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  • Stonewall Jackson trusted very few men. He demanded absolute discipline, unquestioning obedience, and relentless aggression. But there was one general whose brilliance he admired—and whose behavior he could never fully forgive. Their partnership helped win battles, yet their personal relationship remained one of the Confederacy’s most complicated rivalries.


    Time Period: 1862–1863
    Conflict: American Civil War
    Key Figures: Stonewall Jackson and A.P. Hill


    The image portrays two of the Confederacy's most famous commanders: Lieutenant General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson and Major General Ambrose Powell (A.P.) Hill. Together they helped create some of the most remarkable Confederate victories of the Civil War. Yet behind the battlefield success lay a relationship filled with tension, arguments, and lingering resentment.


    When the Civil War intensified in 1862, A.P. Hill emerged as one of the Confederacy's most talented combat commanders. Leading his famous Light Division, Hill developed a reputation for aggressive attacks, rapid movement, and personal courage under fire.


    Stonewall Jackson immediately recognized Hill's military ability.


    In battle, Hill was often exactly the type of commander Jackson needed. He moved quickly, fought aggressively, and inspired his troops. During the Shenandoah Valley Campaign of 1862, Jackson's lightning-fast victories depended heavily on officers capable of executing difficult orders under extreme pressure.


    However, the two men possessed very different personalities.


    Jackson was intensely private, deeply religious, and demanded strict obedience from subordinates. Orders were expected to be followed without question. Hill, by contrast, was independent, outspoken, and often challenged decisions he believed were mistaken.


    Their disagreements soon became legendary.


    Throughout the Valley Campaign, Jackson and Hill repeatedly argued over marching orders, troop movements, and battlefield decisions. On several occasions Jackson accused Hill of moving too slowly or failing to carry out instructions precisely as ordered. Hill, meanwhile, believed Jackson sometimes issued vague or impractical commands.


    The tension reached a breaking point during the Seven Days Battles outside Richmond in June 1862.


    During one heated dispute, Jackson became so frustrated that he temporarily placed Hill under arrest. Although the arrest did not last long, it revealed just how strained their relationship had become. Few Confederate officers could imagine openly clashing with the feared Stonewall Jackson, yet Hill repeatedly did so.


    Despite these personal conflicts, Jackson never doubted Hill's fighting ability.


    In fact, some of the Confederacy's greatest successes occurred because Hill's division arrived at critical moments. At Antietam in September 1862, Hill's troops completed a grueling march and arrived just in time to prevent the collapse of Lee's right flank. Their counterattack helped save the Confederate army from potential disaster.


    Even Jackson reportedly acknowledged the value of Hill's battlefield leadership.


    Yet trust between the two men never fully developed.


    Jackson admired Hill's courage but disliked his independence. Hill respected Jackson's military genius but resented what he considered unfair criticism and excessive secrecy. Their relationship became a constant balance between professional respect and personal frustration.


    Everything changed in May 1863.


    After the Confederate victory at Chancellorsville, Stonewall Jackson was accidentally wounded by Confederate soldiers and later died from complications. The Confederacy lost one of its greatest commanders.


    Following Jackson's death, A.P. Hill eventually rose to command a corps in Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. He continued serving with distinction until he was killed near Petersburg in April 1865, just days before Lee's surrender.


    Historians still debate exactly what Jackson truly thought of A.P. Hill. What is clear is that Jackson considered Hill difficult, stubborn, and occasionally infuriating. Yet he also knew that Hill was one of the most capable combat commanders in the Confederate army.


