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Some Related Sentences

At and outbreak
At the outbreak of the Civil War, Johnston was the commander of the U. S. Army Department of the Pacific in California.
* 2011 – At least 300 people killed in deadliest tornado outbreak in the Southern United States since the 1974 Super Outbreak.
At this critical moment, the Roman army was crippled by the outbreak of a second smallpox pandemic, the plague of Cyprian ( 251-70 ).
At the outbreak of war, the German army had no radically new theory of war named Blitzkrieg or otherwise.
At the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950, rather than waiting for the draft, he volunteered for the U. S. Army to have some choice in assignments.
At the outbreak of World War II he volunteered for the Royal Air Force, but was unable to serve because of a childhood illness.
At first, many members of the Dublin public were simply bewildered by the outbreak of the Rising.
At the outbreak of World War I in August 1914, the Italian political left became severely split over its position on the war.
At the outbreak of World War I, Lang returned to Vienna and volunteered for military service in the Austrian army and fought in Russia and Romania, where he was wounded three times.
At about the same time, the plague outbreak tapered off.
At the outbreak of war, Italy had seized the chance to occupy the southern half of Albania, to avoid it being captured by the Austro-Hungarians.
At the outbreak of the war, Iraq had amassed an estimated 35 billion in foreign exchange reserves.
At the outbreak of World War II, IALA's research activities were moved from Liverpool to New York, where E. Clark Stillman established a new research staff.
At the outbreak of World War I in 1914, he was sent to Ruma, where he was arrested for anti-war propaganda and imprisoned in the Petrovaradin fortress.
At the outbreak of war in August 1914, the governors of British East Africa ( as the Protectorate was generally known ) and German East Africa agreed a truce in an attempt to keep the young colonies out of direct hostilities.
At the outbreak of war, German citizens in Britain were interned.
At the outbreak of World War I, Weber, aged 50, volunteered for service and was appointed as a reserve officer and put in charge of organising the army hospitals in Heidelberg, a role he fulfilled until the end of 1915.
At the outbreak of World War II he applied to become a war artist for he was keen to put his skills at the service of his country.
") At the outbreak of the Second World War, Foot volunteered for military service, but was rejected because of his chronic asthma.
At the time it was not known how cholera was transmitted, but physician John Snow suspected contaminated water and had the handle of the public pump he suspected removed ; the outbreak then subsided.
At the head of this band of dissenters was an apostate who had denied the Faith even before the outbreak of persecution.
At the height of a second outbreak, the Plague of Cyprian ( 251 – 266 ), which may have been the same disease, 5, 000 people a day were said to be dying in Rome.
At the outbreak of World War I, the country's territory included only the provinces of Walachia, Moldavia, and Dobruja.
At the outbreak of World War I, in August 1914, infantry officers in all combatant armies still carried swords as part of their field equipment.
At the outbreak of World War II virtually all artillery was still being moved around by artillery tractors or horses.

At and Crimean
At the beginning of the Crimean War, such helmets were common amongst infantry and grenadiers, but soon fell out of place in favour of the fatigue cap.
At the same time the Tatars of the Crimean Khanate, the only remaining successor to the Golden Horde, continued to raid Southern Russia.
At the end of the conservative reign of Nicolas I ( 1825 – 55 ) a zenith period of Russia's power and influence in Europe was disrupted by defeat in the Crimean War.
* June 26 – At a ceremony in London, Queen Victoria awards the first sixty-six Victoria Crosses to British troops, for actions during the Crimean War.
At the end of the Crimean War, in 1856, by the Treaty of Paris, two districts of southern Bessarabia were returned to Moldavia, causing the Russian Empire to lose access to the Danube river.
At all times conspicuous for his eloquence, honesty and recalcitrancy, he twice came with especial prominence before the public — in 1838, when, although at the time without a seat in parliament, he appeared at the bar of the Commons to protest, in the name of the Canadian Assembly, against the suspension of the Canadian constitution ; and in 1855, when, having overthrown Lord Aberdeen's ministry by carrying a resolution for the appointment of a committee of inquiry into the mismanagement in the Crimean War, he presided over its proceedings.
At the beginning of the modern era, Southern Dobruja had a mixed population of Bulgarians and Turks with several smaller minorities, including Gagauz, Crimean Tatars and Romanians.
At Sebastopol, on 25 June 1856 he was invested by the British Commander in Chief, Lord Gough, with the Order of the Bath, for his conspicuous contribution to the Allied campaign during the Crimean War.
At the time of the Crimean War, several public houses in Britain adopted the name.
At the same time, Russia was in no position to help Montenegro after suffering a defeat in the Crimean War in 1854.
At the time, Akhmat Khan was busy with his struggle against the Crimean Khanate and did not do anything seriously except to demand tribute and send a Mongol noyan to Moscow.
At the same time, the involvement of a number of individuals such as Florence Nightingale during the Crimean War and Henry Dunant, a Genevese businessman who had worked with wounded soldiers at the Battle of Solferino, led to more systematic efforts to prevent the suffering of war victims.
At the outbreak of the Crimean War the fort had to be blown up and abandoned, but it was resettled by the Cossacks in 1864, at the conclusion of the Russian-Circassian War, and became known as the stanitsa of Gelendzhiksaya.
At the end of this period Crimean Tatars were included in this wave of deportation.
At the outbreak of the Crimean War in 1854, Loch severed his connection with India, and obtained leave to raise a body of irregular Bulgarian cavalry, which he commanded throughout the war.
At the Crimean parliamentary election, 2006 the party was part of the For Yanukovych!

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