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      • Musketier Oskar Niemeyer (n.d. – 23 August 1914) was a German soldier. He is recognized as the first recipient (posthumous) of the Iron Cross during the First World War.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oskar_Niemeyer
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  2. Musketier Oskar Niemeyer (n.d. – 23 August 1914) was a German soldier. He is recognized as the first recipient (posthumous) of the Iron Cross during the First World War. [1]

  3. Musketier Oskar Niemeyer was a German soldier. He is recognized as the first recipient (posthumous) of the Iron Cross during the First World War.

  4. Mar 17, 2023 · Oskar Niemeyer is said to have been decorated posthumously for an extreme act of bravery, just like the British Lieutenant Maurice James Dease, who was the first officer to posthumously receive the Victoria Cross and is also buried in the cemetery.

  5. Nov 26, 2018 · It took Jair Valera two minutes to draw the sketch of a staircase that made an almost insane vision become reality: It is a staircase bearing the signature of the world-famous architect Oscar Niemeyer made for an apartment in Berlin, located just 100 meters from the Brandenburg Gate.

    • Who is Oskar Niemeyer?1
    • Who is Oskar Niemeyer?2
    • Who is Oskar Niemeyer?3
    • Who is Oskar Niemeyer?4
    • Who is Oskar Niemeyer?5
  6. Sep 6, 2014 · During a recent visit to Mons to remember the 'Old Contemptibles' i was captivated by the story of this young German soldier who swam the Conde canal in order to operate the mechanism of a swing bridge. He was killed in action on the same day and we found his grave at St Symphoriens. I felt a con...

  7. Musketeer Oskar Niemeyer 8./I.R. 84 Died on 23rd August 1914. Grave: G1 R 6. During the battle for the Mons bridges Niemeyer swam the canal in order to operate the machinery which would swing the bridge back across for his company to follow. Though successful he was killed in the process.

  8. May 2, 2017 · Oskar Ritter von Niedermayer, sometimes called "the German Lawrence," was an exotic member of Germany's military establishment. Although he carried the archaic title of a Ritter, he did not belong to the traditional nobility. A product of the Bavarian middle class, he did not receive his knighthood until February 1919, after

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