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kashira kureijii
09-18-2015, 04:12 PM
Alright I think this would be sweet, Share cool History stuff here,


No Social Justice BullShit!!!


Don't Shit up this thread ( classic Zilvia opening tag haha)


Share any cool history stuff, Stories, Favorite planes tanks or generals, Opinions, etc


Copy and paste is acceptable, no one is gonna write out an entire freakin story





http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/Statue-Augustus_zpsstnftodm.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/Statue-Augustus_zpsstnftodm.jpg.html)

kashira kureijii
09-18-2015, 04:23 PM
I'll start with my favorite WW2 tank and plane,

Panther tank, bundsarchive photo
http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/1310783-bundesarchiv_bild_101i_711_0427_04__oberst_karl_lo renz_vor_panzer_v__panther__zpsyu9yntoq.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/1310783-bundesarchiv_bild_101i_711_0427_04__oberst_karl_lo renz_vor_panzer_v__panther__zpsyu9yntoq.jpg.html)

Ta-152 Its like the Kami form of a FW 190, could outrun any other prop plane at the end of the war

http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/1-Ta-152H-Germany-1945-02_zpsur4zcr95.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/1-Ta-152H-Germany-1945-02_zpsur4zcr95.jpg.html)

Grenade180sx
09-18-2015, 04:29 PM
http://www.mimages.co.za/files/imagecache/watermark/files/CABAA-CCBCA-DDBCH-BJ_thumb.jpg

Grenade180sx
09-18-2015, 04:32 PM
nothing is more awesome then old ww2 battleship's

http://www.wallpaper4me.com/images/wallpapers/Optimized-battleshipfiring-986323.jpeg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ea/BB61_USS_Iowa_BB61_broadside_USN.jpg
http://chud.com/articles/content_images/5/battleshipfiring.jpg

Gingersmurf
09-18-2015, 04:37 PM
How about one of the bigger tanks? The t28. Its the american Super heavy
https://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1090/1240969313_107b830471.jpg
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6e/T28_Front_Quarter.jpg
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/15/30/42/153042ac8b7743ba2628a395e5f3dbf6.jpg

And it's bigger Brother, the T30
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cc/T30_Heavy_Tank.JPG
http://wiki.gcdn.co/images/thumb/0/00/T30_Heavy_Tank_(2).jpg/292px-T30_Heavy_Tank_(2).jpg

Mind you, the t28 was an outright failure. Two were ever made, one caught on fire and was sold for scrap during testing, One was found in a field in Virginia and never saw deployment.

kashira kureijii
09-18-2015, 04:45 PM
Highway of death pic is pretty crazy! such destruction

Badass Reichstag 1945 photo , I know this is a famous pic, but I read something interesting about it recently.

If you look closely the officer supporting hims hand is very bare and white,
Thats because the photo was doctored to remove the 2 stolen watches he had on his right hand,
The Russians obviously pillaged everything at the end of the war, but they doctored the photo because it seemed more purely heroic
http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/flaggenhissung-2-mai-1945-reichstag-berlin_zpsebu8eate.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/flaggenhissung-2-mai-1945-reichstag-berlin_zpsebu8eate.jpg.html)

Grenade180sx
09-18-2015, 05:06 PM
my grandfather was here on D-day, cant even imagine it.

http://www.ww2incolor.com/news/images/1041.jpg

KA24sleeper
09-18-2015, 05:31 PM
How about one of the bigger tanks? The t28. Its the american Super heavy
https://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1090/1240969313_107b830471.jpg
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6e/T28_Front_Quarter.jpg
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/15/30/42/153042ac8b7743ba2628a395e5f3dbf6.jpg

And it's bigger Brother, the T30
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cc/T30_Heavy_Tank.JPG
http://wiki.gcdn.co/images/thumb/0/00/T30_Heavy_Tank_(2).jpg/292px-T30_Heavy_Tank_(2).jpg

Mind you, the t28 was an outright failure. Two were ever made, one caught on fire and was sold for scrap during testing, One was found in a field in Virginia and never saw deployment.

its acutaly the t95. the t28 was the smaller version they used to transport on smaller trans boats to the shore. heres a great referance and a great game. im on the xbox version of this game if any one is on http://worldoftanks.com/encyclopedia/vehicles/. and the movable turrent is the t30 and the t29 is its lesser counterpart

kashira kureijii
09-18-2015, 06:21 PM
your granddad musta been a badass!

