![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: chess, famous, players, ukraine |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| Ads |
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Roman M. Parparov" wrote in message
... I meant that under Russian patronage the Orthodox population of Ukraine would have an easier time than under Polish. That`s right but the Pope has visited Ukraine and not Russia so far. So a kind of mistrust is seen between Vatican and Russia not Vatican and Ukraine. I can often hear even accusations on both sides and strange actions like expelling catholic priests from Russia. That`s right, Crimea is another unsolved question between Russia and Ukraine :-) Russians treat it like a separate region from Ukraine but nowadays it`s Ukrainian anyway. The point is that Crimea was for a long time part of Russian Federation within USSR. The population of Crimea is largely mixed - Russians, Ukrainian, Tartar without any major group. The problem is that many Russians still don`t recognize Crimea as part of Ukraine :-) The main problem in relationship between Russians and Ukrainians are sentiments but in politics there are no sentiments only pragmatism. And that the Russians try still to treat Ukrainians as "lesser brother"... .... and Ukraine is called sometimes by Russians "little Russia" what is a little bit deceptive. Regards, Jerzy |
|
#23
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Nick" wrote in message
om... To be more accurate, it's called the 'Battle of Britain'. Yes, the sun never sets on the British Empire ;-) There were several squadrons of them. Over two thousand sacrificed their lives in the air fight. To be more accurate, more than 2000 Polish airmen may have been killed during the entire war, but far fewer than 2000 were killed during the Battle of Britain in 1940. Thanks for correcting me. That`s exactly what I`ve heard on the radio but distorted a little ;-) The most famous was of course squadron 303. 303 'Kosciuszko' Squadron--named in honour of Tadeusz Kosciuszko (1746-1817), a national hero in Poland and the United States--was formed on 2 August 1940 in Northolt, England. 303 Squadron fought in the Battle of Britain from 31 August 1940 until 11 October 1940, shooting down 125 aeroplanes (as officially confirmed kills), which made it the highest scoring RAF squadron in the Battle of Britain. Out of the 38 pilots who then flew in the squadron, 34 were Polish, three were British officers, and the highest scoring fighter pilot was a Czech, Josef Frantisek, who shot down 17 aeroplanes (more than anyone else during the Battle of Britain) before his death on 8 October 1940. Nice statistics, Nick. I must look it up in the book about the 303 squad written by Polish writer Arkady Fiedler ;-) In general, the non-British pilots in the Royal Air Force were more skilled than the British pilots at that time, and a disproportionately high number of its leading fighter aces were not British. I`ve heard about several aces in RAF of English origins but I`m not sure. Anyway I`m not a historian ;-) Regards, Jerzy |
|
#24
|
|||
|
|||
|
(Nick) wrote in message . com...
-remove- (Mhoulsby) wrote in message ... From: "Jerzy" Date: 28/08/03 07:33 GMT Daylight Time Message-id: Right Nick, I`ve just heard on the radio that today we are commemorating Polish pilots that fought in the Battle of England in 1940 on your side. There were several squadrons of them. Over two thousand sacrificed their lives in the air fight. To be more accurate, more than 2000 Polish airmen may have been killed during the entire war, but far fewer than 2000 were killed during the Battle of Britain in 1940. 29 Polish airmen of Fighter Command were killed during the Battle of Britain. Mark Houlsby wrote: although Poles comprised the greatest number of foreign nationals) Only if 'foreign nationals' are regarded as persons outside the Commonwealth. Actually, during the Battle of Britain, there were slightly more Polish fighter pilots in the Royal Air Force than the pilots from any single nation of the Commonwealth, though not from the combined nations of the Commonwealth. Fighter Command's Aircrew in the Battle of Britain (abridged list) ('The Battle of Britain' by Richard Hough and Denis Richards, 191): Nation: Flew Killed Poland 141 29 New Zealand 129 14 Canada 90 20 Czechoslovakia 87 7 Belgium 24 6 South Africa 22 9 Australia 21 14 France 13 0 Ireland 9 0 United States 7 1 Mark Houlsby wrote: the RAF would, at the very least, have struggled to win the Battle of Britain and would most probably have lost. ... In general, the non-British pilots in the Royal Air Force were more skilled than the British pilots at that time, and a disproportionately high number of its leading fighter aces were not British. During the Battle of Britain, the Operational Training Units needed to pass out the new British pilots as quickly as possible, which inevitably impaired their skills in combat: "The supply of replacement pilots was more important still and was rapidly becoming the most critical aspect of Fighter Command's continuing defence. Between 8 and 18 August no fewer than 154 pilots had been lost, killed, missing or so gravely wounded as to be out of the Battle. During that same period the OTUs produced few more than a third of this number. They had, it transpired later, made no effort to accelerate the final training course, to pack in more flying hours per day, or to increase the facilities for firing practice. It was just as if peace still prevailed, except that the extent of the course was *severely shortened*.... The crisis was compounded by the quality and experience of those lost, including a large number of squadron and flight commanders, and the dangerous inexperience of those replacing them. Taking a random sample in 1988 of the many survivors who reported to their OTU training after the Battle began, the average was eleven days, which could mean six to nine hours (several of them less) in the air. 