voleur de chevaux - ορισμός. Τι είναι το voleur de chevaux
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Τι (ποιος) είναι voleur de chevaux - ορισμός

MEDIEVAL DEFENSIVE OBSTACLE
Chevaux de frise; Chevaux-De-Frise; Chevaux-de-Frise; Chevaux-de-frise; Cheval de Frise; Cheval-de-frise; Cheveaux-de-frise
  • Confederate]] ''cheval de frise'' at the Fort Mahone defenses during the [[siege of Petersburg]]
  • ''Chevaux de frise'', according to the later use of the term, could include broken glass studding the top of a wall in a nineteenth-century fort.
  • Hessian]] map showing the placement of ''chevaux de frise'' in the Delaware River in 1777
  • The "knife rest" or "Spanish rider" is a modern wire obstacle functionally similar to the ''cheval de frise'', and sometimes called that.

Le Voleur (magazine)         
Le Voleur (journal); Le Voleur illustré
Le Voleur was an illustrated literary magazine published weekly in Paris from 1828 until 1907. It was established by Charles Lautour-Mézeray and Émile de Girardin.
Petits-Chevaux         
Petits Chevaux
Petits-Chevaux, French for "little horses", is a gambling game played with a mechanical device consisting of a board perforated with a number of concentric circular slits, in which revolve, each independently on its own axis, figures of jockeys on horseback, distinguished by numbers or colors. The bystanders having staked their money according to their choice on a board marked in divisions for this purpose, the horses are started revolving rapidly together by means of mechanism attached to the board, and the horse which stops nearest a marked goal wins, every player who has staked on that horse receiving so many times his stake.
Cheval-de-frise         
·noun A piece of timber or an iron barrel traversed with iron-pointed spikes or spears, five or six feet long, used to defend a passage, stop a breach, or impede the advance of cavalry, ·etc.

Βικιπαίδεια

Cheval de frise

The cheval de frise (plural: chevaux de frise [ʃə.vo də fʁiz], "Frisian horses") was a defensive obstacle, existing in a number of forms, principally as a static anti-cavalry obstacle but also quickly movable to close breaches. The term was also applied to underwater constructions used to prevent the passage of ships or other vessels on rivers. In the anti-cavalry role the cheval de frise typically comprised a portable frame (sometimes just a simple log) with many projecting spikes. Wire obstacles ultimately made this type of device obsolete.

During the American Civil War the Confederates used them more than the Union forces. During World War I, armies used chevaux de frise to temporarily plug gaps in barbed wire. Barbed wire chevaux de frise were used in jungle fighting on the South Pacific islands during World War II.

The term is also applied to defensive works on buildings. This includes a series of closely set upright stones found outside the ramparts of Iron Age hillforts in northern Europe, or iron spikes outside homes in Charleston, South Carolina.