Also World of Tanks is pretty sweet, and way too damn addicting.
Its free(for PC), but you'll end up spending money on it.

KA24sleeper
09-18-2015, 07:40 PM
Ya its free on xbox and yes is verry addicting. I love playing that game. I have always love the different AT's were made between all countries. And the t95 is my favorite tank even tho it didnt see action

Matej
09-18-2015, 09:28 PM
Some high-ranking Nazi general lived at my grandmother's house when they occupied her village. Out of all the houses he picked her family's and he made her his maid. At the end of his stay he gave them a really fancy custom made record player. Bet that thing would be worth a fortune now if her father did not gamble it away in a card game. :(

Matej
09-18-2015, 09:38 PM
If you gentlemen wish to see some really neat illustrations and photos including lots of historical war stuff, this is one of my favorite places on the internet:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/x-ray_delta_one/

The comments on the images are usually great as well.

VROOOM
09-19-2015, 09:34 AM
F-22 breaking the sound barrier

http://twistedsifter.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/airplane-breaking-the-sound-barrier-3.jpg?w=800&h=1118

kashira kureijii
09-19-2015, 11:36 AM
Some high-ranking Nazi general lived at my grandmother's house when they occupied her village. Out of all the houses he picked her family's and he made her his maid. At the end of his stay he gave them a really fancy custom made record player. Bet that thing would be worth a fortune now if her father did not gamble it away in a card game. :(

cool sauce!, Nazi's were garrisoned at my grandparents farm during the war too!
My grandmother used to tell me this story about one of them accidentally
shooting themselves while trying to impress her hahaha

iStayBroke
09-19-2015, 12:15 PM
Met a Tuskegee Airman while the Thunderbirds were practicing overhead for the airshow here. Told me he came to see the F-22 demonstration and the F-35 static display. Talked for a good 2 hours or so.

Matej
09-19-2015, 08:58 PM
cool sauce!, Nazi's were garrisoned at my grandparents farm during the war too!
My grandmother used to tell me this story about one of them accidentally
shooting themselves while trying to impress her hahaha
The funny thing is that while everyone was scared and nervous when the Germans came through, my grandma would say they were actually extremely clean and polite to everyone in the village, and even compensated people for housing them.
Then when the Russians passed through later on, they were greeted as the good guys and the liberators, but they stole a bunch of things and raped women and left the town a pillaged mess.
History has a lot of grey areas.

There was a big underground concrete bunker from WWII in the city I grew up in. My friends and I explored a few rooms of it once as kids with flashlights. Wish I had some pictures.


Cutaway images are always neat.
https://c2.staticflickr.com/8/7779/18341289056_71d5b67999_o.jpg
https://c2.staticflickr.com/8/7643/17110110435_d8a1e9b5cb_o.jpg

cured13
09-19-2015, 10:17 PM
Then when the Russians passed through later on, they were greeted as the good guys and the liberators, but they stole a bunch of things and raped women and left the town a pillaged mess.





That's exactly what my grandparents told me about the end of the WWII and Russians barbaric behaviour.

kashira kureijii
09-19-2015, 10:44 PM
Phalanx VS elephants muhahaha
finished reading a biography of Alexander the Great
This is from the Battle of Hydaspes
This particular battle resulted in the subjugation of all India,( so the whole known world, at this point)
Alexander had like 30,000 guys and had to attack across a river
The Indians had like 100,000 guys, and were the defenders
Alexander being Alexander, Western Civilization badass that he was,
Won the battle,
it was the last great battle of his life.
All this was happening like 4000 miles from their home. they had to walk a long way man

http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/dhm1174_zpstdxwyxcd.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/dhm1174_zpstdxwyxcd.jpg.html)

Rb26kouki
09-20-2015, 01:16 PM
Phalanx VS elephants muhahaha
finished reading a biography of Alexander the Great
This is from the Battle of Hydaspes
This particular battle resulted in the subjugation of all India,( so the whole known world, at this point)
Alexander had like 30,000 guys and had to attack across a river
The Indians had like 100,000 guys, and were the defenders
Alexander being Alexander, Western Civilization badass that he was,
Won the battle,
it was the last great battle of his life.
All this was happening like 4000 miles from their home. they had to walk a long way man

http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/dhm1174_zpstdxwyxcd.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/dhm1174_zpstdxwyxcd.jpg.html)
epic. Walk 4000 miles then still go to war? damn.

kashira kureijii
09-20-2015, 01:34 PM
epic. Walk 4000 miles then still go to war? damn.

