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#Kalkreuth
benkaden · 10 months
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Ansichtskarte
Grüße aus Kalkreuth 8281 Kalkreuth (Kr. Großenhain)
Meißen: Brück & Sohn Meißen (J 04-10/88 IV-14-483 30722)
Fotos: Erich Braun, Dresden
1988
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90s00wcwwwf · 1 year
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Tonight! Gervonta "Tank" Davis Vs Ryan "The King" Garcia at catch weight of 136lbs.
Date : 4/22/23
Timing : 8 p.m. ET
# Gervonta Davis vs. Ryan Garcia; Catchweight (136lbs)
# David Morrell vs. Yamaguchi Falcao; Super middleweight
# Bektemir Melikuziev vs. Gabriel Rosado; Super middleweight
# Elijah Garcia vs. Kevin Salgado Zambrano; Middleweight
# Fiodor Czerkaszyn vs. Elias Espadas; Middleweight
# Vito Meilnicki Jr vs. Jose Sanchez Charles; Light middleweight
# Floyd Schofield vs. Jesus Valentin Leon; Lightweight
# Lorenzo Simpson vs. Pachino Hill; Middleweight
# Tristan Kalkreuth vs. Jaime Solorio; Light heavyweight
# Jalil Major Hackett vs. Jason Phillips; Light middleweight
# Cuttino Oliver vs. Roberto Cantu Pena; Bantamweight
Links to live streams.
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ledenews · 7 months
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Linsly's Enrichment Fund Drive Golf Outing Next Week
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Linsly's Enrichment Fund Drive Linsly's Enrichment Fund Drive golf outing is just a week away! Whether you join us for golf that day or just donate to the Enrichment Fund, your support makes a direct and significant impact on Linsly students. Funds from this event will help make a Linsly education available to deserving students, who would not otherwise have the financial ability to attend The Linsly School. Thank you to our returning title sponsors: Kalkreuth Roofing and Sheet Metal; Michael Flynn '88; and NPSG Global. To register for this event or make a donation to the Linsly Enrichment Fund, please click the link below. Donate or Register Here Read the full article
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pharaoh105 · 1 year
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DAZN Weights from Arlington, Texas
Photo: Golden Boy Promotions By Jeff Zimmerman at the scale (William Zepeda 134.2 vs. Jaime Arboleda 134.6 WBA Continental Americas lightweight title) Diego De La Hoya 126 vs. Victor Morales Jr. 125.4 Fredrick Lawson 149 vs. Esteban Villalobos 152 David Stevens 168 vs. Marco a. Periban 167.2 Tristan Kalkreuth 201.6 vs. Jonathan Rice 224.6 Caleb Suñiga 129.4 vs. Carlos Arroyo 130.2 Darius Fulghum…
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latinboxsports · 1 year
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Happy Birthday wishes to Tristan Kalkreuth @tristankalkreuth 🎂🎂🎂 📸: @goldenboy https://www.instagram.com/p/CktnE7nu1yS/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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playerswiki · 3 years
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Tristan has an estimated net worth of more than $100,000. He has accumulated most of his net worth through his successful career in boxing. Being a professional boxer, one earns a good sum through brand endorsement and contract. Tristan is very much early in his career. He will be earning millions in the days to come.
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histoireettralala · 4 years
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The Battle of Auerstaedt
Brunswick’s command was divided into five divisions plus cavalry, and numbered sixty-three thousand men in all. General Gebhard Blücher commanded the Prussian advance guard. His leading squadron, marching in a careless manner, was roughly handled by Davout’s advance guard, and thrown back behind Hassenhausen. Blücher reacted quickly. Moving his cavalry forward he attacked Gudin’s leading regiment (the 25th). The French infantry formed a square, and aided by the misdirection of a battery of Prussian artillery, beat off the enemy attack. Then supported by the 85th line, they occupied Hassenhausen. Davout now moved Gudin’s entire division into a defensive position with the newly captured hamlet in its center, and sent word to Friant and Morand to come forward on the double. General Friedrich Wilhelm Karl von Schmettau, who commanded the leading Prussian division, drew up his regiments in parade ground formations and began to fire ineffective volleys into Hassenhausen while he awaited the arrival of the division of the Prince of Orange. The fog began to lift by eight o’clock and Gudin could see a portion of Orange’s division moving into position on Schmettau’s left, and the leading regiment of still a third Prussian division (Wartensleben) moving against his left. Only the timely arrival of Friant enabled Gudin’s hard-pressed regiments to hold their ground. Davout launched Friant straightaway against Orange’s brigades, which were threatening to engulf Gudin’s right, and drove them back beyond Spielberg. At 9:00 AM Davout’s cavalry arrived on the battlefield and was placed on the extreme right to support Friant and to prevent the enemy from maneuvering against this vulnerable flank.