    In war, mutual admiration does not always create friendship. Sometimes great victories are achieved by men who respected each other's abilities while never fully trusting one another
    Stonewall Jackson trusted very few men. He demanded absolute discipline, unquestioning obedience, and relentless aggression. But there was one general whose brilliance he admired—and whose behavior he could never fully forgive. Their partnership helped win battles, yet their personal relationship remained one of the Confederacy’s most complicated rivalries. Time Period: 1862–1863 Conflict: American Civil War Key Figures: Stonewall Jackson and A.P. Hill The image portrays two of the Confederacy's most famous commanders: Lieutenant General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson and Major General Ambrose Powell (A.P.) Hill. Together they helped create some of the most remarkable Confederate victories of the Civil War. Yet behind the battlefield success lay a relationship filled with tension, arguments, and lingering resentment. When the Civil War intensified in 1862, A.P. Hill emerged as one of the Confederacy's most talented combat commanders. Leading his famous Light Division, Hill developed a reputation for aggressive attacks, rapid movement, and personal courage under fire. Stonewall Jackson immediately recognized Hill's military ability. In battle, Hill was often exactly the type of commander Jackson needed. He moved quickly, fought aggressively, and inspired his troops. During the Shenandoah Valley Campaign of 1862, Jackson's lightning-fast victories depended heavily on officers capable of executing difficult orders under extreme pressure. However, the two men possessed very different personalities. Jackson was intensely private, deeply religious, and demanded strict obedience from subordinates. Orders were expected to be followed without question. Hill, by contrast, was independent, outspoken, and often challenged decisions he believed were mistaken. Their disagreements soon became legendary. Throughout the Valley Campaign, Jackson and Hill repeatedly argued over marching orders, troop movements, and battlefield decisions. On several occasions Jackson accused Hill of moving too slowly or failing to carry out instructions precisely as ordered. Hill, meanwhile, believed Jackson sometimes issued vague or impractical commands. The tension reached a breaking point during the Seven Days Battles outside Richmond in June 1862. During one heated dispute, Jackson became so frustrated that he temporarily placed Hill under arrest. Although the arrest did not last long, it revealed just how strained their relationship had become. Few Confederate officers could imagine openly clashing with the feared Stonewall Jackson, yet Hill repeatedly did so. Despite these personal conflicts, Jackson never doubted Hill's fighting ability. In fact, some of the Confederacy's greatest successes occurred because Hill's division arrived at critical moments. At Antietam in September 1862, Hill's troops completed a grueling march and arrived just in time to prevent the collapse of Lee's right flank. Their counterattack helped save the Confederate army from potential disaster. Even Jackson reportedly acknowledged the value of Hill's battlefield leadership. Yet trust between the two men never fully developed. Jackson admired Hill's courage but disliked his independence. Hill respected Jackson's military genius but resented what he considered unfair criticism and excessive secrecy. Their relationship became a constant balance between professional respect and personal frustration. Everything changed in May 1863. After the Confederate victory at Chancellorsville, Stonewall Jackson was accidentally wounded by Confederate soldiers and later died from complications. The Confederacy lost one of its greatest commanders. Following Jackson's death, A.P. Hill eventually rose to command a corps in Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. He continued serving with distinction until he was killed near Petersburg in April 1865, just days before Lee's surrender. Historians still debate exactly what Jackson truly thought of A.P. Hill. What is clear is that Jackson considered Hill difficult, stubborn, and occasionally infuriating. Yet he also knew that Hill was one of the most capable combat commanders in the Confederate army. In war, mutual admiration does not always create friendship. Sometimes great victories are achieved by men who respected each other's abilities while never fully trusting one another
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  • Patriotic Goth Music from Austria

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8fIj3u21n4




    Our landscape raped by different armies
    Soldiers, slaves who have no faces
    Control our ways and lives completely
    Our minds are torn, time left its traces
    Controlled by TV screens and letters
    That point out assimilation
    To trends and movements from outside
    Fall victim to this infiltration
    Everybody's just consuming
    What the media's dictating
    And they all have just forgot
    The joy that is to creating
    Here in the heart of Europe
    No one stands up proud no more
    Here in the heart of Europe
    Our culture is a dying whore
    No room for individuality
    Grey masses who think one way only
    Move like robots through the streets
    In our thinking we stand lonely
    Once a land of art and culture
    Now slave to streams from outside
    Our nations culture, doomed and dying
    Like a candle's fading light
    Patriotic Goth Music from Austria https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8fIj3u21n4 Our landscape raped by different armies Soldiers, slaves who have no faces Control our ways and lives completely Our minds are torn, time left its traces Controlled by TV screens and letters That point out assimilation To trends and movements from outside Fall victim to this infiltration Everybody's just consuming What the media's dictating And they all have just forgot The joy that is to creating Here in the heart of Europe No one stands up proud no more Here in the heart of Europe Our culture is a dying whore No room for individuality Grey masses who think one way only Move like robots through the streets In our thinking we stand lonely Once a land of art and culture Now slave to streams from outside Our nations culture, doomed and dying Like a candle's fading light
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 6χλμ. Views
  • #DNA #Napoleon #biosecurity #napoleonicwars #excavations #Russia #GrandeArmée #war #warepidemics #epidemics
    https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/dna-reveals-what-killed-napoleons-soldiers-during-their-disastrous-retreat-from-russia-in-1812
    #DNA #Napoleon #biosecurity #napoleonicwars #excavations #Russia #GrandeArmée #war #warepidemics #epidemics https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/dna-reveals-what-killed-napoleons-soldiers-during-their-disastrous-retreat-from-russia-in-1812
    WWW.LIVESCIENCE.COM
    DNA reveals what killed Napoleon's soldiers during their disastrous retreat from Russia in 1812
    A mass grave holding soldiers from Napoleon Bonaparte's French army reveals some of the diseases that killed the Grande Armée during its disastrous retreat from Russia in 1812.
    Goth Vibes
    1
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 5χλμ. Views
  • Even though Ukraine is losing, Its illegal for its soldiers to say they are losing, Because of dictator Zelenskyy.
    https://youtu.be/bJN6dalVPlo?si=sQnh5QITgOpQ3iEk
    Even though Ukraine is losing, Its illegal for its soldiers to say they are losing, Because of dictator Zelenskyy. https://youtu.be/bJN6dalVPlo?si=sQnh5QITgOpQ3iEk
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 3χλμ. Views
  • Jeeeesus...
    as an Aikido/Jojutsu veteran, I found it extreme...

