Karel 'Kut' Kuttelwascher served with the Czechoslovak Air Force until his country was invaded by Germany.  He saw combat with the Armee de L'Air (most likely scoring two kills and one possible) in the Battle of France.  He also saw action during the Battle of Britain though it was not until 1941 that he increased his score overall to five confirmed and two probable.  On the 17th February 1942 'Kut' was promoted to F/Lt. 
Based at Tangmere, No.1 Sqn commenced night intruder operations from the 1st April 1942 to the 2nd July 1942, during which time they undertook 180 missions, shot down 22 enemy aircraft, and damaged another thirteen.  They also destroyed sixty-seven trains, five boats and one vehicle.  The highest scoring pilot was F/Lt Kuttelwascher.  In only fifteen missions, he gained fifteen confirmed kills, and five damaged airplanes.  His aircraft was a Hurricane Mk.IIc, BE581, which he named ‘Night Reaper’ and decorated it with a Scythe. 








 After 1791, she lived in Caen with her cousin, Madame Le Coustellier de Bretteville-Gouville. The two developed a close relationship and Corday was the sole heir to her cousin's estate.
Jean-Paul Marat was a member of the radical Jacobin faction which had a leading role during theReign of Terror. As a journalist, he exerted power and influence through his newspaper, L'Ami du peuple ("The Friend of the People").
was stormed by the mob and the royal family fled for their lives. The Legislative Assembly had been left impotent after a large number of deputies had fled, and its successor, the National Convention, had not yet met. To further complicate this matter, the insurrectionary Paris commune established 9 August 1792 incorporated some of the most radical revolutionary elements, including the sans-culottes, and briefly contended for the role of de facto government of France. Lacking a sovereign power, the Parisians' fear, hatred, and prejudice proved to be the seeds of the September Massacres
 and proclaimed a new revolutionary Commune headed by transitional authorities. During the storming of the Tuileries Palace by the insurrectionists, Louis XVI fled with the royal family, and his authority as King was suspended by the Legislative Assembly; a de facto executive was named, but the actual power of decision rested with the revolutionary Commune, whose strength resided in the mobilized sans-culottes, the vast majority of Paris' fairly poor population. Supported by a new armed force (the 48 sections of Paris were fully equipped with munitions from the plundered arsenals the days before the Assault of the Tuileries, substituting the 60 National Guard battalions) the Commune and its sans-culottes took control of the city and dominated the Legislative Assembly and its decisions and for some weeks the Commune was the actual government of France.

quickly fallen, that perhaps its own aristocratic officers had capitulated too easily, and that the Prussians were advancing quickly toward the capital. On 25 July, Brunswick had circulated his bombastic "Brunswick Manifesto" 
from Coblenz: his avowed aim was
different Prisons and Churches), who might in the absence of such a number of Citizens rise and not only effect the release of His Majesty, but make an entire counterrevolution.

 friend of Marie Antoinette and sister-in-law to the duc d'Orléans, and mutilated her body. Her head was paraded atop a pike under the captive Queen's windows at the Temple,

Breasts and privates cut off.
much to work - she had known the princesse in life.
Stop at a barber shop so the princesse's hair can be restyled.
The head taken to the Temple, where the royal family was imprisoned, so that Marie Antoinette could kiss her friend's lips.


A Jacques Pointel rescues the head.






