Thirty Years" War - traducción al alemán
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Thirty Years" War - traducción al alemán

WAR PRINCIPALLY FOUGHT IN CENTRAL EUROPE FROM 1618 TO 1648
Thirty Years War; Thirty Years' War overview; Thirty Years’ War; Thirty Years' War/verbose overview; 30-years' War; Thirty-Years War; Thirty Year War; Thirty years war; Thirty year's war; 30 years war; 30 Years War; Thirty Years' war; 30 Years' War; TYW; Thirty Year's War; 30 Year's War; 30-years War; Thirty Years Wars; Thirty years War; Thirty Years war; Thirty Year's war; Thirty years' war; 30 Year War; The Thirty Years War; Bohemian Period; Swedish Period; Danish Period; Danish period; 30-years’-War; Thirty Years’ war; 30-years'-War; 30-year War; 30-Years War; Thirty Years'War; Thirty-Year War; 30-Year War; Swedish War; Swedish War (1630–1635); Swedish War (1630-1635); The 30 Years War; 30 years' war; Low Saxon War; Kejserkrigen; The Emperor's War; La Guerre De Trente Ans; French intervention in the Thirty Years' War; Dreißigjähriger Krieg; Thirty Years' Wars
  • [[Albrecht von Wallenstein]] achieved great military success for the Empire but his power threatened both Ferdinand and the German princes
  • Siege of Stralsund]], 13 May to 4 August 1628
  • > 66%}}
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  • p=250}}
  • Spain]]
  • [[Cardinal Richelieu]], who directed French foreign policy from 1624 until his death in 1642
  • Siege and capture of [[Casale Monferrato]] by French troops, 1630
  • Europe after the Peace of Westphalia, 1648
  • "Winter's King", [[Frederick V of the Palatinate]], whose acceptance of the Bohemian Crown sparked the conflict
  • [[Holy Roman Empire]] after the Peace of Westphalia, 1648
  • [[Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria]] whose seizure of the Palatinate expanded the war
  • The [[Iberian Union]]; Spain's inability to protect Portuguese interests in the 1602 to 1663 [[Dutch–Portuguese War]] was a key factor in the 1640 [[Portuguese Restoration War]]
  • Swedish sovereignty over [[Western Pomerania]] (in blue) was confirmed in 1653
  • The [[Sack of Magdeburg]] in 1631. Of the 25,000 citizens, only 5,000 survived.
  • Contemporary painting showing the [[Battle of White Mountain]] (1620), where Imperial-Spanish forces under [[Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly]] won a decisive victory.
  • Siege of Prague]] in 1648
  • Battle of Breitenfeld]] in 1631.
  • upright=1.8
  • Soldiers plundering a farm
  • class=noviewer
  • Spain]] and the [[Dutch Republic]], 30 January 1648.

