2nd WW2 Cumulative History Quiz

Status
Not open for further replies.
That would be why I rated it as an info thingy :p

Anyway, to roughly quote from Nafziger's works on the Waffen SS and other units from WW2...

The Kalmucks are a mongolic people who inhabit the region northwest of the Caspian sea and west of the Volga. They are a nomadic people and Tibetan Bhuddists, and in 1935 Stalin established the area as an autonomous region. When the Germans reached the region, one of the officers involved had previously served as a white Russian cavalry officer during the civil war and knew the Kalmuck language well. Otto Doll was sent there to establish contact, and promised them their indepedence after the war in return for support during it. Doll helped organise the area, raising security troops, abolishing the hated collective farms and eventually raising military units (mostly horsemen). Not long afterwards though the Germans were forced to withdraw from the area, and the population fled with them to avoid Stalin's wrath. Less than a year from the first contacts being made, the Germans had recruited extensively from the Kalmucks, and had enough to form the Kalmuck Cavalry Corps. In German, all the words begin with a "K", hence it's abbreviation, the KKK.

Co-incidentally, it's ranks even included camel riders! It's ranks fought on the eastern front until whittled down until it effectively ceased to exist. Survivors ended up somewhere in Croatia by the end of the war.

Tibetan Bhuddists on camels with German uniforms on? Now that's an interesting unit :D
 
privatehudson said:
That would be why I rated it as an info thingy :p

Anyway, to roughly quote from Nafziger's works on the Waffen SS and other units from WW2...

The Kalmucks are a mongolic people who inhabit the region northwest of the Caspian sea and west of the Volga. They are a nomadic people and Tibetan Bhuddists, and in 1935 Stalin established the area as an autonomous region. When the Germans reached the region, one of the officers involved had previously served as a white Russian cavalry officer during the civil war and knew the Kalmuck language well. Otto Doll was sent there to establish contact, and promised them their indepedence after the war in return for support during it. Doll helped organise the area, raising security troops, abolishing the hated collective farms and eventually raising military units (mostly horsemen). Not long afterwards though the Germans were forced to withdraw from the area, and the population fled with them to avoid Stalin's wrath. Less than a year from the first contacts being made, the Germans had recruited extensively from the Kalmucks, and had enough to form the Kalmuck Cavalry Corps. In German, all the words begin with a "K", hence it's abbreviation, the KKK.

Co-incidentally, it's ranks even included camel riders! It's ranks fought on the eastern front until whittled down until it effectively ceased to exist. Survivors ended up somewhere in Croatia by the end of the war.

Tibetan Bhuddists on camels with German uniforms on? Now that's an interesting unit :D

Ha ha. Thats reasonably obscure. I've read about tibetans captured in Normandy and Cossacks serving the Germans so it not a big surprise.

BTW Merry Christmas everybody (after midnight here.)
 
who asks now, nobody got that ?
 
Zardnaar said:
Ha ha. Thats reasonably obscure. I've read about tibetans captured in Normandy and Cossacks serving the Germans so it not a big surprise.(..)
Wasn't it Koreans captured in Normandy ??

Anyway; I think PrivateHudson can ask another.
 
Nah, let someone else have a go :) Anyone's question
 
Zardnaar said:
Yep- told you it was an easy one. Your turn.
Huzzah for me.
I pass, as I will be absent for the next week and a half, so the next person can take it
 
Small explosive device that looked like a bit like a tiny WW1 tank
 
Wasn't it a remote controlled device that was supposed to be driven onto the allied landing beaches and exploded, but was a complete failure?
 
if it was those small explosive tanks then they were designed for use in areas around the D-Day beaches in brecourt and other parts of the french bocage.
 
They were indeed small guided "tanks" with an explosive. PH got it. They were not such as successful as hoped but they damaged and destroyed many allied tanks and other things. Since they were so small they were not easy to detect.

Adler
 
I'll ask an easy one since I'll br busy later. What two word codename sent on 6th June 1944 sounded like a pregnant woman's craving, and what did it tell the allies had happened?
 
Would it be 'ice cream' or 'dill pickle' :confused: :scan: ? I have no idea until
I get home and look at my books of what it was code for :mischief: .
 
Actually, come to think of it, the code was three words, I just didn't consider "and" in the equation, so there's a hint :p
 
pickles and ice cream?

thanks GOD my wife never had that as a craving...YUUUCK
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom