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RIP To the 172 Israeli troops, 22 British troops, 10 French troops, 1,650-3,000 Egyptian troops, and 1,000 Egyptian civilians who were killed in the Suez Crisis
This has to be one of the most brilliant victories in military history, proving the best defense is a good offense. There's no doubt in my mind, God's Hand was in this war.
I just finished reading the last chapter of The New Roman Empire, by Anthony Kaldellis, this morning, and it discussed many of these events. I highly recommend it. It is the first general history of the "Byzantine" Empire written in a very long time, and it is fascinating. In fact, with the last chapter of the book so fresh in my mind, I'm nearly certain that it was one of the main sources for this video.
I think we need a special episode to cover the popular eastern roman hostility to latin catholicism. Why does the populous reaction seems to be plainly hostile to the union of churches? Do they consider all latins the same (venetian, genoese, etc)? To what extend has the spice /silk route was collapsed in that period making western europe expansion of influence eastwards unprofitable/unfavorable? How does a population that is culturally, historically, linguistically prefer the rule under the ottoman crescent rather than the latin tiara?
European coalition defeats against the Turks: Battle of the Catalaunian Plains Battle of Civetot Crusade of 1101 Battle of Dorylaeum (1147) Battle of Mount Cadmus Battle of Mansurah (1250) Battle of Fariskur Battle of Sirpsindigi Battle of Kosovo(1389) Battle of Nicopolis Battle of Varna Battle of Kosovo(1448) Battle of Mohács Battle of Preveza Fire of Moscow (1571) Long Turkish War Turkish occupation of Iceland Battle of Matapan Gallipoli campaign Turkish War of Liberation
Ohh. I know this episode it was from the South Korean Channel called MBCDrama named 무신/Warrior k 19 to 56 episodes. As a South Korean, I just wanted to say that Mooshin Jungeon ended when the final ruler Kim Jun died by the Emperor Wonjongs rebels in the imperial palace in the late 12th century. Also, you forgot to mention that Korean general Choe-Chungmyng was with Kim-Kyongson, the mongol general ordered Choe-Chungmyng, and be executed by a Mongol General Bu-Ta-Wu after the first Mongol-Korean war was over.
I cant watch this video because it's simply too painful but I will leave this comment to boost your interaction and get you more views. Keep doing what you're doing, but maybe with a little less heartbreaking decline of Roman civilization next time
Although I know not every military engagement can be mentioned without making the videos really long, I am surprised Sigismund's siege of Golubac wasn't mentioned considering it wasn't one of the many small scale clashes led by lower ranked generals, rather it was a campaign against the Ottomans led by the Hungarian king himself. Good video either way tho