Thirty Years' War      
Dreißigjähriger Krieg
Cold War         
  • The [[Pan-European Picnic]] took place in August 1989 on the Hungarian-Austrian border.
  • invasion of Czechoslovakia]] by the Soviet Union in 1968 was one of the biggest military operations on European soil since [[World War II]].
  • Kamenev]] celebrating the second anniversary of the [[October Revolution]]
  • NATO and Warsaw Pact troop strengths in Europe in 1959
  • A manifestation of the [[Finlandization]] period: in April 1970, a Finnish stamp was issued in honor of the 100th anniversary of [[Vladimir Lenin]]'s birth and the Lenin Symposium held in [[Tampere]]. The stamp was the first Finnish stamp issued about a foreign person.
  • NATO and Warsaw Pact troop strengths in Europe in 1973
  • Iranian people protesting against the [[Pahlavi dynasty]], during the [[Iranian Revolution]]
  • 300px
  • Destroyed statue of Lenin]] in [[Zhytomyr]] on 21 February 2014 during the [[Euromaidan]] protests
  • 300px
  • American Relief Administration operations in Russia, 1922
  • August Coup]] in [[Moscow]], 1991
  • The human chain in [[Lithuania]] during the [[Baltic Way]], 23 August 1989
  • 300px
  • US combat operations during the [[Battle of Ia Drang]], [[South Vietnam]], November 1965
  • East German dictator [[Erich Honecker]] lost control in August 1989.
  • The beginning of the 1990s brought a thaw in relations between the superpowers.
  • reached the Moon]] in 1969.
  • Tempelhof Airport]] in Berlin during the Berlin Blockade
  • Pushkin Square]], pictured in 1991
  • SALT II arms limitation treaty]] in Vienna on 18 June 1979.
  • [[Che Guevara]] (left) and [[Fidel Castro]] (right) in 1961
  • The world map of military alliances in 1980
  • 300px
  • Changes in national boundaries after the end of the Cold War
  • European [[colonial empire]]s in Asia and Africa all collapsed in the years after 1945.
  • Cuban tank in the streets of [[Luanda]], [[Angola]], 1976
  • spy aircraft]], 1 November 1962
  • Post-war territorial changes in Europe and the formation of the Eastern Bloc, the so-called "[[Iron Curtain]]"
  • expanded eastwards]] into the former Warsaw Pact and parts of the former Soviet Union.
  • Egyptian leader [[Anwar Sadat]] with Henry Kissinger in 1975
  • August Coup]]
  • USS ''Mt. McKinley'']], 15 September 1950.
  • 300px
  • 300px
  • US Marines]] engaged in street fighting during the liberation of [[Seoul]], September 1950
  • [[Mao Zedong]] and [[Joseph Stalin]] in Moscow, December 1949
  • Allied occupation zones in Germany]]
  • U.S. [[Lend Lease]] shipments to the USSR
  • [[Nikolai Podgorny]] visiting [[Tampere]], [[Finland]] on 16 October 1969
  • [[Otto von Habsburg]], who played a leading role in opening the Iron Curtain
  • Protest in Amsterdam against the deployment of [[Pershing II]] missiles in Europe, 1981
  • 300px
  • [[Mao Zedong]] and US President [[Richard Nixon]], during his visit in [[China]]
  • [[Mikhail Gorbachev]] in one-to-one discussions with US President [[Ronald Reagan]]
  • "[[Tear down this wall!]]" speech: Reagan speaking in front of the [[Brandenburg Gate]], 12 June 1987
  • President Reagan with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher during a working luncheon at [[Camp David]], December 1984
  • The [[Battle of Stalingrad]], considered by many historians as a decisive turning point of World War II
  • INF Treaty]] at the White House, 1987.
  • President Reagan publicizes his support by meeting with [[Afghan mujahideen]] leaders in the White House, 1983.
  • Chilean leader [[Augusto Pinochet]] shaking hands with Henry Kissinger in 1976
  • Delta 183 launch vehicle lifts off, carrying the [[Strategic Defense Initiative]] sensor experiment "Delta Star".
  • Non-socialist states}}
  • regime]] led by [[Pol Pot]], 1.5 to 2 million people died due to the policies of his four-year premiership.
  • The Soviet invasion during [[Operation Storm-333]] on 26 December 1979
  • influence]], after the [[Cuban Revolution]] of 1959 and before the official [[Sino-Soviet split]] of 1961
  • [[Suharto]] of Indonesia attending funeral of five generals slain in [[30 September Movement]], 2 October 1965
  • confer]] in Tehran, 1943
  • Republic of the Congo]]
  • The [[Spasskaya Tower]] had kept its red star and did not restore the two-headed eagle present before communist takeover.