They'd actually been at war for the whole 4000 miles so ultra mega epic:):):)

kashira kureijii
09-24-2015, 11:49 AM
https://www.warhistoryonline.com/military-vehicle-news/horten-229-v3-flying-wing-48-images-have-you-seen-all-of-these-before.html/3

Horton flying wing photos!
These aren't of the stupid model history channel made, they actually have the central fuselage


http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/flying%20wing_zps4wuh7bfe.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/flying%20wing_zps4wuh7bfe.jpg.html)


http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/flying%20wing%202_zpsov4vnbyg.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/flying%20wing%202_zpsov4vnbyg.jpg.html)


Also saw these cool colorized photos, you always seem to see less colorized German photos so they're pretty sweet
http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/11407052_723517114444750_2462208087423572690_n_zps yx6kkkg7.png (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/11407052_723517114444750_2462208087423572690_n_zps yx6kkkg7.png.html)

SS liebandster
http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/1900116_473068756156255_1482026685_n_zpsc5lfo3fk.p ng (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/1900116_473068756156255_1482026685_n_zpsc5lfo3fk.p ng.html)

kashira kureijii
09-24-2015, 11:54 AM
Also this is pretty sweet
They're bombing "festung Sevastopol" with this big railway cannon

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zISYZA1x620

Grenade180sx
09-26-2015, 08:39 PM
Interesting fact about D-day



Exercise Tiger, or Operation Tiger, was the code name for one in a series of large-scale rehearsals for the D-Day (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Overlord) invasion of Normandy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normandy), which took place on Slapton Sands (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slapton,_Devon) or Slapton Beach in Devon (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devon). Coordination and communication problems resulted in friendly fire (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friendly_fire) deaths during the exercise, and an Allied convoy positioning itself for the landing was attacked by E-boats (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-boat) of Germany (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany)'s Kriegsmarine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kriegsmarine), resulting in the deaths of 946 American (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States) servicemen.[1] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger#cite_note-Small-1)[2] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger#cite_note-2)[3] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger#cite_note-3) Because of the impending invasion, the incident was under the strictest secrecy at the time and was only nominally reported afterward. As a result, Exercise Tiger has been called "forgotten."


The first practice assault took place on the morning of 28 April[7] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger#cite_note-7)[8] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger#cite_note-8) and was marred by an incident involving friendly fire (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friendly_fire). H-hour (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H-hour) was set for 7:30 am, and was to be preceded by a live firing exercise to acclimatize the troops to the sights, sounds and even smells of a naval bombardment. During the landing itself, live rounds were to be fired over the heads of the incoming troops by forces on land, for the same reason. This followed an order made by General Dwight D. Eisenhower (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwight_D._Eisenhower), the Supreme Allied Commander, who felt that the men must be hardened by exposure to real battle conditions.[1] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger#cite_note-Small-1) The British heavy cruiser (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy_cruiser) HMS Hawkins (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Hawkins_%28D86%29) was to shell the beach with live ammunition, from H-60 to H-30 (i.e. 6:30 to 7:00 am) giving the beachmasters half an hour to inspect the beach and declare it safe.
Several of the landing ships for that morning were delayed, and the officer in charge, American Admiral Don P. Moon (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_P._Moon), decided to delay H-hour for 60 minutes, until 8:30. This message was received by Hawkins, but not by a number of the landing craft, with the result that troops were landing on the beach at the same time as the bombardment was taking place. British Marines (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Marines) on one vessel[clarification needed (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Please_clarify)] recorded in its log book (the only log which has since been recovered from any of the boats) that men were being killed by friendly fire. "On the beaches they had a white tape line beyond which the Americans should not cross until the live firing had finished." But the American soldiers said they were going straight through the white tape line and were getting blown up.[1] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger#cite_note-Small-1)
via wiki.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger


Almost 1k soliders lost their lives just in an training accident prior to D-day. crazy

kashira kureijii
09-27-2015, 04:12 PM
damn that really sucks.
that negligence is almost criminal

Helmut Von Moltke the Elder quote! So hard core!