'I fired my guns once into cloud', was a typical comment; and few of them had any air-to-air gunnery practice, or experience with the reflector gunsight. 'I tried to take up my new pilots once or twice before taking them on ops', one squadron commander, James Leathart, claimed. 'It was like sentencing them to death if I didn't, and not far short of it even if I did. They hadn't a clue about high-speed combat or deflection shooting or holding fire until 200 yards...'" --Richard Hough and Denis Richards (The Battle of Britain, 200-1) 'Death, where is thy sting?' --Nick |
|
#25
|
|||
|
|||
|
From: (Nick)
Date: 29/08/03 02:58 GMT Daylight Time Message-id: (Nick) wrote in message .com... -remove- (Mhoulsby) wrote in message ... From: "Jerzy" Date: 28/08/03 07:33 GMT Daylight Time Message-id: Right Nick, I`ve just heard on the radio that today we are commemorating Polish pilots that fought in the Battle of England in 1940 on your side. There were several squadrons of them. Over two thousand sacrificed their lives in the air fight. To be more accurate, more than 2000 Polish airmen may have been killed during the entire war, but far fewer than 2000 were killed during the Battle of Britain in 1940. 29 Polish airmen of Fighter Command were killed during the Battle of Britain. Mark Houlsby wrote: although Poles comprised the greatest number of foreign nationals) Only if 'foreign nationals' are regarded as persons outside the Commonwealth. Actually, during the Battle of Britain, there were slightly more Polish fighter pilots in the Royal Air Force than the pilots from any single nation of the Commonwealth, though not from the combined nations of the Commonwealth. Fighter Command's Aircrew in the Battle of Britain (abridged list) ('The Battle of Britain' by Richard Hough and Denis Richards, 191): Nation: Flew Killed Poland 141 29 New Zealand 129 14 Canada 90 20 Czechoslovakia 87 7 Belgium 24 6 South Africa 22 9 Australia 21 14 France 13 0 Ireland 9 0 United States 7 1 Mark Houlsby wrote: the RAF would, at the very least, have struggled to win the Battle of Britain and would most probably have lost. ... In general, the non-British pilots in the Royal Air Force were more skilled than the British pilots at that time, and a disproportionately high number of its leading fighter aces were not British. During the Battle of Britain, the Operational Training Units needed to pass out the new British pilots as quickly as possible, which inevitably impaired their skills in combat: "The supply of replacement pilots was more important still and was rapidly becoming the most critical aspect of Fighter Command's continuing defence. Between 8 and 18 August no fewer than 154 pilots had been lost, killed, missing or so gravely wounded as to be out of the Battle. During that same period the OTUs produced few more than a third of this number. They had, it transpired later, made no effort to accelerate the final training course, to pack in more flying hours per day, or to increase the facilities for firing practice. It was just as if peace still prevailed, except that the extent of the course was *severely shortened*.... The crisis was compounded by the quality and experience of those lost, including a large number of squadron and flight commanders, and the dangerous inexperience of those replacing them. Taking a random sample in 1988 of the many survivors who reported to their OTU training after the Battle began, the average was eleven days, which could mean six to nine hours (several of them less) in the air. 'I fired my guns once into cloud', was a typical comment; and few of them had any air-to-air gunnery practice, or experience with the reflector gunsight. 'I tried to take up my new pilots once or twice before taking them on ops', one squadron commander, James Leathart, claimed. 'It was like sentencing them to death if I didn't, and not far short of it even if I did. They hadn't a clue about high-speed combat or deflection shooting or holding fire until 200 yards...'" --Richard Hough and Denis Richards (The Battle of Britain, 200-1) 'Death, where is thy sting?' --Nick Interesting, Nick. I am well aware that many Hungarians fought in the wehrmacht. Of course, Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding's principal concern during the Battle of Britain was a shortage of trained pilots, if the RAF had been able to muster fewer than a critical number, the Luftwaffe would have won. With this in mind, I was conviced (evidently wrongly) that some Hungarian *refugees* had served in the RAF during the battle, an idea which your statistics effectively refute. Mark |
|
#26
|
|||
|
|||
|
-remove- (Mhoulsby) wrote in message ...
