British Territorial Army - traducción al holandés
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British Territorial Army - traducción al holandés

ELEMENT OF THE BRITISH ARMY
British Territorial Army; British Army/Territorial Army; Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve; Territorial Army (UK); T.A.V.R.; UK Territorial Army; Territorial Army (United Kingdom); Army Reserve(United Kingdom); Army Reserve (UK); Reserve of Officers; British Army Reserve; Territorial Army Reserve of Officers; TAVR II; TA (UK)
  • 46th Infantry Brigade]], 15th (Scottish) Infantry Division, advance along a lane near Caumont, 30 July 1944.
  • 100px
  • 100px
  • Infantry of 50th (Northumbrian) Division moving up past a knocked-out German 88mm gun near 'Joe's Bridge' over the Meuse-Escaut Canal in Belgium, 16 September 1944

British Territorial Army         
Engelse Territoriale Leger
territorial waters         
  • exclusive economic zone]]
  • [[Peru]] claims territorial waters out to 200 nmi.
  • Internal and external territorial waters of the Philippines prior to the adoption of new baselines in 2009.
COASTAL WATERS THAT ARE PART OF A NATION-STATE'S SOVEREIGN TERRITORY
Territorial Waters; Territorial sea; Territorial seas; Contiguous zone; U.S. territorial waters; 12 mile limit; 12-mile limit; National sea boundary; Sovereign waters; Territorial water; Maritime belt; Home water
territoriale wateren
the British Museum         
  • Room 21 – [[Mausoleum at Halicarnassus]], one of the [[Seven Wonders of the Ancient World]], mid-4th century BC
  • left
  • Proposed British Museum Extension, 1906
  • Human Headed Winged Lions]] and reliefs from [[Nimrud]] with the [[Balawat Gates]], c. 860 BC
  • Room 9 – [[Assyrian palace reliefs]], [[Nineveh]], 701–681 BC
  • External view of the World Conservation and Exhibition Centre at the museum, 2015
  • Room 33a – [[Amaravati Sculptures]], southern India, 1st century BC and 3rd century AD
  • Gallery 50 – View down the Roman Britain gallery
  • Reading Room]].
  • Great Court]] roof, 2005
  • The museum's main entrance
  • Room 18 – [[Parthenon]] marbles from the [[Acropolis of Athens]], 447 BC
  • A few of the [[Elgin Marbles]] (also known as the Parthenon Marbles) from the East [[Pediment]] of the [[Parthenon]] in Athens.
  • King Edward VII's]] Galleries, 1914
  • Room 4 – [[Colossal red granite statue of Amenhotep III]], 1350 BC
  • Entrance ticket to the British Museum, London 3 March 1790
  • Room 17 – Reconstruction of the [[Nereid Monument]], c. 390 BC
  • Grenville]] Library, 1875
  • Room 52 – Ancient Iran with the [[Cyrus Cylinder]],  559–530 BC
  • Mausoleum of Halicarnassus]] Room, 1920s
  • Sir Robert Smirke]]'s west wing under construction, July 1828
  • Percival David collection]] of Chinese ceramics
  • Room 4 – The [[Rosetta Stone]], key to the decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs, 196 BC
  • The [[Rosetta Stone]] on display in the British Museum in 1874
  • [[Sir Hans Sloane]]
  • Wide view of the Great Court
  • Duveen]] Gallery, 1980
  • Montagu House]], c. 1715
  • Room 61 – The famous false fresco 'Pond in a Garden' from the [[Tomb of Nebamun]], c. 1350 BC
  • Room 24 – The [[Wellcome Trust]] Gallery of Living and Dying, with [[Hoa Hakananai'a]], a ''[[moai]]'', in the centre
  • Sir [[Leonard Woolley]] holding the excavated [[Sumer]]ian [[Queen's Lyre]], 1922
NATIONAL MUSEUM IN LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM
Brit. Mus; Brit. Mus.; British Museum London; The British Museum; British Museum Department of Libraries and Archives; British Museum Department of Africa, Oceania and the Americas; British Museum Department of Conservation, Documentation and Science; British Museum Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities; British Museum Department of Prehistory and Europe; British Museum Department of Prints and Drawings; British Museum Act 1955; British Museum Act 1924; British Museum Act 1839; British Museum Act 1962; British Museum Act 1946; British Museum Act 1930; British Museum Act 1878; British Museum Act 1932; British Museum Act 1938; London British Museum; British Museum Publications; British museum; British Museum, London; Sloane library; Sloane Library; Www.britishmuseum.org; The British Museum Press; British Museum Press; Sainsbury African Galleries; Sainsbury Exhibitions Gallery; British Museum Department of Greece and Rome; British Museum Department of Conservation and Scientific Research; British Museum Research Publications; Museum of Looting; British Museum Department of Britain, Europe and Prehistory; British Museum Catalogue; Britiſh Muſeum
het Britse Museum (het nationale museum in Londen met de grootste collectie van oudheden in de wereld)