  • [[Clement Attlee]], [[Harry S. Truman]] and [[Joseph Stalin]] at the [[Potsdam Conference]], 1945
  • President Truman signs the [[North Atlantic Treaty]] with guests in the Oval Office.
  • 300px
  • After ten-year-old American [[Samantha Smith]] wrote a letter to [[Yuri Andropov]] expressing her fear of nuclear war, Andropov invited Smith to the Soviet Union.
  • 300px
  • American tanks]] face each other at [[Checkpoint Charlie]] during the Berlin Crisis of 1961.
  • US and USSR/Russian nuclear weapons stockpiles, 1945–2006
  • Finnish president]] [[Urho Kekkonen]] at Moscow in 1960
  • 300px
  • Allied]] troops in [[Vladivostok]], August 1918, during the [[Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War]]
  • Big Three]]" at the [[Yalta Conference]]: [[Winston Churchill]], [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]], and [[Joseph Stalin]], 1945
  • Remains of the "Iron Curtain" in the [[Czech Republic]]
1947–1991 TENSION BETWEEN THE SOVIET UNION AND THE UNITED STATES AND THEIR RESPECTIVE ALLIES
ColdWar; Cold War (1962-1991); The Cold War in the 1950s and 1960s; The Cold War since 1970; Cold war history; Cold war era; Forty-Five Years' War; End of the Cold War (1962-1991); Cold warrior; The cold war; COLD WAR; Cold War (1969-1979); Cold war; The Cold War; Холодная война; Cold Warrior; Western europe during the cold war; Cold-war; Soviet american war; Guerra fria; Drop and cover; Cold War era; Холо́дная война; Kholodnaya voyna; Cold War period; Hot Peace; The Great Game II; History of the Cold War; Cold War I; Old Cold War; First Cold War; 1st Cold War; Cold War 1.0; Cold War One; Cold-War; Confrontation between the US and the Soviet Union; Capitalist-Communist War
der Kalte Krieg (Krieg mit politischen und/oder wirtschaftlichen Mitteln)
Desert Storm         
  • 3rd Armored Division]] along the Line of Departure
  • A M109A2 howitzer belonging to Battery C, 4th Battalion of the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Division (FWD) moves into position to conduct fire missions during the [[Battle of Norfolk]], February 1991.
  • McDonnell Douglas A-4KU Skyhawk]] [[ground-attack aircraft]]
  • title = The British Challenger 1 Main Battle Tank}}</ref>
  • U. S. M1A1 Abrams tanks move out on a mission during Desert Storm in 1991. A [[Bradley IFV]] and logistics convoy can be seen in the background.
  • Aftermath of an Iraq Armed Forces strike on US barracks
  • U.S. Air Force]], which killed  at least 408 civilians in [[Baghdad]]
  • Comfort}}, February 1991
  • Two Iraqi T-55 tanks lie abandoned near Kuwait City on 26 February 1991.
  • An OH-58D Kiowa helicopter departs from a communications site in the desert during Operation Desert Shield
  • Military operations during Khafji's liberation
  • A Bradley IFV burns after being hit by Iraqi [[T-72]] fire.
  • military forces]] retreating from Kuwait.
  • Thanksgiving Day]], 1990.
  • President Bush visiting American troops in Saudi Arabia on Thanksgiving Day, 1990
  • 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry Regiment]] pose with a captured Iraqi tank, February 1991
  • Canadian [[CF-18 Hornet]]s participated in combat during the Gulf War.
  • [[British Army]] [[Challenger 1]] main battle tank during Operation Desert Storm
  • Prince Sultan, Minister of Defence and Aviation]] in Saudi Arabia to discuss how to handle the [[invasion of Kuwait]].
  • Countries that deployed coalition forces or provided support<ref name="auto7"/> (On behalf of Afghanistan, 300 Mujaheddin joined the coalition on 11 February 1991. Niger contributed 480 troops to guard shrines in Mecca and Medina on 15 January 1991.)<ref name="auto7"/>
  • An [[armored bulldozer]] similar to the ones used in the attack
  • 3rd Field Artillery Regiment]], 2nd Armored Division (FWD) conducts artillery strikes on Iraqi positions during the [[1st Gulf War]]. 4-3 FA was the primary fire support battalion for Task Force 1-41 during the [[1st Gulf War]], February 1991.
  • Destroyed Iraqi civilian and military vehicles on the [[Highway of Death]]
  • Ground troop movements 24–28 February 1991 during [[Operation Desert Storm]]
  • Type 59]] tank lies destroyed after a coalition bombing attack during Operation Desert Storm.
  • A destroyed Iraqi Army T-55 tank lies among the wreckage of many other Iraqi vehicles, such as trucks, cars and buses, somewhere along the [[Highway of Death]] in April 1991.
