U.S. Army Ranger #1 the Batavian Knight of the Continental Congress that was buried in the U.S. Capitol Crypt
The Tomb of Jonas The Great Batavian U.S. Army Ranger #1 was buried in the U.S. Capitol Crypt in 1797. He happened to be Lithuanian where he’d settled in Pennsylvania in the New World where many Prussians (a monolithic term for Continental Europeans) did from Russians to Germans to French and Dutch. In Prussia he is credited as King of Prussia where the Dutch Republic was renamed for his family Batavian Republic after which he build the Brandenburg Gate to commemorate it. The Ancient Rengen were a class of Knights that used ranged weapons including artillery - Jonas brought Prussian wheeled cannons like you see at West Point
The Tomb of Jonas The Great Batavian U.S. Army Ranger #1 was buried in the U.S. Capitol Crypt in 1797. He happened to be Lithuanian where he’d settled in Pennsylvania in the New World where many Prussians (a monolithic term for Continental Europeans) did from Russians to Germans to French and Dutch. In Prussia he is credited as King of Prussia where the Dutch Republic was renamed for his family Batavian Republic after which he build the Brandenburg Gate to commemorate it. The Ancient Rengen were a class of Knights that used ranged weapons including artillery - Jonas brought Prussian wheeled cannons like you see at West Point
The Tomb of Jonas The Great Batavian U.S. Army Ranger #1 was buried in the U.S. Capitol Crypt in 1797. He happened to be Lithuanian where he’d settled in Pennsylvania in the New World where many Prussians (a monolithic term for Continental Europeans) did from Russians to Germans to French and Dutch. In Prussia he is credited as King of Prussia where the Dutch Republic was renamed for his family Batavian Republic after which he build the Brandenburg Gate to commemorate it. The Ancient Rengen were a class of Knights that used ranged weapons including artillery - Jonas brought Prussian wheeled cannons like you see at West Point