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Raiding





Encyclopedia results for Raiding

  1. Raiding

    Raiding may refer to The present participle of the verb Raid disambiguation raid , a word which itself has several meanings Raiding, Austria , a town in the district of Oberpullendorf in Burgenland in Austria disambig ca Raiding es Raiding ...   more details



  1. Raiding, Austria

    Infobox Town AT name Raiding name local image coa 100px Raiding.jpg image map Map at raiding.png image photo Center of Raiding.jpg imagesize 300px image caption state Burgenland regbzk district Oberpullendorf district Oberpullendorf population 846 population as of 2005 population ref pop dens 65 area 13.1 elevation 253 lat deg 47 lat min 34 lat hem N lon deg 16 lon min 32 lon hem E postal code 7321 area code mayor Markus Landauer website http www.raiding.at www.raiding.at Raiding lang hu Doborj n , lang hr Rajnof is a small Austria n market town in the District of Oberpullendorf district Oberpullendorf , Burgenland . It is the birthplace of Franz Liszt . Geography The municipality lies on Raiding Creek in Middle Burgenland Raiding is the only borough in the municipality. History Raiding was first documented in 1425 as Dobornya . Like the rest of Burgenland, Raiding belonged to Kingdom of Hungary Hungary from c. 1000 to 1920 21. After the end of the First World War , Western Hungary was given to Austria with the Treaties of Treaty of St. Germain St. Germain and Treaty of Trianon Trianon there it formed the new province of Burgenland. In 1971, Raiding was merged with Unterfrauenhaid and Lackendorf into a larger municipality, which was later dissolved. Raiding has been a market town since 1990. Politics The municipal council has 15 seats with party mandates as follows SP 9, VP 6, FP 0, Austrian Green Party Gr ne 0 , and other lists 0. Culture and Landmarks The Liszt Museum in the house where he was born Business and Infrastructure Viticulture is the main business in Raiding. Other industries there include metal construction and soda water production. People Paul Iby , Bishop ... district Category Cities and towns in Oberpullendorf District bs Raiding bg ca Raiding de Raiding es Raiding eo Raiding fr Raiding hr Doborjan it Raiding hu Doborj n nl Raiding ja pt Raiding ru sk Raiding vo Raiding war Raiding, Austria ...   more details



  1. Slave raiding

    slavery Slave raiding is the military practise of performing a Raid military raid for the purpose of capturing people and bring them out of the raid area to serve as slaves. Sometimes seen as a normal part of war fare it is nowadays widely consired a crime. The practise of slave raiding is known to have occurred Some of the earliest surviving written records of slave raiding are from Sumer in Iraq and Mohenjo Daro in Pakistan . Overview see also Atlantic slave trade Arab slave trade The act of slave raiding involves an organized and concerted attack on a Human settlement settlement or region , with the purpose being the taking of the areas people. The people collected are enslaved. Once turned into slaves, they are often kept in some form of slave pen. From the pen, the slave takers will then move the slaves to some form of transportation such as a ship or Camel train camel caravan . Slave raiding was a violent form of economic development where a Economic shortage resource shortage was addressed with the acquisition by force of the desired resource, in this case human labor. Other than the element of slavery being present, such violent seizure of a resource does not differ from similar raid military raids to gain territory, oil , food , water or any other desired commodity . Slave raiding was a large and lucrative trade on the coasts of Africa , in ancient Europe , Mesoamerica and in medieval Asia . Slavery in the United States American slavery , the Caribbean , Central America and South America was predicated on a series of European countries endorsing and supporting slave raiding between African tribes to supply the mass quantities of Africans, who later became the workforce of agricultural plantations in the Americas. The many alternative methods of obtaining human beings to work in indentured or other Unfree labour involuntary conditions , as well as cultural changes have reduced the need for slave raiding and it is no longer widely practiced. An exception to this takes ...   more details



  1. Employee raiding

    In business , employee raiding is the practice of unlawfully inducing an employee to leave one employer and take up employment with another employer. The purpose of employee raiding is usually to gain access to unique or rare knowledge or skills which the employee may possess. Taking the employee gives the raider an unfair competitive advantage. Ethical and legal dilemmas over employee raiding arise from the conflict of interests between an employee s right to free access to the labour market, and an employer s right to protect knowledge and skills which it regards as company property. Employers may attempt to protect themselves against the most damaging effects of employee raiding by inserting non compete clause s into employment contracts. With increasing competition between companies sharing the same field of business, there have been non disclosure forms for employees to sign, preventing employee raiding. The extreme difficulty in verifying this is a major example of how it poses a threat to all companies. Unreferenced date March 2007 See also unfair competition trade secrets Category Business ethics ...   more details