(snipped) There is no doubt that without its Polish pilots (and Canadians and Hungarians and Indians... although Poles comprised the greatest number of foreign nationals) the RAF would, at the very least, have struggled to win the Battle Of Britain and would most probably have lost. Some historical inaccuracies in that statement have been corrected earlier in this thread. According to the RAF Battle of Britain Museum (Hendon, England), during the Battle of Britain (1940), Fighter Command had a total of 2863 airmen (503 of them were killed in the Battle) flying on its operations. Of these airmen, 2316 (403 were killed) were from the United Kingdom, and 547 (100 were killed) were not from the United Kingdom. So slightly under 20% of the participating airmen (and the fatalities) were not British. On average, the non-British airmen were more skilled than the British airmen, many of whom had been hastily trained before being flung into the Battle. Hence, the non-British airmen probably accounted for at least 25% and perhaps more than 30% of Fighter Command's effective strength. Without their vital contributions, the margin between victory and defeat would have been erased, and the Luftwaffe should have been able to win the battle of attrition in the skies over Britain in 1940. http://www.guardiancentury.co.uk/194...128255,00.html 'Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.' --Winston Churchill (21 August 1940) --Nick |
|
#27
|
|||
|
|||
|
(Nick) wrote in message . com...
From: "Jerzy" Date: 28/08/03 07:33 GMT Daylight Time Message-id: Right Nick, I`ve just heard on the radio that today we are commemorating Polish pilots that fought in the Battle of England in 1940 on your side. There were several squadrons of them. Over two thousand sacrificed their lives in the air fight. The most famous was of course squadron 303. 303 'Kosciuszko' Squadron--named in honour of Tadeusz Kosciuszko (1746-1817), a national hero in Poland and the United States--was formed on 2 August 1940 in Northolt, England. 303 Squadron fought in the Battle of Britain from 31 August 1940 until 11 October 1940, shooting down 125 aeroplanes (as officially confirmed kills), which made it the highest scoring RAF squadron in the Battle of Britain. Out of the 38 pilots who then flew in the squadron, 34 were Polish, three were British officers, and the highest scoring fighter pilot was a Czech, Josef Frantisek, who shot down 17 aeroplanes (more than anyone else during the Battle of Britain) before his death on 8 October 1940. Actually, the Royal Air Force officially recognised its highest scoring fighter pilot in the Battle of Britain as James ('Ginger') Lacey (1917-1989), a NCO who was flying the Hawker Hurricane (then the most common RAF fighter type), with 18 confirmed victories. At the war's end, Lacey was credited with a total of 28 confirmed victories in air combat. During the shooting of the 1969 film, "The Battle of Britain", Adolf Galland, an expert consultant who had been a top German fighter ace during the battle, became engaged in a passionate argument when he contended that the Luftwaffe did *not* lose the Battle of Britain. Evidently, he believed that the Luftwaffe should have won the battle eventually if it had continued fighting it with improved tactics. Adolf Galland (1912-1996) became the Luftwaffe's General der Jagdflieger. At the war's end, Galland (who had been demoted to take command of JV 44, an elite unit of pilots flying the Me-262 jet fighter) was credited with a total of 104 confirmed victories in air combat. For further reading: "The Battle of Britain: the Making of a Film" by Leonard Mosley "Die Ersten und die Letzten" ("The First and the Last") by Adolf Galland "Adolf Galland: the Authorised Biography" by David Baker (William Falkner (1826-1889) and William Faulkner (1897-1962) are different.) "War on paper and war on the field are as different as darkness from light, fire from water, or heaven from earth." --William Falkner (The Little Brick Church) --Nick |
|
#28
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Nick" wrote in message
om... Actually, the Royal Air Force officially recognised its highest scoring fighter pilot in the Battle of Britain as James ('Ginger') Lacey (1917-1989), a NCO who was flying the Hawker Hurricane (then the most common RAF fighter type), with 18 confirmed victories. At the war's end, Lacey was credited with a total of 28 confirmed victories in air combat. That`s what I heard but wasn`t quite sure. During the shooting of the 1969 film, "The Battle of Britain", Adolf Galland, an expert consultant who had been a top German fighter ace during the battle, became engaged in a passionate argument when he contended that the Luftwaffe did *not* lose the Battle of Britain. Evidently, he believed that the Luftwaffe should have won the battle eventually if it had continued fighting it with improved tactics. Adolf Galland (1912-1996) became the Luftwaffe's General der Jagdflieger. At the war's end, Galland (who had been demoted to take command of JV 44, an elite unit of pilots flying the Me-262 jet fighter) was credited with a total of 104 confirmed victories in air combat. For further reading: "The Battle of Britain: the Making of a Film" by Leonard Mosley "Die Ersten und die Letzten" ("The First and the Last") by Adolf Galland "Adolf Galland: the Authorised Biography" by David Baker Interesting but I`m afraid we have gone a little Off Topic ;-) Regards, Jerzy |
|
#29
|
|||
|
|||
|
-remove- (Mhoulsby) wrote in message ...
