- the more current, and
equally military, "
Steinkirk",
named after the
Battle of
Steenkerque in 1692. The
Steinkirk was a long, narrow,
plain or lightly-trimmed...
-
Battle of Steenkerque, also
known as Steenkerke, Steenkirk,
Steynkirk or
Steinkirk was
fought on 3
August 1692,
during the Nine Years' War, near Steenkerque...
-
position he ****umed was too
strong to attack. However, at the
Battle of
Steinkirk on 24 July
William launched an ****ault led by Mackay's division; with...
-
composition was
performed to mark the
victory celebrations and the
Battle of
Steinkirk in August, 1692.[citation needed] The
composition consists of the following...
- Foot,
killed at the
Battle of
Steinkirk. (Cokayne
mistakes the
regiment as the
Royal Scots Greys who were not at
Steinkirk, for the
Royal Scots who were...
-
officers had
opportunities to make
notes of
different styles such as the "
Steinkirk"
cravat or necktie. Both
parties wore
shirts under their clothing, the...
- Luxembourg, to the Netherlands, and
shared in the
French victories at Fleurus,
Steinkirk, and Neerwinden. On the
death of his cousin, Jean
Louis d'Orléans, Duke...
- the king at the
siege of
Namur in 1692, and took part in the
victory of
Steinkirk. For his
services he was
raised in 1692 to the rank of
Marshal of France...
- be if he
caught cold, she "takes a
Steinkirk off her Neck, and lays it
gently on his Head" (V.i.21). (A "
steinkirk" was a
loosely tied lace
collar or...
- over a
stiffened ornamental cravat-string. The
years 1695–1700 saw the
Steinkirk style, with the
front ends
twisted and the
terminals either p****ed through...