Interesting. Never have I seen her with such a satanic grin! #monarch ?
Selena Gomez
The picture on the bottom right is wrong. The most important one was cut off. The statement was deliberately made into a lie. The soldier is defending the civilians. Show the whole picture, you liar! Probably all the pictures are wrong here.
Schloß Neuschwanstein
Sorry, its ugly. Imagine a sweet white princess in a wunderful dress ....and she is yours!
The Russians have gone home. Now the Germans are talking friendly about them. The US Army has stayed there and wonders why the Germans talk friendly about the Russians.
US Army M60 Patton tank in West Germany
He looks stupid. An underdog with his princess. Naive girl!
Magic!! 💖
nice, what is it?
Peace for the world is possible, even from Great Britain!
History & favourites | moments in time: The Christmas Truce of 1914
Leading up to Christmas 1914, the first-holiday season since the start of the first world war, Pope Benedict XV called for a truce on both sides to celebrate Christmas. This was refused by warring countries however, along the western front there was some short-lived ceasefire and unofficial truces.
On Christmas Eve British and German soldiers sang Christmas carols to one another across enemy lines. On Christmas Day allied forces saw German soldiers leave their trenches and cross no man’s land, fearing this was a trap the allies were sceptical until they saw the Germans were unarmed. The two camps met at No Man’s Land, shook hands, collected their dead, exchanged gifts and there are even reports they played football. This was not the first time there was an unofficial truce but would be one of the lasts.
The Christmas truce happened relatively early in to the war and any attempts at a truce the next year was quashed by officers. Even if officers hadn’t intervened, the hostility between the allied and central powers had grown, too much blood was shed for friendly fraternisation, the old ways of war where chivalry was a custom was over. Europe had entered a new age of warfare.