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  1. George Alexander Eugene Douglas Haig, 2nd Earl Haig, OBE, KStJ, DL, FRSA (15 March 1918 – 9 July 2009) was a British artist and peer who succeeded to the earldom of Haig on 29 January 1928, at the age of nine upon the death of his father, Field Marshal the 1st Earl Haig. Until then he was styled Viscount Dawick. Throughout his life, he was ...

  2. dict.cc | Übersetzungen für 'George Haig 2 Earl Haig' im Englisch-Deutsch-Wörterbuch, mit echten Sprachaufnahmen, Illustrationen, Beugungsformen, ...

  3. George Douglas Haig (1918–2009) National Galleries of Scotland. Painter, born in London, son of Field-Marshal Earl Haig whom he succeeded in 1928. After education at Stowe School and Oxford University, Earl Haig served in the Army in World War II, being a prisoner of war in Italy and Germany. In 1945–7 he attended Camberwell School of Arts ...

  4. de.wikipedia.org › wiki › HaigHaig – Wikipedia

    Douglas Haig (Schauspieler) (1920–2011), US-amerikanischer Schauspieler; Douglas Haig (Wirtschaftswissenschaftler) (1926–2015), britischer Wirtschaftswissenschaftler; George Haig, 2. Earl Haig (1918–2009), britischer Adliger und Politiker; Georgina Haig (* 1985), australische Schauspielerin; Isaac Haig, kanadischer Schauspieler

  5. 3. Feb. 2004 · George Alexander Eugene Douglas Haig, 2nd Earl Haig was born on 15 March 1918. 1 He was the son of Field Marshal Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig and Hon. Dorothy Maud Vivian. 1 He married, firstly, Adrienne Thérèse Morley, daughter of Derrick Morley and Lesley Campbell, on 19 July 1956. 1 He and Adrienne Thérèse Morley were divorced in 1981. 1 He married, secondly, Donna Geroloma Lopez y Royo ...

  6. When Haig died in 1928 vast numbers attended his funeral, testament to the high regard in which he was held by his contemporaries. Yet today he is widely perceived as the archetypal bungling First World War general. His reputation was attacked in the 1930s by historian Basil Liddell Hart and wartime prime minister David Lloyd George. In the ...

  7. Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig (born June 19, 1861, Edinburgh—died Jan. 29, 1928, London) was a British field marshal, commander in chief of the British forces in France during most of World War I. His strategy of attrition (tautly summarized as “kill more Germans”) resulted in enormous numbers of British casualties but little immediate gain in 1916–17 and made him a subject of controversy.