  1. Party Raiding

    Party Raiding is the term for members of one political party voting in another party s primary in an effort to either nominate a weaker candidate or at the very least prolong divided support between two or more contenders for that party s nomination especially for President . ref name Issacharoff cite book title The Law of Democracy last Issacharoff first Samuel year 2007 publisher Thompson West isbn 1587784602 pages 276 ref Party raiding can only occur in jurisdictions which allow open primary voting. As examples, Texas permits open primary voting though a voter cannot vote in both primaries , while neighboing Oklahoma operates under a closed primary system with one catch a state party can open its primary to independent voters at the sole discretion of the party chairman . A notable example of attempted party raiding was The Rush Limbaugh Show Operation Chaos Operation Chaos in the Democratic Party United States presidential primaries, 2008 Democratic primary in 2008 when Rush Limbaugh encouraged Republican Party United States Republicans to vote for Hillary Clinton in an effort to weaken Barack Obama politically. ref cite news url http latimesblogs.latimes.com washington 2008 04 rush limbaugh.html work The Los Angeles Times title Top of the Ticket date April 29, 2008 ref References reflist Category Elections in the United States ...   more details



  1. Ram-raiding

    Ram raiding is a variation on burglary in which a van , SUV , car, or other heavy vehicle is driven through the windows or doors of a closed shop, usually a department store or jeweller s shop, to allow the perpetrators to loot it. This act has occurred since at least the mid 1930s. The term came into widespread use after a series of such raids in Belfast in 1979 that was covered in news reports and in countries such as Australia that inspired a series of similar crimes. Notably, large trucks are used to break into technology companies and steal high value equipment for resale on the black market . Image Bollard ramkraakbeveiliging.jpg thumb right 240px A bollard in front of a shop to deter ram raiders. Commercial properties in areas prone to ram raids often erect strong wiktionary barrier barriers or obstructions, such as bollard s, to discourage such attacks. Automated teller machine ATM centres are also victims of ram raiding. Many companies have come up with solutions to ram raiding. ref http www.dailytelegraph.com.au money atm ram raiders foiled story e6frezc0 1111117254514 Raminator foils ATM ram raids. The Daily Telegraph. 21 Aug. 2008. ref Everything from electronic bollards to electronic barriers have been employed to keep property from the raiders. Citation needed date March 2009 Another solution is security guards, but teams of round the clock security are expensive and often not the most economical way of dealing with ram raiding. Fictional portrayals Trivia date February 2010 In the opening scenes of the 1959 British Film Too Many Crooks a car with a customised bumper rams through a jewellers shop window to destroy the security grille. In season 2, episode 1 of the TV series Knight Rider 1982 TV series Knight Rider one of the characters uses an armored Peterbilt to break into a top secret munitions dump. The practice was portrayed in the 1994 movie Shopping ... store. The Australian drama Dangerous TV series Dangerous features ram raiding as a central ...   more details



  1. Trench raiding

    Trench raiding was a feature of trench warfare which developed during World War I , pioneered by the Canadian Corps . It was the practice of making small scale surprise attacks on enemy position. Raid military Raids were made by both sides in the conflict and always took place at night for reasons of stealth. Any attempt to raid a trench during daylight hours would have been pointless because it would have been quickly spotted enemy machine gun ners and sniper s had a clear view of No Man s Land no man s land and could easily shoot anyone who showed their head above the trench parapet . Image out at night by small teams of men who would black up their faces with burnt cork before crossing the barbed wire and other debris of no man s land to infiltrate enemy trench systems. The distance between friendly and enemy front lines varied, but was generally several hundred metres. Despite the fact that World War I was the first conflict to be fought by Armoured warfare mechanized means, trench raiding was very similar to Medieval warfare Equipment medieval warfare insofar as it was fought face to face with crude weaponry. Trench raiders were lightly equipped for stealthy, unimpeded movement. Typically, raiding parties were armed with deadly homemade trench raiding club s, bayonet s, Trench knife trench knives , hatchet s, Pickaxe Pickaxe handle pickaxe handles and brass knuckles . The choice of weaponry was deliberate the raiders intention was to kill or capture people quietly, without drawing attention to their activities. Clearly, this would have been impossible if they had routinely ... raiding had multiple purposes. Typically, the intention would be one or more of the following ... procedure to notify sentries along the line whenever raiding parties were sent out, and to use ... Daring Innovation The Canadian Corps and Trench Raiding on the Western Front editor last Horn ... Trench raiding Category Trench warfare Raiding ...   more details



