- The
Fähnlein (in Swedish: fänika) was an
infantry unit
approximately equivalent to the
company or
battalion which was used in
parts of
Europe during the...
- The
regiment itself was
formed by ten
Fähnlein,
equivalent to a
company and
commanded by a captain. A
Fähnlein was made up by 400 men,
including 100 veterans...
- of
Hemmingstedt on 17
February 1500. It is
possible that at
least some
Fähnlein of the
Black Guard survived during these fourteen years and were part,...
- of the
Landsknechte or
mercenaries in
European warfare, who
commanded a
Fähnlein, a unit of
roughly battalion-size. A
literal translation is "field captain"...
- used on seals. For war flags, a
distinction was made
between Banner and
Fähnlein, the
former was the
large war flag used only in the case of a full levy...
- guild,
itself referring to a
military unit for the
Thirty Years' War:
Fähnlein being a 16th–17th
century German word for the
equivalent of a company/battalion...
- Das Thüringer
Fähnlein (in German), vol. 2, Jena, pp. 70–77 Kurt
Langlotz (1939), "Götterberge um Eisenach", Das Thüringer
Fähnlein (in German), vol...
-
three independent companies: Jämtlands
Kompani Stavanger lens
Fahnlein Agdesidens Fahnlein Despite the
initial ambitious plans for the
creation and further...
-
example from W. Perrett's 1921
transcription of
Gottfried Keller's Das
Fähnlein der
sieben Aufrechten: ˈkɑinə ˈreːdə, virt ˈniçts daˈraˑus! zɑːktə *ˈheːdigər...
-
Middle three of his
small Fähnlein of
cavalry launched a
frontal attack on the
Brunswick horse. The
fourth Lüneburg
Fähnlein out-flanked the
opposing body...