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Three Prussians divisions now faced two of Davout’s. The Duke of Brunswick, who realized that his army was numerically superior to that of the French, ordered Wartensleben’s division, supported by Schmettau, to turn the enemy’s left flank and gain control of the main road leading to Kösen - a maneuver which if successful would have cut off Davout’s line of retreat. Schmettau’s attack on Hassenhausen was met by fierce resistance on the part of Gudin’s already hard-pressed men. Nevertheless the French left was driven back and badly shaken. At this decisive moment Morand’s 1st Division began to arrive on the battlefield. Davout ordered these fresh troops into action on the double. They not only steadied Gudin’s wavering left, but absorbed the shock fo Wartensleben’s attack which would easily have been decisive on their absence. Both Schmettau and Brunswick were mortally wounded in the attack on Hassenhausen. The Duke‘s removal from the field of battle (he died several days later) resulted in some confusion, for neither the King, who was present on the field of battle with Wartensleben’s division at the time, nor Scharnhorst, Brunswick’s chief of staff who was with Orange on the left flank, were immediately informed that the supreme commander had been wounded. When it became known, Frederick William assumed command of the army in person.
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As the battle reached its climax at noon, the King called up fresh troops. Blücher’s infantry, part of Kuhnheim’s division which was in reserve, and the infantry of the Prussian Guard were launched against Morand’s division in a desperate attempt to turn the French left and cut off their line of retreat toward Kösen. But with Davout himself encouraging and rallying his men, the attack was beaten off and Prince William of Prussia was seriously wounded. This was the last major effort made on the part of the Prussian army. Davout now seized the offensive and ordered Morand on his left and Friant on the right to move to the attack. Pivoting on Gudin, the 1st and 2d Divisions moved forward until they brought the enemy under an interlocking cross fire that swept the entire Prussian line. In desperation the King ordered Kuhnheim’s division and the remaining brigades of von Arnim’s division into the line to check Friant’s threatening advance. However, these fresh troops were caught in the murderous cross fire of Morand and Friant who occupied the high ground on both flanks, and the Prussians were forced to fall back and take refuge behind Gernstadt.
The Prussian army was now retreating from Hassenhausen with three of its divisions in disorder. Seeing this Davout ordered Gudin’s division forward, and the entire III corps advanced on Auerstaedt and Eckartsberg. Heavy fighting took place for the village of Gernstadt [..] Morand was also harassed on his left by Blücher, who had gathered what cavalry he could find [..] Not only did Morand beat off the Prussian cavalry, but he moved his artillery into position [..] At the same time Friant turned the Count’s left and brought his artillery to bear on the unfortunate Prussian lines. Attacked on both flanks and in the front, Kalkreuth fell back from Gernstadt in relatively good order [..] But the Count was unable to defend his new position under the thundering attack of the victorious French.
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[..] Frederick William decided that prudence was the better part of valor. He ordered a general retreat in the direction of Weimar. Assuming that Hohenlohe and Rüchel were in good order and controlling the ground before him, for he had received no news of the events of the battle at Jena, the Prussian army began to retrace its steps toward Weimar.
As the last rays of the sun faded on the western horizon the Prussian king led his defeated troops from the battlefield. The weary but triumphant soldiers of the III Corps turned to the task of rounding up prisoners and caring for their wounded before taking a well-deserved rest. Davout was unable to undertake a vigorous pursuit as his men were exhausted and his divisions reduced in strength and in need of reorganization. The day had been the most glorious in the annals of any single French corps in centuries. The III Corps had engaged a well-trained enemy more than twice its own numbers and defeated it. Auerstaedt was also Davout’s finest hour. He had fought well at Austerlitz; he would cover himself again with glory at Eckmühl (1809); he would withstand the assault of the superior forces of Bagration at Mogilev (1812); and his defense of Hamburg would be a military triumph. However, none of these would compare with the brilliant display of arms at Auerstaedt. If his marshal’s baton had been granted because of family ties and personal attachment to the new Emperor, Auerstaedt justified Napoleon’s judgement of the man. He did not win his baton on the battlefield, as would Oudinot at Wagram (1809), rather he proved beyond all doubt his worthiness to bear the title in a manner which was universally acknowledged.
