Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In the fall of 1914 the entire casern was completed.
Additional buildings were constructed on the casern to make room for more soldiers.
The casern predates the division, which was not formed until May 1942.
Early in 1913 the construction of the casern started and by October of the same year four companies were stationed there.
From 1948 until it was abandoned in 1975, the casern again lodged Belgian military, mainly trainees.
Saraydüzü Casern, this building reconstructed in 2009 and opened.
There are usually two beds in each casern, for six soldiers to lie, who mount the guard alternately; the third part being always on duty.
Following this, he ran away from military casern on the Karađorđevo hill, where he was eventually surrounded.
Today, Saraydüzü Casern is war of liberation museum and using for conferences, meetings, speeches etc.
A casern, also spelled cazern or caserne, is a military barracks in a garrison town.
The main building of this flak casern exists until today; since 1947 there are manufacturing facilies of a candy factory.
During World War I the casern was used to confine Russian, French and British officers.
Polish, Russian and frensh prisoners of war were captured in a barack settlement within the area of a flak casern.
Five centuries later, Mulai Ismail built the current wall and made from Témara a ribat (casern) around said mosque.
After the end of world war two around 1500 refugees and expellees came to Stephanskirchen and founded the settlement Haidholzen close to the former flak casern.
Since 1996 a Holocaust museum at the Dossin Casern called the Museum of Deportation and Resistance reminds of this infamous period.
In 1811, he was summoned to move from his casern situated in Lemgo to Bremen where Napoleon had just started what turned out to be his last campaign.
The importance of Saraydüzü Casern is that, Amasya Circular(genelge) was signed in that historical building in 12 June 1919.
The Dossin Casern, apart from a wing renovated in the 1980s for civil housing, became the site of the Jewish Museum of Deportation and Resistance by 1996.
The foundation continues his teachings at the historical site in Karlsruhe, a former Telegraph Casern in the west of Karlsruhe, covering a closed area of approximately 10.000 square meters.
In the fall of 1968, the 513th Military Intelligence Group merged with the 66th Military Intelligence Group and relocated to the McGraw Casern in Munich, Germany.
Website of the City of Karlsruhe: Reitinstitut Egon von Neindorff, Riding hall and Stables in the former Telegraph Casern (in german)
The Jewish Museum of Deportation and Resistance in the Casern Dossin, built in the 18th century by Queen Maria Theresa of Austria, "Ruler of the Austrian Netherlands".
During the Second World War, between 4 August 1942 and 31 July 1944, 28 trains left from this Belgian casern and deported over 25,000 Jews and Romas, most of whom arrived at the extermination camps of Auschwitz-Birkenau.