  • 3rd Armored Division]] fire
  • Iraqi tanks destroyed by [[Task Force 1-41 Infantry]], February 1991
  • Republican Guard]] T-55 tank destroyed by Task Force 1–41 Infantry, February 1991
  • The [[USAF]] [[F-117 Nighthawk]], one of the key aircraft used in Operation Desert Storm
  • Approximate area and major clashes in which DU rounds were used
  • Civilians and coalition military forces wave Kuwaiti and Saudi Arabian flags as they celebrate the retreat of Iraqi forces from Kuwait.
  • HMAS ''Sydney'']] in the Persian Gulf in 1991
  • Type 63]] armored personnel carriers and trucks on Highway 8 in March 1991
  • transport helicopter]], after being captured by a US Marine Corps unit at the start of the ground phase of Operation Desert Storm
  • Iraqi Army]].
  • Type 69]] tank destroyed by the French [[Division Daguet]] during Operation Desert Storm
  • Map of Kuwait
  • [[Iraqi Kurds]] fleeing to Turkey shortly after the war
  • Chieftain]] [[main battle tank]]s
  • Kuwaiti Armed Forces [[M-84]] [[main battle tank]]s
  • A M109A2 howitzer belonging to Battery C, 4th Battalion of the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Division (FWD) during the Gulf War, February 1991.
  • M3 Bradleys of L Troop, 3rd ACR, stand in line at a holding area during the build-up to Operation Desert Shield.
  • Tomahawk missile]]. The Gulf War was the last conflict in which [[battleship]]s were deployed in a combat role.
  • American F-15Es parked in Saudi Arabia during Operation Desert Shield
  • Oil well fires rage outside Kuwait City in 1991.
  • Gen. [[Colin Powell]] (left), Gen. [[Norman Schwarzkopf Jr.]], and [[Paul Wolfowitz]] (right) listen as Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney addresses reporters regarding the 1991 Gulf War.
  • American AH-64 Apache helicopters proved to be very effective weapons during the 1991 Gulf War.
  • Destroyed [[LAV-25]]
  • [[Donald Rumsfeld]], US special envoy to the Middle East, meets [[Saddam Hussein]] on 19–20 December 1983.
  • Military personnel examine the remains of a Scud.
  • General Norman Schwarzkopf visit Kuwaiti dignitaries in the aftermath of Operation Desert Storm.
  • 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade]] during the Gulf War
  • Iraqi 'Saddam' main battle tank destroyed during Operation Desert Storm
  • One of the Italian tornadoes used in the operation
  • Marine Artillery played a huge factor in disrupting Iraqi counterattacks during the [[1st Gulf War]], February 1991.
  • F-16C]]
  • Sailors from a US Navy honor guard carry Navy pilot [[Scott Speicher]]'s remains.
  • A sentry patrols along a line-up of OH-58 Kiowa helicopters
  • Coalition troops from Egypt, Syria, Oman, France, and Kuwait during Operation Desert Storm
1990–1991 WAR BETWEEN IRAQ AND AMERICAN-LED COALITION FORCES
First Gulf War; Operation Desert Storm; Desert Storm; Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm; 1991 Persian Gulf War; 1990/1 Gulf War; UN-Iraq war; Operation Desert Shield; Desert Shield; Gulf War I; Gulf War One; Gulf war; 1991 Gulf War; Operation: Desert Storm; Stuart Lockwood; Iraqi wars; Iraq War (1991); 1990 Gulf War; 1991 Iraq war; Naming the Gulf War; The Persian Gulf War; Persain Gulf War; Gulf Crisis; Operation Desert Sword; Persian Gulf war; DESERT STORM; Persian Gulf War of 1991; The Gulf War; Operations Desert Shield; Operation Desert Sabre; American Casualties in Operation Desert Storm; Gulf War 1; Gulf war 1; Desert Shield and Storm; Operation desert shield; 1991 Iraq War; 1990-1991 Iraq War; Desert storm; Operation Desert storm; Naming the gulf war; Gulf 1; Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm; First US-Iraq War; Persian Gulf War; Arabian Gulf War; 1991 Arabian Gulf War; Operation Desert Storm, 1990; 1st Gulf War; DESERT SHIELD; Operation Desert Shield (Gulf War); Operation Desert Shield/Storm; 1990 Gulf Crisis; 1991 Gulf Crisis; 1990-1991 Gulf War; 1990/1991 Gulf Crisis; 1991 Middle East War; Golf War; 1991 Persian Gulf conflict; Kuwait war; Kuwait War; 1990–1991 Iraq War; Operation Desert Shield/Operation Desert Storm; 1990 invasion of Iraq; First Iraq War; Gulf-War; Casualties of the Gulf War; Video Game War; 1990 Iraq War; War of the Persian Gulf; Persian Gulf crisis; Gulf War of 1991
Wüstensturm (auch Name der Militäroperation zur Befreiung Kuwaits 1991)