John G. Gallaher - The Iron Marshal, a Biography of Louis Nicolas Davout
Maps of the battle (and an account of the battle hour by hour, in French, found here
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juarezesdeporte · 3 years
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REGRESA GOLDEN BOY PROMOTIONS A EL PASO
EL PASO, Texas. - El ex retador al campeonato mundial Kamil Szeremeta (21-1, 5 KOs) se medirá con  Jaime Munguía (36-0, 29 KOs) para su defensa a 12 asaltos del título mediano Intercontinental de la OMB
El combate se llevará a cabo el sábado 19 de junio en el Don Haskins Center de la Universidad de Texas en El Paso y será transmitido en vivo exclusiva y globalmente por DAZN.
“Mis respetos para Jaime Munguía, pues a pesar de tantos cambios se ha mantenido tranquilo y enfocado en su compromiso para este 19 de junio”, dijo Óscar de la Hoya, Presidente y Jefe Ejecutivo de Golden Boy.
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“Estoy seguro de que realizará todos los cambios y ajustes necesarios para salir con la mano en alto. Kamil Szeremeta es el reto perfecto para mostrar al mundo por qué merece una oportunidad titular”, agregó de la Hoya. 
“Tengo muchísima experiencia cuando se trata de cambios de oponente, bviamente es diferente en este nivel porque la preparación es más fuerte y con más inteligencia. Sin embargo, lo tomo con mucha tranquilidad y vamos a hacer los ajustes necesarios para salir con la mano en alto este 19 de junio”,  afirmó Jaime Munguía.
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 “Estamos listos para demostrar al mundo que Jaime Munguía está listo para convertirse en monarca mundial en dos divisiones”, aseveró Fernando Beltrán , Jefe Ejecutivo de Promociones Zanfer.
 “Pero primero tendrá que probarse ante un fuerte rival en Kamil Szeremeta, cuyo sola derrota fue ante uno de los mejores pesos medianos de los últimos años. Con una contundente victoria este 19 junio, el orgullo tijuanense pondrá en sobre aviso a todos los contendientes de la división”. “Estoy encantado de estar regresando en una pelea tan importante contra Jaime Munguía”, dijo Kamil Szeremeta. 
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En el duelo co estelar, el contendiente uzbeko en acenso Bektemir “Bully” Melikuziev (7-0, 6 KOs) enfrentará la prueba mas difícil de su carrera hasta la fecha ante el ex retador al campeonato mundial “King” Gabriel Rosado (25-13-1, 14 KOs) de Filadelfia, Pensilvania en una batalla a 12 giros por los cetros supermediano Intercontinental de la OMB y Continental de las Américas de la AMB.
Ibeth “La Roca” Zamora (32-6, 12 KOs) de San Cristóbal Huichochitlán, Toluca, México defenderá su campeonato mundial mosca del CMB contra la medallista de Bronce Olímpica Marlen Esparza (9-1, 1 KOs) de Houston, Texas en una pelea a 10 vueltas. 
El contendiente de peso welter Blair “The Flair” Cobbs (14-0-1, 9 KOs) de Las Vegas, Nevada combatirá ante Brad “King” Solomon (29-3, 9 KOs) de Lafayette, Luisiana en un duelo a 10 giros que abrirá la transmisión de DAZN. 
Peleas adicionales del respaldo serán transmitidas en vivo por Facebook Watch. Una emocionante batalla entre dos pesos welter del establo de Golden Boy encabezará la transmisión de peleas preliminares cuando Raúl Curiel (9-0, 7 KOs) de Tampico, México y Ferdinand Keroyban (14-1, 9 KOs) de North Hollywood, California choquen en un combate a 10 episodios. 
El impresionante zurdo de peso welter Alexis “Lex” Rocha (16-1, 10 KOs) de Santa Ana, California buscará recuperarse tras su primera derrota en una pelea a 10 asaltos ante Jameson Bacon (26-4, 17 KOs) de Cebú, Filipinas.
Tristan Kalkreuth (8-0, 6 KOs) de Duncanville, Texas retornará al cuadrilátero en un combate a seis giros en peso crucero ante Demetrius Banks (10-10-1, 5 KOs) de Detroit, Michigan. 
