'm not complaining, though the title of this entry might look like. Imposing the Brussels Museum of Military History Army and the nature of things must praise the glory of the brave Belgian army weapons. The point is, I had an interesting opportunity to look at events well known to me from the Polish perspective through the eyes of Westerners. Military
any here since the beginning of the Battle of Waterloo, and so seriously from the Belgian Revolution of 1830. Nothing earlier is not. Two world wars devoted a separate, powerful pavilions. Very interesting - with lots of illustrative dioramas (and in some small relish of each - such as male desert gapiący the viewer who umości the gunner's chair of the Afrika Korps and the like). A small corner of a total of life in the trenches of the Great War, makes a powerful impression, because attacks from the entry into the tumult of artillery fire, barking dogs, guarding against enemy scouts and shouting NCOs.
vastness hall, which is presented in the heavy weapons from World War I, impressed by the time of entering the pavilion dedicated to aviation. Steel and glass, intricate design worn in hiding kilkadziesiąc airplanes, helicopters of all ages develop the art of flying. From the first canvass airframe through the machine battle of two world wars, anti-missile troposphere, to combat and passenger jets, even with the present (including currently used by the Belgian army F-16 and unmanned exploratory machines).
three-hour tour - great entertainment for the big boys, of course, but the enormity of the exhibits and it's at your fingertips - will impress everyone.
Returning to the title notes - about the Poles is also a little bit. It begins with a nice wystawką in honor of Polish officers in the Belgian army resulting in the 30s Nineteenth century. Then a little worse - when the cabinet of the consequences of the Treaty of Versailles show all the mannequin from the uniforms of the army of "new" countries (with Latvia and including) the Poland is represented by only a newspaper from 1926, with the best dedicated to the Polish Army (in the cabinet to the theme of disintegration of the Austro-Hungarian Empire). But there is nothing to complain about. It is also wystawka about our defense in 1939, dummies Polish sailors, very objectively and without ściemy described the Katyn massacre (although attached to the "crusade against communism", which probably has little to alleviate the existence of an ugly pronunciation of "Legion Walloon SS). And no way to show the impression that Stalin and the Soviet Union were allies are cool, like everyone else. No - since the beginning of a bust of Stalin is contrasted with the busts Mussolini and Hitler, a showcase of the NKVD leaves no doubt what methods Stalin was victorious.
liked this museum.
also liked the parrots in the museum adjacent to the park five decades. Because it's the same aleksandretty Plover, as our home Pedro. Tear up shockingly and bask in the September sun. Free and this freedom clearly intoxicated. Apparently in Warsaw also has a herd of runaway aleksandrett, able to live in freedom all year round, but that Brussels is certainly easier in the winter ...
0 comments:
Post a Comment