From: "Jerzy" Message-id: Right Nick, I`ve just heard on the radio that today we are commemorating Polish pilots that fought in the Battle of England in 1940 on your side. There were several squadrons of them. Over two thousand sacrificed their lives in the air fight. The most famous was of course squadron 303. Do you remember them today in England? We most certainly do. The first time I visited the Polish club in my home city of Newcastle-upon-Tyne was to play a chess match, some thirty years ago. Dear Mr Houlsby, On 15 August 1940, the Luftwaffe launched a surprise raid against targets near Newcastle-upon-Tyne. "To support the fierce, predictable raids in the south with surprise raids on airfields and industrial targets in the north-east appears to have been a sudden inspiration emanating from Goering's Chief of Intelligence, Oberst Josef 'Beppo' Schmidt. He was confident that all Fighter Command's resources had been concentrated in the southern Groups and that the north-east was wide open to attack.... For the Luftwaffe, this northern operation was stricken with grievous misfortunes. The plan was, in addition to the Danish force ('some sixty Ju-88 bombers'), for some seventy Norway-based He 111 bombers, escorted by a Gruppe of twenty-one Me 110s...to attack airfields in the Tyne-Tees area.... As a feint, a force of Heinkel seaplanes was to precede the operation by flying towards the Scottish coast north of Edinburgh to draw any unlikely fighters north and away from the main attacks. 'But the German bombers made a serious navigational error: they made landfall seventy-five miles too far north, thus almost coinciding with the point of the mock attack. 'Thanks to this error'...'the mock attack achieved the opposite of what we intended. The British fighter defence force was not only alerted in good time, but made contact with the genuine attacking force.'... Dowding in his 'Despatch' made this comment on Stumpff's surprise assault on the north-east: '...the bombers received such a drubbing that the experiment was not repeated'." --Richard Hough and Denis Richards (The Battle of Britain, pp. 173-4) Inaccuracy in locating the target has not been confined to Usenet "flame wars". 'England, that dear land of mists.' --Charlotte Bronte (Villette) --Nick |
|
#30
|
|||
|
|||
|
From: (Nick)
Date: 28/09/03 00:47 GMT Daylight Time Message-id: -remove- (Mhoulsby) wrote in message ... From: "Jerzy" Message-id: Right Nick, I`ve just heard on the radio that today we are commemorating Polish pilots that fought in the Battle of England in 1940 on your side. There were several squadrons of them. Over two thousand sacrificed their lives in the air fight. The most famous was of course squadron 303. Do you remember them today in England? We most certainly do. The first time I visited the Polish club in my home city of Newcastle-upon-Tyne was to play a chess match, some thirty years ago. Dear Mr Houlsby, On 15 August 1940, the Luftwaffe launched a surprise raid against targets near Newcastle-upon-Tyne. "To support the fierce, predictable raids in the south with surprise raids on airfields and industrial targets in the north-east appears to have been a sudden inspiration emanating from Goering's Chief of Intelligence, Oberst Josef 'Beppo' Schmidt. He was confident that all Fighter Command's resources had been concentrated in the southern Groups and that the north-east was wide open to attack.... For the Luftwaffe, this northern operation was stricken with grievous misfortunes. The plan was, in addition to the Danish force ('some sixty Ju-88 bombers'), for some seventy Norway-based He 111 bombers, escorted by a Gruppe of twenty-one Me 110s...to attack airfields in the Tyne-Tees area.... As a feint, a force of Heinkel seaplanes was to precede the operation by flying towards the Scottish coast north of Edinburgh to draw any unlikely fighters north and away from the main attacks. 'But the German bombers made a serious navigational error: they made landfall seventy-five miles too far north, thus almost coinciding with the point of the mock attack. 'Thanks to this error'...'the mock attack achieved the opposite of what we intended. The British fighter defence force was not only alerted in good time, but made contact with the genuine attacking force.'... Dowding in his 'Despatch' made this comment on Stumpff's surprise assault on the north-east: '...the bombers received such a drubbing that the experiment was not repeated'." --Richard Hough and Denis Richards (The Battle of Britain, pp. 173-4) Inaccuracy in locating the target has not been confined to Usenet "flame wars". 'England, that dear land of mists.' --Charlotte Bronte (Villette) --Nick Right. The effects of that air raid can still be clearly discerned in the fact that in several rows of terraced houses in Jesmond, a district near to the centre of the city (shall we call these "files"...?) there is one "rank" along which several houses, on several different streets, may be seen to have been rebuilt, after the air raid, with different bricks from those used in the rest of the terraces. "Women are from Venus, Men are from Mytholmroyd" (John Morrison) |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|