Definición

Territorial Army
¦ noun (in the UK) a volunteer force locally organized to provide a reserve of trained manpower for use in an emergency.

Wikipedia

Army Reserve (United Kingdom)

The Army Reserve is the active-duty volunteer reserve force of the British Army. It is separate from the Regular Reserve whose members are ex-Regular personnel who retain a statutory liability for service. The Army Reserve was known as the Territorial Force from 1908 to 1921, the Territorial Army (TA) from 1921 to 1967, the Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve (TAVR) from 1967 to 1979, and again the Territorial Army (TA) from 1979 to 2014.

The Army Reserve was created as the Territorial Force in 1908 by the Secretary of State for War, Richard Haldane, when the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 combined the previously civilian-administered Volunteer Force, with the mounted Yeomanry (at the same time the Militia was renamed the Special Reserve).

Haldane planned a volunteer "Territorial Force", to provide a second line for the six divisions of the Expeditionary Force which he was establishing as the centerpiece of the Regular Army. The Territorial Force was to be composed of fourteen divisions of infantry and fourteen brigades of cavalry, together with all the supporting arms and services needed for overseas war, including artillery, engineers commissariat and medical support. The new Special Reserve was to take over the depots of the militia, as an expanded reserve for the Regular Army. Under multiple political pressures, Haldane altered the public purpose of the Territorial Force in his Territorial and Reserve Forces Act to home defence, at the last moment but did not alter the planned structure. During the First World War, by the end of April 1915, six full Territorial divisions had been deployed into the fight.

Between the wars the Territorial Army (as it was now called) was re-established to be the sole means of expansion in future wars, but it was smaller than before and poorly resourced. Yet eight TA divisions were deployed before the fall of France. After the Second World War, the TA was reconstituted with ten divisions, but then successively cut until rebuilding began in 1970, with numbers peaking at nearly 73,000. It was then run down again despite a major role in the Iraq and Afghanistan operations, bottoming at an estimated 14,000. From 2011 that trend was reversed and a new target of 30,000 trained manpower set with resourcing for training, equipment and the emphasis restored to roles for formed units and sub-units.

During periods of total war, the Army Reserve is incorporated by the Royal Prerogative into Regular Service under one code of Military Law for the duration of hostilities or until de-activation is decided upon. After the Second World War, for example, the Territorial Army, as it was known then, was not demobilised until 1947. Army Reservists normally have a full-time civilian job or career, which in some cases provides skills and expertise that are directly transferable to a specialist military role, such as NHS employees serving in Reservist Army Medical Services units. All Army Reserve personnel have their civilian jobs protected to a limited extent by law should they be compulsorily mobilised. There is, however, no legal protection against discrimination in employment for membership of the Army Reserve in the normal course of events (i.e. when not mobilised).

Ejemplos de uso de British Territorial Army
1. A jury has acquitted two British Territorial Army soldiers of charges that they raped a local woman last summer while they were in Wyoming for training.
2. "I was quite well made, and nobody joked with me." After graduating from the Glasgow College of Food Technology, he joined the British Territorial Army.