41st Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery - meaning and definition. What is 41st Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery
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What (who) is 41st Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery - definition


41st Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery         
MILITARY UNIT
41 Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery
41 Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery was formally raised in Egypt during March 1916 for service with the 11th Field Artillery Brigade, part of 4th Division Artillery. Today 41st Field Battery is one of 4 batteries that make up the 1st Field Regiment, part of 7 Brigade.
104th Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery         
MILITARY UNIT
104 Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery
The 104 Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery was formed in the town of Moascar in Egypt during March 1916 during the First World War, as the 104th Field Artillery (Howitzer) Battery, part of 4th Field Artillery Brigade. The battery was disbanded in 1919, but the name was used for a new battery raised in 1965, which later formed part of the Auustralian military involvement in the Vietnam War.
105th Medium Battery, Royal Australian Artillery         
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Officers of the battery inside a dugout, Ypres, August 1917</div>
MILITARY UNIT
105th Field Battery, Royal Australian Artillery
The 105th Medium Battery is a unit of the Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery that can trace its history back to March 1916, when it was raised as 105th Howitzer Battery in Egypt. The battery is based at Gallipoli Barracks, Enoggera, Queensland, as a full-time regular army unit and is one of three batteries that make up the 1st Regiment, in the 7th Brigade.