  1. Commerce raiding

    U.S. and British privateers were also actively raiding each other s shipping during the War of 1812 ... the pressure on the shipping lanes. The Japanese Navy participated in commerce raiding, but concentrated ... . DEFAULTSORT Commerce Raiding Category Economic warfare Category Naval warfare Category Commerce ...   more details



  1. Trench raiding club

    Trench raiding clubs were homemade Melee weapon m l e weapons used by both the Allies of World War I Allies and the Central Powers during World War I . Club weapon Clubs were used during nighttime trench raiding expeditions as a quiet and effective way of killing or wounding enemy soldiers. The clubs were usually made out of wood. It was common practice to fix a metal object at the striking end e.g. an empty Mills bomb in order to maximize the injury inflicted. Another common design comprised a simple Stick fighting stave with the end drilled out and a lead weight inserted, with rows of large Hobnail footwear hobnails hammered in around its circumference. Most designs had some form of cord or leather strap at the end to wrap around the user s wrist. Trench clubs were manufactured in bulk by units based behind the lines. Typically, regimental carpenters and metal workers would make large numbers of the same design of club. They were generally used along with other quiet weapons such as trench knife trench knives , hatchet s and Pickaxe Pickaxe handle pickaxe handles backed up with revolver s and hand grenade s. In popular culture In the film Defendor , the title character uses a trench club on a chain as his primary weapon and states that it had once belonged to his grandfather. See also Hand to hand combat Trench warfare External links http www.channel4.com history microsites L lostgeneration ww1 popup 611.html Photo of hob nailed trench club in Imperial War Museum http www.diggerhistory.info pages weapons enemy ww1.htm Photo of hob nailed trench club in a private collection http www.1914 1918.net Diaries wardiary 2msex.htm Account of a raid where a trench club was used to kill an officer Category World War I infantry weapons Category M l e weapons ...   more details



  1. Combat Rubber Raiding Craft

    No footnotes date June 2008 Refimprove date June 2008 Image Combat Rubber Raiding Craft manned by SEAL Team 5.jpg thumb right Combat Rubber Raiding Craft manned by SEALs of SEAL Team 5 The F470 Combat Rubber Raiding Craft CRRC , also known as the Combat Rubber Reconnaissance Craft, is a specially fabricated rubber inflatable boat often used by United States Navy SEALs and United States Marine Corps Marines , among others. Though the Zodiac Marine & Pool Zodiac Marine and Pool produces a large range of both inflatable and rigid hulled boats, the name Zodiac has become synonymous with the CRRC. Function The boat can be used for over the horizon transportation, inserting lightly armed raiding parties or reconnaissance teams onto beaches, piers, offshore facilities and larger vessels. The CRRC can be inflated in minutes by foot pump, compressor or CO sub 2 sub tank and can be deployed from shore and a variety of vessels. Additionally, it can be launched from several types of aircraft and submarines equipped with a special lockout chamber . Its chief advantages are stealth, versatility, light weight, compact size when stowed, and the safety imparted by its hyper buoyant nature, which gives it the ability to operate in relatively high seas for a craft of its size. A total of eight individual airtight chambers comprise the F470. The main hull or gunwale contains five intercommunicating chambers, which are separated by internal baffle s and valve s. This means that a single leak will not result in loss of pressure throughout the boat, and that air can be bled between chambers to compensate for loss in one. Two additional chambers, located below the gunwale on either side and called speed skags, provide cushioning for the boat s occupants and additional buoyancy in case of pressure loss in the hull. The final chamber is an inflatable keel tube which runs the length of the craft ... be installed on the Zodiac F470 CRRC Combat Rubber Raiding Craft , and inflates in 40 seconds. Demonstration ...   more details



  1. Cattle raiding in Kenya

    Cattle raiding References Reflist DEFAULTSORT Cattle Raiding In Kenya Category Crime in Kenya ...   more details