    #NorthKorean #NorthKorea #Soldiers #KimJongUn #martialarts #army #military #theguardian

    https://youtu.be/4-x1LPskvJc
    Jeeeesus... as an Aikido/Jojutsu veteran, I found it extreme... #NorthKorean #NorthKorea #Soldiers #KimJongUn #martialarts #army #military #theguardian https://youtu.be/4-x1LPskvJc
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 5χλμ. Views
  • #NATO #OTAN #NATOforUkraine #Russia #RussianUkrainianWar #RussiaUkraineConflict #UkraineWarNews #Ukraina #Ukrainekrieg #Ukraine#Railway #railwaytrack #Germany #wounded #evacuation
    https://en.protothema.gr/2024/09/26/nato-planning-even-for-the-evacuation-of-wounded-soldiers-in-case-of-war-with-russia/
    #NATO #OTAN #NATOforUkraine #Russia #RussianUkrainianWar #RussiaUkraineConflict #UkraineWarNews #Ukraina #Ukrainekrieg #Ukraine️ #Railway #railwaytrack #Germany #wounded #evacuation https://en.protothema.gr/2024/09/26/nato-planning-even-for-the-evacuation-of-wounded-soldiers-in-case-of-war-with-russia/
    EN.PROTOTHEMA.GR
    NATO: Planning even for the evacuation of wounded soldiers in case of war with Russia - ProtoThema English
    A German lieutenant general stated that NATO is working to ensure it has the operational capability to transport a large number of severely injured soldiers — planning that began after Russia's invasion of Ukraine
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 9χλμ. Views
  • #song #germany #erika

    Never understood why this epic song is necessarily considered a National-Socialist one. Its sound is amazing and talks about love...(near Stalingrad)

    From Wikipedia: The song's lyrics describe a soldier's longing for a woman named Erika, and it became popular during World War II among German soldiers. The song is not explicitly political or aggressive in nature, and its meaning has evolved over time.

    https://youtu.be/rcVb6l4TpHw
    #song #germany #erika Never understood why this epic song is necessarily considered a National-Socialist one. Its sound is amazing and talks about love...(near Stalingrad) From Wikipedia: The song's lyrics describe a soldier's longing for a woman named Erika, and it became popular during World War II among German soldiers. The song is not explicitly political or aggressive in nature, and its meaning has evolved over time. https://youtu.be/rcVb6l4TpHw
    Goth Vibes
    1
    21 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2χλμ. Views
  • This song (well, really all of the songs on the album) makes me think of trench warfare, machine gun and small arms fire, infrantry charges, artillery bombardments, tanks, gas attacks, wounded and dead soldiers laying in no-mans land, and just WW1 in general....its so fucking amazing.
    This song (well, really all of the songs on the album) makes me think of trench warfare, machine gun and small arms fire, infrantry charges, artillery bombardments, tanks, gas attacks, wounded and dead soldiers laying in no-mans land, and just WW1 in general....its so fucking amazing.
    Goth Vibes
    1
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 3χλμ. Views
  • Stop supplying arms to Ukraine and let putin arrest all those azov battilion neo nazis regular soldiers can then go back to their loved ones alive and special military operation can be over.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uCUpvTMis-Y
    Stop supplying arms to Ukraine and let putin arrest all those azov battilion neo nazis regular soldiers can then go back to their loved ones alive and special military operation can be over. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uCUpvTMis-Y
    Dark Love
    1
    4 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 2χλμ. Views
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