Manuel Flores (9-0, 6 KOs) de Coachella, California se medirá ante Daniel Lozano (15-10-1, 11 KOs) de Bowling Green, Florida en una batalla a seis episodios en la división de peso supergallo
. Gregory “Goyo” Morales (12-0, 8 KOs) de San Antonio, Texas arriesgará su récord invicto en un choque a cuatro rounds en peso supergallo ante un oponente por anunciar.
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benkaden · 4 years
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Ansichtskarte
Grüße aus Kalkreuth 8281 Kalkreuth (Kr. Großenhain) Brück & Sohn Meißen, 1988
Fotos: Erich Braun, Dresden
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ledenews · 9 months
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Wheeling Arts and Cultural Commission Announces Arts Fest Lineup
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The highly-anticipated return of the Wheeling Arts Fest is just around the corner, and the excitement is palpable as the stage is set for a day of musical enchantment and artistic exploration at Wheeling Park on Saturday, August 5th. Presented by the Wheeling Arts and Cultural Commission, this year's festival promises an unforgettable experience for all attendees, featuring an exceptional lineup of local, live music and a diverse array of talented artists and makers at the Artist Market. The Main Stage music lineup, set to kick off at 11 a.m., boasts a stellar collection of local talents, ensuring a dynamic and lively atmosphere throughout the day. The Main Stage schedule is as follows: 11 a.m. - noon: Rosella & The Visions 12:30 - 1:30 p.m.: WLU All-Star Band 2 - 3 p.m.: Brother Randall 3:30 - 4:30 p.m.: Zane Run 5 - 6 p.m.: Mr. Fancy Pants 6:30 - 7:30 p.m.: The Trainjumpers 8 - 9 p.m.: Joshua Lee & The Nice Dream As if the Main Stage wasn't enough to satiate the hunger for music, the second stage will host a selection of talented artists to keep the beats flowing seamlessly. Attendees can enjoy the following side stage performances: 1:30 - 2 p.m.: Faire May 3 - 3:30 p.m.: David James 4:30 - 5 p.m.: Chump 6 - 6:30 p.m.: Isaiah Keez 7:30 - 8 p.m.: Corvus While the music will undoubtedly be a major draw, the Wheeling Arts Fest will also feature an incredible Artist Market, where attendees can immerse themselves in a vibrant showcase of creativity and craftsmanship. The Artist Market will be brimming with dozens of vendors offering an array of handcrafted treasures and unique wares. Some of the talented vendors at the Artist Market include: A Frayed Knot Macrame Acute Peach Art Apartment Two Art Cat's Paw Art Studio Colleen’s Crafty Creations LLC East Wheeling Clay Works Fuzzy Whale Paper Co. Haunted Holistics Lone Stone Designs Morgan Wiedebusch Opossum Pouch Soft Goods Papa Faith Peaceniks Creations RōDōWV Art Rust Belt Stained Glass Sarah Sweeney Designs Scott Hanson Illustration Shapelessflame Stone Cottage Apothecary Syd Weiler Illustration The Dreambow Factory Time-to-Dye WildHeart Arts Witty Voyager Wonder Witch Co. "We are thrilled to showcase such an incredible lineup of musicians and artisans at this year's Wheeling Arts Fest," said Rosemary Ketchum, Wheeling Arts and Cultural Commission co-chair. "Our community's vibrant creativity will be on full display, and we invite everyone to come and celebrate with us, supporting local talent and experiencing the magic of art and music coming together." You can join the Wheeling Arts and Cultural Commission at Wheeling Park on Saturday, August 5th, from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., to be part of this unforgettable celebration of art and music. Admission to the festival is free, and everyone is welcome. This event is supported by the Wheeling Arts and Cultural Commission and several community sponsors, including Elle & Jack’s, West Liberty University, Kalkreuth Roofing and Sheet Metal, Climate Smart Business Solutions, Herndon, Morton, Herndon, & Yaeger Law, WTRF, Stratford Springs, Towngate Theatre, Public Market, Paree Insurance, Erin Yeager Photography and Thomas the Stone and Thomas Turtle. Stay up to date with the Wheeling Arts and Cultural Commission by following them on Facebook and Instagram. Read the full article
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latinboxsports · 2 years
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Wild Card Boxing 🥊 Gym. Appreciate the love @freddieroach Tristan Kalkreuth at @wildcardboxingclub 📸: @tristankalkreuth (at Wild Card Boxing Gym In Los Angeles, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CiVwjN6uE6q/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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histoireettralala · 4 years
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Jena and Auerstaedt
While Davout was driving the main Prussian army from the field at Auerstaedt, Napoleon was defeating Hohenlohe on the plains between Jena and Weimar. The outcome of this engagement was never really in question. By the time the battle had reached its climax, Napoleon had mustered more than ninety-thousand men under his direct command; whereas Hohenlohe fought the greater part of the day with only forty thousand men. Nor did the arrival of Rüchel’s thirteen thousand men in the middle of the afternoon appreciably change the situation. Even had the numbers been equal, Hohenlohe was no match for Napoleon; and while the Prussian soldiers fought and died bravely, they were pitted against the finest and most experienced troops on the Continent. The French victory was complete, and the entire Prussian army was in disorder and retreat by nightfall.
