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Apr 3 at 5:41 history edited tohuwawohu CC BY-SA 4.0
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Apr 3 at 5:29 vote accept tohuwawohu
Apr 1 at 22:31 history edited marquinho CC BY-SA 4.0
This is standard Kurrent, not Sütterlinschrift (introduced in elementary schools in 1911)
Apr 1 at 21:16 comment added tofro As an example take famous Camp David
Apr 1 at 17:57 review Close votes
Apr 6 at 3:08
Apr 1 at 15:16 comment added tofro You should be aware that military tends to name their emplacements relatively arbitrarily. It might well be a fortification name has absolutely nothing to do with its real geographical location, but was rather named that way because the commander or his staff decided to name it after their hometown.
Apr 1 at 15:03 answer added ccprog timeline score: 6
Apr 1 at 13:40 comment added tofro "Laubengang" is nothing military. It's a "pergola" or "arcades under trees". Might have been used in military as a tounge-in-cheek nick for fortifications like in your picture, however.
Apr 1 at 13:16 history edited tohuwawohu CC BY-SA 4.0
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Apr 1 at 10:51 history edited guidot
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Apr 1 at 9:51 history asked tohuwawohu CC BY-SA 4.0