Port Arthur town of Knights of Round Table
Шрифт:
By the end of July 1904,
the Japanese army had pushed down the
Liaodong peninsula
and was at the outer defenses of
Port Arthur.
The fact that Japanese forces
had closed to within artillery range of the harbor
in early August 1904
led directly to the
naval Battle of the Yellow Sea
which solidified Japan's command of the sea,
where her fleets continued to blockade the harbor.
Virtually all the battles of
the war
until July 1904
were strategic battles for territorial gain or position leading to the investment and siege of the port city.
The port
Port Arthur
eventually fell 2 January 1905
after a long train of battles on land and sea during which the Japanese occupied the whole of the Korean Peninsula, split the Russian Army, devastated the Russian Fleet, and cut off the source of supplies on the railway from Harbin, culminating
in the bloody battle
known as
the Siege of Port Arthur
the Siege of
Port Arthur
(June 1904 - January 1905;
some sources place the siege start in late July, a technical difference due to definitions)."
(from Wikipedia)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L"ushunkou_District
After World War II
"The Japanese-controlled
Ryojun City had 40 districts.
The Chinese
L"ushun City
was established
on November 25, 1945
to replace Ryojun.
The city was a subdivision of a larger
L"uda City and contained 40 villages in 3 districts.
...
On January 7, 1960,
L"ushun City
was renamed
L"ushunkou District,
still under
L"uda. (L"uda, Lyuda, Luda,[Louda])
(from Wikipedia)
*************************
Lyuda
is a popular
Russian female name for
Ludmila,
Людмила,
with shortages this as short names
Люда,
Lyuda (Люда) ,
Louda, Luda, [L"uda],
Mila (Мила).
******
mill [Мил] мельница (on Russian)
***
a Mill - Mila (Russian female short name). [milii, miliy, milij, milaya] (darling, pleasant, nice, dear words on Russian as милый, милая),
Russian word "милёнок" [milioniok, mil'onjok] = a darling, a lover,
with English word sounds "a mill", "mill". (as some traces of connections of communications between English males and Russian females and Russian males in the past, probably?
The Knight with a word, making move by this, looking as a mill, moving wings, making such man to look like a mill, to name him (if to be in a love) as "a mill" The Mill" "Mill" "Milii" (Mill-lien - Miliij, Miliiy, Milij, Miliy)
There we some hidden romantic love stories communications between Russians-English males and females, saving English word "Mill" for a love word for the traditional love language for all Russians.
Plenty British and American men and women never knew this as they never leaned Russian language to recognize some hidden English words in Russian language as traces of communications between English and Russians in the past.
But soon to lean, and you will surpized to find a love word
We see a modern Great Britain and England to find this "Mill" and we see "King's Mill Hospital" in Mansfield and Sutton-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, England.
The Knight of Mill, Miller, the owner of a mill here had been granted to be a Noble by King for a providing a safe shelter accommodation to The King, as a real historian records and a story of owners of a mill, where now a new building of King's Mill Hospital in Nottinghamshire.
This place had been used and American military, as a hospital, and as a prison for Italian prisoners of WWII, with a free unlocked rules to leave to mix with locals in the daily time.
The Mill with moving wing as a type of some Helicopter or UFO (flying object).
In Russian modern language,
Russians
used the nickname
"The Round Plate" ?
"Round Plate"
for UFO (flying objects with a round shapes).
"Round Plate", "Round Table", "Ball", "The Ball", "Shar", "Sharoy"
(Ball/Shar + Royalty) = Sharoy
Russian The [[ze] [se] ]
The Royalty as [ze royalti] [se royalti] to change to [seroy]
Sir [Ser]
[serii] [seriiy] = gray, grey
My fantasy had been opened to imagine some huge round flying object as UFO as a a round plate or a round table or some ball with Knights of Round Table (UFO) as pilots or a military people.