Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 12 390 323 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjahaku

Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.

1000 tulosta hakusanalla Elbhe

Samuel Elbert and the Age of Revolution in Georgia, 1740-1788
Brigadier General Samuel Elbert's story spans most of Georgia's history in the eighteenth century. He is best remembered for his role as a commander of Georgia troops during the American Revolution. Before the war, he was a prominent Savannah merchant and a member of the General Assembly when James Wright was Georgia's governor. In 1775, Elbert was instrumental in bringing the Revolution to Georgia and he soon commanded Continental forces in the conflict. He emerged as a significant leader in the age of Revolution in Georgia and participated in almost every major battle in the state prior to his capture at Brier Creek on March 3, 1779. Elbert was present at the Battle of the Rice Boats in 1776, a participant in two of Georgia's three campaigns into Florida, commanded American troops during the action on the Frederica River in 1778, and was in Savannah when it fell to the British on December 29, 1778. After his exchange, he went to Yorktown, Virginia, and joined George Washington's forces, where he witnessed the surrender of Lord Cornwallis's British army in 1781. In 1785, Elbert became Georgia's governor, but his one-year term was plagued by border conflicts, particularly with the Creek Indians over the Oconee Lands. Among his most enduring legacies are the creation of independent masonry in Georgia, the chartering of Franklin College which later became the University of Georgia, and a county in the northeast section of the state that bears his name.
The Elbe Resolution

The Elbe Resolution

Lloyd Holm

Fox Farm Press
2014
nidottu
On his fifth Christmas Eve of World War II, during the Battle of the Bulge, Hans Kr ger can think only of Aim e Ferrand, the French woman he'd first met when the German army occupied France four years earlier. Preoccupied with memories of the woman he loves, Hans must interrogate an American prisoner. Little does he know the role this man will play in shaping his fate as the Allies push further into Germany. By April of 1945, eight months following Nazi massacres in the Saulx valley of then-occupied France, a quarter million troops of the Wehrmacht surrender in the Ruhr Pocket. As American prisoners-of-war, Karl Beck-the man responsible for these massacres-is convinced Hans has betrayed him and vows to exact revenge. When Beck learns the whereabouts of an explosive secret file exposing Eisenhower's decision to halt the Allied advance upon Berlin at the river Elbe, his retribution appears to be at hand.