When darkness and exhaustion interceded on the behalf of the fleeing Prussian troops, the III Corps camped on the field of battle (between Eckartsberg and Auerstaedt). Davout then wrote to the Emperor, dated at Eckartsberg, October 14, announcing that he had fought the Prussian army of the Duke of Brunswick accompanied by the King; and that he had driven them back upon Weimar in confusion. Napoleon at first doubted the report, which Colonel Falcon brought him in the early hours of the fifteenth, and he is reported to have remarked, in reference to the fact that Davout wore glasses, “your Marshal is seeing double”. However, as additional reports poured into headquarters throughout the morning, it gradually became clear that the battle which had taken place at Jena had not involved the entire Prussian army, nor even the major portion of the enemy’s forces. The fact that it had been Davout’s III Corps which had stopped the main enemy army, and that the Emperor would have to share his victory with one of his subordinates, which he had never done in the past, was becoming painfully clear.
Napoleon was fully aware that his throne, his position in Europe, and his popularity with the French people was based largely upon his military reputation. This reputation must, therefore, be guarded and enhanced. France must believe that only the Emperor could win great victories, and bring glory and peace to the Continent. He did not intend to share this great victory over the renowned Prussian army with one of his lieutenants. This is not to say that he did not heap praise, honors, and reward upon the future Duke of Auerstaedt. “My cousin”, he wrote Davout on October 16, “I send you my compliments with all my heart one your fine conduct. I regret the loss of your brave men; but they have died on the field of honor. Extend to all of your corps and your generals my satisfaction. They have acquired an everlasting right to my esteem and recognition.” And to Murat he wrote; “Marshal Davout has had a superb affair; he alone has battled 60 000 Prussians.” While to Talleyrand he wrote: “He [Davout] has fought the entire day and has put to flight more than 60 000 men commanded by Moellendorf, Kalkreuth and the King in person. This army corps has covered itself with glory.”
Yet Napoleon considered the two engagements to have been one battle - Jena - and Davout to have formed the right flank of that battle, as he had at Austerlitz and would at Wagram. Neither the name of Auerstaedt nor Eckartsberg appeared in the “5th Bulletin of the Grand Army”. In one short paragraph of the Bulletin which ran six and a half pages, the Emperor summed up the achievements of Davout’s corps “at our right”. Furthermore, in the official account of the action which appeared in the Moniteur and which was referred to as the “Battle of Jena”, only eight lines of the eight-page article pertained to the fighting of the III Corps. It was thus left to history to rectify this deliberate error by the use of the double title of Jena-Auerstaedt. This terminology was adopted by the Prussians from the outset. In fact, they quite correctly saw in the action at Auerstaedt a much more serious defeat than that at Jena. Had the Duke of Brunswick been victorious and thrown Davout back into the Saale, it would have offset the defeat of Hohenlohe and left the Prussians in the field with a substantial army - reinforced by Würtenberg - behind which the shattered forces of Hohenlohe and Rüchel could have rallied. In this manner the campaign would have continued and moved into a second phase, rather than becoming a contest between an army on the one hand, and a mass of fleeing soldiers on the other.
The lingering impression of Auerstaedt was brought out most clearly in 1867 when the Prussian King William paid a visit to the Napoleonic collection in the Invalides during his stay in Paris. As Marshal Canrobert was showing his royal guest the portraits of the Marshals of the Empire, the King stopped at one and asked who he was. When Canrobert replied that it was Marshal Davout, the Prince of Eckmühl, the King exclaimed: “Marshal, you have not named all of Marshal Davout’s titles; he was also called the Duke of Auerstaedt. Prussia has not forgotten!”
John G. Gallaher - The Iron Marshal, a Biography of Louis Nicolas Davout.
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