russisches Roulett - definitie. Wat is russisches Roulett
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Wat (wie) is russisches Roulett - definitie

MILITARY UNIT
Russisches Schutzkorps Serbien; Russian Corps; Russian Factory Protective Group
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German-Russian Museum         
MUSEUM IN GERMANY
German-Russian Museum Berlin-Karlshorst; German-Russian Museum
The German-Russian Museum Berlin-Karlshorst (Deutsch-Russisches Museum Berlin-Karlshorst) is dedicated to German-Soviet and German-Russian relations with a focus on the German-Soviet war 1941–1945.
Museum Berlin-Karlshorst         
MUSEUM IN GERMANY
German-Russian Museum Berlin-Karlshorst; German-Russian Museum
The Museum Berlin-Karlshorst, previously named German-Russian Museum Berlin-Karlshorst (Deutsch-Russisches Museum Berlin-Karlshorst) is dedicated to German-Soviet and German-Russian relations with a focus on the German-Soviet war of 1941–1945.
roulette         
  • caricature]] by [[James Gillray]], 1822
  • ''"Gwendolen at the roulette table"'' – 1910 illustration to [[George Eliot]]'s "[[Daniel Deronda]]".
  • Negative progression system (e.g. Martingale)
  • Positive progression system (e.g. Paroli)
  • French roulette
GAME OF CHANCE
Roulett; Online roulette; Roulette wheel; Professional Roulette System JetSet & Utopia; Corner Bet; Carre Bet; French roulette; European roulette; American roulette
n.
1) to play roulette
2) Russian roulette

Wikipedia

Russian Protective Corps

The Russian Protective Corps (German: Russisches Schutzkorps, Russian: Русский охранный корпус, Serbian: Руски заштитни корпус / Ruski zaštitni korpus) was an armed force composed of anti-communist White Russian émigrés that was raised in the German occupied territory of Serbia during World War II. Commanded for almost its whole existence by Lieutenant General Boris Shteifon, it served primarily as a guard force for factories and mines between late 1941 and early 1944, initially as the "Separate Russian Corps" then Russian Factory Protective Group. It was incorporated into the Wehrmacht on 1 December 1942 and later clashed with the communist-led Yugoslav Partisans and briefly with the Chetniks. In late 1944, it fought against the Red Army during the Belgrade Offensive, later withdrawing to Bosnia and Slovenia as the Germans retreated from the Balkans. After Shteifon′s death in Zagreb, the Independent State of Croatia, on 30 April 1945, Russian Colonel Anatoly Rogozhin took over and led his troops farther north to surrender to the British in southern Austria. Unlike most other Russian formations that fought for Nazi Germany, Rogozhin and his men, who were not formally treated as Soviet citizens, were exempt from forced repatriation to the Soviet Union and were eventually set free and allowed to resettle in the West.