  1. Antbear

    The word Antbear is not a scientific word. It has been commonly used to refer to two completely unrelated large, powerful, and lumbering mammals adapted to a lifestyle of raiding termite mounds The Aardvark , an African Animal The South American Giant Anteater disambig ...   more details



  1. File:Appley Dapply cupboard.jpg

    Summary Information Description Illustration of the title character from Appley Dapply s Nursery Rhymes , a mouse raiding a cupboard Source http store.encore editions.com Gifts BeatrixPotter08.html Date 1917 Author Beatrix Potter Permission PD in US, not in UK other versions Licensing PD US 1923 abroad 2014 Category Images by Beatrix Potter ...   more details



  1. Pre-dawn raid

    unreferenced date October 2007 A pre dawn raid refers to a military tactic that involves a group of people, usually military personnel, Raid military raid ing a location in order to gain an upper hand in combat, retrieve an important document or file, or capture a specific person. The hostage is usually of high political influence or a leader of an opposing military institution. Pre dawn raids usually occur during the early morning usually between one and four o clock , when most civilians and military personnel are asleep. The force raiding then makes a covert entry across enemy lines into a civilian area or military encampment. It is then the raiding army or force s goal to carry out the mission of capturing the person, file, or to kill some of the opposing army while they are left defenseless. See also Dawn raid DEFAULTSORT Pre Dawn Raid Category Law enforcement terminology mil stub ...   more details



  1. Malon

    Recurring characters in The Legend of Zelda series Malon Malon , a character in The Legend of Zelda series List of Star Trek races Malon The Malon , an alien race from the Star Trek Voyager television series. Malon, Burkina Faso Malon , a village in Burkina Faso Malon, Homalin , Sagaing Region, Burma Mal n or maloca a military raiding tactic of the Mapuche peoples. Mal n, Zaragoza Mal n is a municipality in the province of Zaragoza, Spain disambig fr Malon people of malaysia ...   more details



  1. File:Turretpeak.jpg

    Summary Information Description Turret Peak, Arizona. Source www.jdburgessonline.com ... turret top2.jpg Bourke, John On the Border with Crook, Time Life Education, 1982. Goodwin, Grenville Western Apache Raiding and Warfare, University of Arizona Press, 1994. Thrapp, Dan The Conquest of Apacheria, University of Oklahoma Press, 1979. Date August 28, 2009 Author unknown, uploaded by Aj4444 Permission other versions Licensing Non free historic image ...   more details



  1. Raid (military)

    of raiding warfare Land Among many tribal societies, raiding was the most common and lethal form of warfare. Taking place at night, the goal was to catch the enemy sleeping to avoid casualties to the raiding party. ref Gat, Azar, War in Human Civilization ref Cattle raiding was a major feature ... English Cattle Raid of Cooley . Small scale raiding warfare was common in Western European warfare of the Middle ... Raiding by sea was known at the time of the Pharoahs , when the shipborne forces of the Sea Peoples ... and riverside targets. Much Viking raiding was carried out as a private initiative with a few ships ... of Strategy ref Raiding did not cease with the decline of the Viking threat in the 11th. century. It remained a common element of the medieval naval warfare. Extensive naval raiding was carried out ... or the Castile Castilian Pero Ni o . ref Longmate 1990 , pp 314 382 ref In the Mediterranean, raiding .... century. ref Crowley 2008 , Chapter 6 The Turkish Sea ref Raiding formed a major component of English ... List of raids Battleplan documentary TV series Blitz Chevauch e Trench raiding References reflist ...   more details



  1. Cutthroat Gap Massacre

    The Massacre of Cutthroat Gap occurred in the spring of 1833 in the Wichita Mountains . ref Hoig, Stan. The Kiowas and the Legend of Kicking Bird . Boulder The University Press of Colorado, 2000. ISBN 0 87081 564 4. ref Osage Nation Osage Indians attacked the Kiowa village of Chief Islandman while most of the warriors were away a party was raiding the Ute Tribe Ute s and the rest were on a American Bison buffalo hunt. They were raiding to acquire Kiowa horses. The Osage killed the few remaining men, and more than 150 Kiowa women and children. Few escaped. The Osage cut the heads from the bodies and left them in a row of kettles spread across the village. The gap, a small fertile valley, was named after this event. The site is located at coord 34.83043 98.81704 region US OK . The Osage took prisoners, horses and the sacred tai me which the Kiowa used for their sun dance. ref http www.blogoklahoma.us Marker.asp?id 117 Blog Oklohoma Cutthroat Gap Massacre. ref References reflist External links http rebelcherokee.labdiva.com massacregap.html Cutthroat Gap Massacre http digital.library.okstate.edu encyclopedia entries C CU012.html Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Cutthroat Gap, Battle of Category Pre state history of Oklahoma US hist stub ...   more details



