The Advance Guard of Missions

The Advance Guard of Missions
Author: Clifford Grant Howell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 390
Release: 1912
Genre: Missionaries
ISBN:

To trace some of these refreshing rills of influence, to survey a few of the battle-fields of individual victory, hoping thus to aid the reader in his own deep struggles and help to prepare him for final triumph, is the inspiration of this book. - 1. Marcus Whitman, Missionary Physician to the Indians. 2. John Eliot, Puritan Apostle to the American Indians. 3. The Mayhews, Five Generations of Missionries. 4. David Brainerd, Presbyterian Missionarry to the American Indians. 5. Bartholomew Ziegenbalg, the First Protestant Missionary to India. 6. Hans Egede, Pioneer Lutheran Missionary to Greenland. 7. Count Nicolas Ludwig Zinzendorf, Lutheran Evangelist ; later a Moravian Organizer. 8. The Wesleys, Vangard of a Mighty Movement. 9. Christian Frederick Schwartz, the Most Conspicuous Figure in India during the Eighteenth Century. 10. William Carey, Pioneer Baptist Missionary to India. 11. Henry Martyn, a Church of England Chaplain Missionary to India. 12. Robert Morrison, Pioneer Protestant Apostle to China. 13. Haystack Monument, Erected in Menory of a Prayer Meeting. 14. The Judsons, Pioneer American Missionaries to Burma. 15. Gordon Hall, Protestant Missionary to Western India. 16. Dr. John Scudder, First American Medical Missionary to Ceylon and India. 17. Alexander Duff, The Greatest Missionary Orator. 18. William Butler, Methodist Missionary of Two Continents. 19. Robert And Mary Moffat, Lights in Darkest Africa. 20. David Livingstone, Missionary Explorer. 21. William Taylor, Pioneer Methodist Self-Supporting Missionary. 22. John Williams, Triumphs in the Cannibal Isles. 23. John Gibson Oaton, Presbyterian Missionary to the New Hebrides. 24. Allen Gardiner, Beginning in the Neglected Continent. 25. Guido F. Verbeck, Builders in New Japan. 26. J. Hudson Taylor, Founder of the China Inland Mission. 27. William Miller, Converted Infidel and Baptist Evangelist

Field Manual

Field Manual
Author: United States. Department of the Army
Publisher:
Total Pages: 94
Release: 1944
Genre:
ISBN:

Armor

Armor
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 56
Release: 1995
Genre: Armored vehicles, Military
ISBN:

The magazine of mobile warfare.

The Soviet Conduct of Tactical Maneuver

The Soviet Conduct of Tactical Maneuver
Author: David Glantz
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 291
Release: 2013-11-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 1135183546

First Published in 1991. This book addresses a critical aspect of Soviet maneuver theory that has been almost totally neglected in Western analysis, specifically, Soviet concern for tactical maneuver. Since the 1930s, the Soviets have consistently argued that operational maneuver can be successful only if conducted in conjunction with equally successful tactical maneuver, carried out primarily by forward detach­ments. Forward detachments, the primary tactical maneuver forces tasked with performing critical combat functions, emerged in theory in the 1930s and flourished on the basis of virtually untested concepts until the initial phases of Operation Barbarossa, when the Soviet mobile force structure was destroyed in a matter of weeks. Forward detachments again emerged after the Stalin­ grad Operation in 1943, when the Soviet General Staff required their use to spearhead all operations by mobile forces. After mid-1943, forward detach­ments led the operations of all tank armies and tank and mechanized corps, particularly during exploitation operations. By war's end all forces, mobile and rifle alike, employed forward detachments to lead their operations during the exploitation stage of operations. Forward detachments preempted enemy defenses and collectively formed a coordinated network of forward mobile units which provided coherence to the vast array of advancing Soviet mobile and rifle forces. In the late 1960s, the forward detachment received renewed attention as a critical element which could assist in the conduct of operational maneuver. Today, the Soviets believe that forward detachment operations are the key to conducting successful operations on a battlefield increasingly threatened by deadly high-precision weaponry. Tailored, flexible, battalion-size forward detachments, along with their operational counterparts (corps and brigades), may, in fact, be the model upon which the future Soviet force structure will be based. This volume surveys in detail the conceptual and organizational evolution of the forward detachment as the premier Soviet tactical maneuver force. It vividly demonstrates why forward detachments are suited by their versatile nature to be a precursor of future restructured Soviet units in general.