| 1854 - 420 pagina’s
...Adrianople, the troops were in so wretched a condition, from sickness and want of food, that not 7,000 men were able to bear arms : how many thousands of...Government was totally ignorant of this deplorable state of aifairs at Adrianople till some time afterwards, when the intelligence came too late. If the Turks... | |
| Fanny Mayne - 1855 - 436 pagina’s
...have teemed with accounts of the loss of the allied armies, sickness and want of food, that not 7000 were able to bear arms. How many thousands of horses...known what was going on, 'not one single Russian would again have seen his native land ; even as it was, out of 120,000 men, not 6000 ever recrossed the Russian... | |
| Fanny Mayne - 1855 - 434 pagina’s
...have teemed with accounts of the loss of the allied armies, sickness and want of food, that not 7000 were able to bear arms. How many thousands of horses...known what was going on, not one single Russian would again have seen his native land ; even as it was, out of 120,000 men, not 6000 ever recrossed the Russian... | |
| Henry Tyrrell - 1855 - 238 pagina’s
...not having declared war themselves, sanctioned the war carried on against Russia by others. how many horses and mules perished in these two years is not...this deplorable state of affairs at Adrianople till gome time afterwards, when the intelligence came too late. If the Turks had known what was going on,... | |
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