  1. Battle of Ballast Point

    Orphan date February 2009 The Battle of Ballast Point took place in Tampa, Florida on October 18, 1863. A Union raiding party, landed at the current intersection of Gandy Boulevard and Bayshore Boulevard, under the protracted diversionary bombardment of the city of Tampa and Fort Brooke by two ships, one the Tahoma and the other, to be named. The Union divisions marched up the Hillsborough River to what is now Lowry Park and burned two notorious blockade running ships, the Scottish Chieftain , and the Kate Dale , owned by the future mayor of Tampa, James McKay. Escaping capture by mere minutes, with members of his crew in tow, James McKay sped to the city of Tampa and warned all of the landing party and the fate of his ships. After burning the ships, the Confederate forces were alerted to the raiding party s location, and commenced pursuit. A confederate cavalry unit Oklawaha Rangers caught up with the Union raiders, finally and a full engagement ensued. The union soldiers came under direct fire as they boarded their dinghies, in a tactical retreat. coord missing Florida DEFAULTSORT Ballast Point, Battle Of Category Battles of the Lower Seaboard Theater and Gulf Approach of the American Civil War Category Confederate victories of the American Civil War Category Florida in the American Civil War Battle of Ballast Point AmericanCivilWar battle stub ...   more details



  1. Operation Branford

    Operation Branford was a British Commando raid during the Second World War . The target of the raid was the island of Burhou in the Channel islands . The raiding force was supplied by No. 62 Commando also known as the Small Scale Raiding Force was commanded by Captain land Captain Ogden Smith and consisted of 11 men. The raid took place a few days after the successful Operation Dryad over the night of 7 8 September 1942. Their objective was to establish whether the island was suitable as an artillery battery position to support an attack on Alderney . ref cite web accessdate 23 June 2010 publisher Google title Google book search url http www.google.co.uk search?hl en&client firefox a&hs dkO&rls org.mozilla 3Aen US 3Aofficial&tbs bks 3A1&q commando raid on the Island of Burhou&btnG Search&aq f&aqi &aql &oq &gs rfai ref References Reflist British Commando raids of the Second World War state collapsed coord missing Category Conflicts in 1942 Category Channel Islands Category World War II British Commando raids B Category Battles involving the United Kingdom ...   more details



  1. File:Doolittle LtCol g41191.jpg

    LtCol James H. Doolittle, USAAF Doolittle Raid on Japan, April 1942 Lieutenant Colonel James H. Doolittle, USAAF front , leader of the raiding force, wires a Japanese medal to a 500 pound bomb, during ceremonies on the flight deck of USS Hornet CV 8 , shortly before his force of sixteen B 25B bombers took off for Japan. The planes were launched on 18 April 1942. The wartime censor has obscurred unit patches of the Air Force flight crew members in the background. Official U.S. Navy Photograph Photo 80 G 41191 retrieved from the Naval Historical Center at http www.history.navy.mil photos images g40000 g41191.jpg Licensing PD USGov Military Navy ...   more details



  1. Tomb Raider (disambiguation)

    Tomb Raider may refer to the following articles Tomb Raider , a video game and film franchise Tomb Raider 1996 video game Tomb Raider 1996 video game , the first game in the series Tomb Raider 2000 video game Tomb Raider 2000 video game , a handheld game for Game Boy Color Tomb Raider 2011 video game Tomb Raider 2011 video game , an upcoming series reboot Lara Croft Tomb Raider , a 2001 film based on the video game series Tomb Raider comics Tomb Raider comics Lara Croft , the protagonist of the video game and film series Grave robbery , the act of raiding tombs disambig ...   more details



