Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Falling Soldier (full title: Loyalist Militiaman at the Moment of Death, Cerro Muriano, September 5, 1936) is a black-and-white photograph by Robert Capa, claimed to have been taken on Saturday, September 5, 1936.
Federico Borrell García (3 January 1912 – 5 September 1936) was a Spanish Republican and anarchist militiaman during the Spanish Civil War, commonly thought to be the subject in the famous Robert Capa photo The Falling Soldier.
A sculpture by Igael Tumarkin inspired by Death of a Loyalist Soldier. From 1936 to 1939, Capa worked in Spain, photographing the Spanish Civil War, along with Taro and David Seymour. [8] It was during that war that Capa took the photo now called The Falling Soldier (1936), purported to show the death of a Republican soldier.
The battle is famous owing to the picture of a "falling militiaman" taken by Robert Capa, a picture that sought to represent the tragic fate of the Spanish Republic. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] See also
La Sombra del Iceberg (Spanish for The Shadow of the Iceberg) is a 2007 documentary film, that claims the photograph The Falling Soldier by Robert Capa was staged, and that Federico Borrell García was not the individual in the picture. [1] [2] The documentary makes several claims: [3]
The claims, which the Trump campaign has strongly denied, appeared in an recent article published by The Atlantic
Jonathan Campos, Samuel Lilley, Danasia Elder and Ian Epstein, the crew who died on board American Eagle Flight 5342, have received honorary awards from their airline.
The father of a US Army soldier killed in 2004 and buried in Arlington National Cemetery is questioning what Donald Trump hoped to gain by visiting the venerated final resting place of US service ...