentations in the Leeds International Medieval Conference. Hosted by the Tampere University.
13. ↑ Even if Spiridon was said to have died in the battle, some historians still associate him with Birger. See e.g. Riasanovsky, Nicholas V.: A History of Russia. Oxford 1993.
Bibliography
"Suomalaisten keskiaika". WSOY. 2004. ISBN 951-0-28321-5.
Larsson, Mats G (2002). Götarnas Riken : Upptäcktsfärder Till Sveriges Enande. Bokförlaget Atlantis AB ISBN 978-91-7486-641-4
This article incorporates material from the public domain 1906 Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary.
FYI SSG Paul HeadleeCPL Michael PeckPO1 Steve DittoCPL Douglas ChryslerSSG Michael Noll Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen SPC Michael Oles SRTSgt George RodriguezPO3 Charles Streich SGT (Join to see)SGT David A. 'Cowboy' GrothSFC (Join to see)SGT Steve McFarland PO1 H Gene LawrencePO2 Frederick Dunn SMSgt David A Asbury CSM (Join to see) SPC Nancy Greene TSgt David L. Brad Miller
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