@ioanadmarina: Part 1 | Să fac și cu cremele de corp? #perfumetok #fypromania #bodymist #romania #bodyspray

ioanadmarina
ioanadmarina
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Region: GB
Friday 03 October 2025 09:00:00 GMT
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dnd1244h
Laura :
vrem colectia de parfumuriiiiiiii
2025-10-03 14:52:00
14
mariiastefania
Maria Ștefania :
Așteptăm partea a 2 a 🥰
2025-10-03 09:24:27
4
anca.muresan28
Anca :
da vrem 😊tutorial 😊
2025-10-03 10:47:54
3
rebyy_xx
rrily_20🤍 :
și a meaaa❤
2025-10-04 15:30:01
3
lorenna1
Lorenna :
❤️❤️❤
2025-10-04 07:15:08
1
tweodoraa
mayaa🫂💕 :
îmi doresc ff mult să faci tutorial la cum îți prinzi prinzi părul că sa faci acele buclee! eu nu știu cum să mi-l prin să iasă asaa
2025-10-03 10:11:04
1
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The Sword-Wielding WW2 Soldier Who Captured 42 Germans Alone Jack “Mad Jack” Churchill was no ordinary soldier — he was a World War II officer who fought like he’d stepped out of the 15th century. Carrying a Scottish broadsword, a longbow, and bagpipes into battle, Churchill wasn’t just eccentric — he was strategically fearless, deeply trained, and shockingly effective. Churchill was a British Army officer before the war, and a decorated marksman with the longbow. While he’s often credited with the only confirmed longbow kill of WWII — reportedly during a 1940 ambush in France — this claim remains anecdotal, passed down through multiple sources but lacking formal documentation in military records. Still, no other credible claim exists, and most historians accept the account as likely true. In Norway (1941), during the raid on Vågsøy, Churchill famously leapt from a landing craft playing “March of the Cameron Men” on his bagpipes, then threw grenades and led a sword charge. His flair for drama wasn’t for show — it was morale-building, both for his men and himself. His most astonishing feat came in Sicily (1943), where he captured 42 German soldiers alone with just a sword and a revolver. While some accounts suggest there may have been distant support, it was Churchill himself who disarmed and marched them back to Allied lines. Later captured by the Germans, he escaped Sachsenhausen concentration camp, was recaptured, and escaped again. After the war, instead of fading into quiet retirement, he became a military instructor and pioneered river surfing in the UK — becoming the first man to surf the River Severn’s tidal bore. Churchill was once quoted as saying: “Any officer who goes into action without his sword is improperly dressed.” He wasn’t just eccentric — he embodied a philosophy: discipline, courage, and theatrical defiance in the face of war. He died in 1996, and remains one of the most extraordinary — and strangely inspiring — figures in modern military history. #ww2history  #militaryhistory  #WarStories #History
The Sword-Wielding WW2 Soldier Who Captured 42 Germans Alone Jack “Mad Jack” Churchill was no ordinary soldier — he was a World War II officer who fought like he’d stepped out of the 15th century. Carrying a Scottish broadsword, a longbow, and bagpipes into battle, Churchill wasn’t just eccentric — he was strategically fearless, deeply trained, and shockingly effective. Churchill was a British Army officer before the war, and a decorated marksman with the longbow. While he’s often credited with the only confirmed longbow kill of WWII — reportedly during a 1940 ambush in France — this claim remains anecdotal, passed down through multiple sources but lacking formal documentation in military records. Still, no other credible claim exists, and most historians accept the account as likely true. In Norway (1941), during the raid on Vågsøy, Churchill famously leapt from a landing craft playing “March of the Cameron Men” on his bagpipes, then threw grenades and led a sword charge. His flair for drama wasn’t for show — it was morale-building, both for his men and himself. His most astonishing feat came in Sicily (1943), where he captured 42 German soldiers alone with just a sword and a revolver. While some accounts suggest there may have been distant support, it was Churchill himself who disarmed and marched them back to Allied lines. Later captured by the Germans, he escaped Sachsenhausen concentration camp, was recaptured, and escaped again. After the war, instead of fading into quiet retirement, he became a military instructor and pioneered river surfing in the UK — becoming the first man to surf the River Severn’s tidal bore. Churchill was once quoted as saying: “Any officer who goes into action without his sword is improperly dressed.” He wasn’t just eccentric — he embodied a philosophy: discipline, courage, and theatrical defiance in the face of war. He died in 1996, and remains one of the most extraordinary — and strangely inspiring — figures in modern military history. #ww2history #militaryhistory #WarStories #History

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