  1. Charlton Street Gang

    Unreferenced date December 2009 The Charlton Street Gang was a New York street gang and Piracy river pirates during the mid nineteenth century. The Charlton Street Gang was one of the earliest river pirates raiding small cargo ships in the North River New York New Jersey North River of New York Harbor during post American Civil War Civil War period of the 1860s. With the well protected ocean liner s and major shipping vessels reserved for the Manhattan Westside dockyards however, the gang began to raid merchant shipping upriver. Under the leadership of Sadie the Goat , the gang stole a sloop in 1869 and soon began raiding merchant shipping and raiding homes along the Hudson River from the Harlem River as far as Poughkeepsie city , New York Poughkeepsie and Albany, New York . Flying the flag of the Jolly Roger , the gang was extremely successful soon becoming known for kidnapping wealthy men, women, and children for ransom. According to newspapers of the period Sadie the Goat allegedly had forced several male victims to walk the plank . However after several victims had been murdered by the gang local Hudson Valley residents formed a vigilante group and, after several members were killed in a series of violent battles, the gang decided to return to the New York waterfront where they returned to street crime eventually dissolving by the end of the decade. Resources Sifakis, Carl. Encyclopedia of American Crime, New York, Facts on File Inc., 1982 Category Historical gangs of New York City nl Charlton Street Gang ...   more details



  1. Operation Fahrenheit

    Operation Fahrenheit was a British Commando raid during the Second World War . It was carried out by a small group of men from No. 12 Commando and No. 62 Commando over the night of 11 12 November 1942. Captain land Captain O B Micky Rooney and six Non commissioned officers from No. 6 Commando, with two men from No. 62 Commando formed the raiding party. The objective of the raid was to capture German servicemen for interrogation by attacking a signals station at Pointe de Plouezec on the north Brittany coast. One raiding party left Dartmouth on the 11 November in Motor Torpedo Boat MTB 344. After reaching their target they discovered that the cliff tops were heavily mined. Rooney and one of his men checked out the signals station and a nearby pillbox . The signals station was protected by barbed wire and sentries and the pillbox was unoccupied. Rooney decided to carry out a frontal assault on the signals station. Splitting the unit into three groups, they made their way to within yards of the barbed wire. While Rooney was preparing a hand grenade they were heard by the two sentries. Before they could react they were killed by the hand grenade and machine gun fire. The occupants of the signal station were then engaged, killing two who had come into the open. The others returned fire from inside the signals station and it was decided to withdraw before reinforcements arrived. The party successfully re embarked and returned to Dartmouth. ref cite web accessdate 8 June 2010 publisher Combined Operations title The Small Scale Raiding Force url http www.combinedops.com SSRF.htm ref References Reflist British Commando raids of the Second World War coord missing Category Conflicts in 1942 Category World War II British Commando raids F Category Battles involving the United Kingdom Category 1942 in France ...   more details



  1. Teishin Shudan

    nihongo Teishin Shudan Raiding Group was a Empire of Japan Japanese special forces Airborne forces airborne unit during World War II . The unit was a division military division level force, and was part of the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force IJAAF . The Teishin units were therefore distinct from the Marine corps marine Japanese marine paratroopers of World War II parachute units of the Special Naval Landing Force s. History The Imperial Japanese Army developed an airborne paratroop force in the late 1930s, but the program did not receive much attention by the Imperial General Headquarters until review of the success of similar Fallschirmj ger German paratroop units during the Blitzkrieg of 1940. Army paratroops were first deployed in combat during the Battle of Palembang , on Sumatra in the Netherlands East Indies , on 14 February 1942. The operation was well planned, with 425 men of the 1st Parachute Raiding Regiment seizing Palembang airfield, while the paratroopers of the 2nd Parachute Raiding Regiment seized the town and its important oil refinery. Paratroops were subsequently deployed in the Burma campaign . Following this success, in July 1943 , the 1st Glider Tank Troop was formed, with four Type 95 Ha Go light tanks. This unit was eventually expanded to battalion size, with a tank company using 14 Type 2 Ke To light tanks, an infantry company, and a motorized transport company. The paratroop brigades were organized into the Teishin Shudan as the first division level raiding unit, at the main Japanese airborne base, Karasehara Airfield, Ky sh , Japan. It was commanded ... brigade raiding brigade two glider infantry regiments raiding artillery company 120 personnel raiding signals company 140 personnel raiding engineer company 250 personnel The unit had an estimated 5,575 .... Two regiments of Teishin Shudan were formed into the 1st Raiding Group, commanded by Major General ... Raiding Brigade, of this group were assigned to attack American air bases on Luzon and Leyte on the night ...   more details




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