Definición

war crime
n.
1) to commit a war crime
2) to prosecute war crimes

Wikipedia

Thirty Years' War

The Thirty Years' War was one of the longest and most destructive conflicts in European history, lasting from 1618 to 1648. Fought primarily in Central Europe, an estimated 4.5 to 8 million soldiers and civilians died as a result of battle, famine, and disease, while some areas of what is now modern Germany experienced population declines of over 50%. Related conflicts include the Eighty Years' War, the War of the Mantuan Succession, the Franco-Spanish War, the Dutch-Portuguese War and the Portuguese Restoration War.

Until the 20th century, historians generally viewed the war as a continuation of the religious struggle initiated by the 16th-century Reformation within the Holy Roman Empire. The 1555 Peace of Augsburg attempted to resolve this by dividing the Empire into Lutheran and Catholic states, but over the next 50 years the expansion of Protestantism beyond these boundaries destabilised the settlement. While most modern commentators accept that differences over religion and Imperial authority were important factors in causing the war, they argue its scope and extent were driven by the contest for European dominance between Habsburg-ruled Spain and Austria, and the French House of Bourbon.

Its outbreak is generally traced to 1618, when Emperor Ferdinand II was deposed as king of Bohemia and replaced by the Protestant Frederick V of the Palatinate. Although Imperial forces quickly suppressed the Bohemian Revolt, his participation expanded the fighting into the Palatinate, whose strategic importance drew in the Dutch Republic and Spain, then engaged in the Eighty Years' War. Since rulers like Christian IV of Denmark and Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden also held territories within the Empire, this gave them and other foreign powers an excuse to intervene, turning an internal dynastic dispute into a broader European conflict.

The first phase from 1618 until 1635 was primarily a civil war between German members of the Holy Roman Empire, with support from external powers. After 1635, the Empire became one theatre in a wider struggle between France, supported by Sweden, and Emperor Ferdinand III, allied with Spain. This concluded with the 1648 Peace of Westphalia, whose provisions included greater autonomy within the Empire for states like Bavaria and Saxony, as well as acceptance of Dutch independence by Spain. By weakening the Habsburgs relative to France, the conflict altered the European balance of power and set the stage for the wars of Louis XIV.

Ejemplos de uso de Thirty Years" War
1. At no time in the thirty years war has there been hatred between the people.
2. I tried to get as much as possible advantages out of that situation.‘ She read about the Thirty Years War.
3. Millions of people perished in the Thirty Years War between Catholics and Protestants in the 17th century.
4. Over the centuries the same ground would be strewn with the gore of the Hundred Years War, the Thirty Years War, the Napoleonic wars, the Franco–Prussian War, World War I and World War II.
5. That treaty, which brought to an end the Thirty Years war and inaugurated the modern European state system, also concluded that one state should only take up arms against another and intervene in its affairs if it were itself to be attacked by that state.