Helmut Von Moltke the Elder....."Eternal peace is a dream, and not even a beautiful one. War is a part of God's world order. In it are developed the noblest virtues of man: courage and abnegation, dutifulness and self-sacrifice. Without war the world would sink into materialism."

Wikipedia Franco-Prussian war article is pretty good (I've noticed there are few books about the franco-prussian war, the french probably want to sweep it under the rug hahahaha)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franco-Prussian_War

http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/800px-Gardekorps_zpsgynd4tzi.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/800px-Gardekorps_zpsgynd4tzi.jpg.html)

kashira kureijii
10-01-2015, 05:39 PM
Invasion of Britain

It is a fairly unknown fact that Julius Caesar invaded Britain, during his Consulship (but then again, most people couldn't tell you what Caesar did at all), and that the invasion went fairly well until there was some political drama that needed to be addressed by Caesar.

After the Romans had conquered Gaul under Caesars leadership, Caesar set out in boats across the English channel to conquer Britain. Upon arrival on the British coast, they found that the British barbarian tribesmen were waiting for them on the cliffs above the beachhead. The Tribesmen, shirtless with strange markings and spiky hair, screamed and shouted as they rode back and forth above the beachhead.

This frightened the Legionaries, which refused to disembark the boats now beached. There was a period of silence and lack of action, until one Legionary, the Legion standard bearer,shouted that if the legion did not want to be dishonored and have the legion standard taken( which as we know was considered great dishonor), they would have to follow him. With this, he lept from the boat, and advanced onto the beachhead alone, in the face of thousands of crazed tribesmen. This forced all the Legionaries to disembark and advance onto the beach and establish a beachhead.


After this the Romans had a few minor skirmishes with the tribesmen and advanced to Londoninium( modern day London). The Romans had some minor skirmishes and conquests in Britain, but due to political uphevel in Rome and some smoldering rebellions in Gaul, Caesar was forced to take his Legions back to mainland Europe, leaving Britain to be conquered 100 years later.

http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/lal297048_zpsg6yzxaac.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/lal297048_zpsg6yzxaac.jpg.html)

cargirlbecca
10-10-2015, 10:45 PM
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-o-XEkb6V2Rc/UUFEspPCrbI/AAAAAAAANVA/fPq14Zoj2qg/s640/blogger-image-2144400498.jpg

Abandoned Japanese Midget Submarine in America (http://www.thegentlemanracer.com/2013/03/abandoned-japanese-midget-submarine-in.html)

kashira kureijii
10-21-2015, 09:42 AM
http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/10831746_1442942572619020_741292815_n_zpsevd69p8n. jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/10831746_1442942572619020_741292815_n_zpsevd69p8n. jpg.html)

http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/1387760509567_zps5nckbiyt.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/1387760509567_zps5nckbiyt.jpg.html)


hahaha, ^ whoever made these is awesome.

Also, almost finished reading this book on the history of china, which I wouldn't reccommend primarily because the history of china is soul crushingly boring. All it is is a bunch of dynasties changing hands every couple hundred years, with like a few major events, all of which only involve china.

Trying to find a book on fredrich the great, as I lack knowledge of that era

http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/freidrich-750_zpsbbg0xfpp.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/freidrich-750_zpsbbg0xfpp.jpg.html)

kashira kureijii
11-09-2015, 06:53 PM
Heres a pretty awesome story about the Byzantine emperor Justinian

On his way to visit the bulgar king tervel (by boat, while he was returning to power), his ship came across a great storm. One of his compatriots suggested that divine anger(the storm) might be cooled if upon returning to the throne he would spare those who formerly opposed him. Justinian's reaction was this " If I spare a single one of them, may I be drowned on this instant". Nothing happened, and the storm subsided

Terry84
12-01-2015, 03:30 AM
Amazing history stuff. Nations don't learn from history.

kashira kureijii
12-09-2015, 08:53 AM
this is a cool story, involves aussies for you koala punks


https://www.warhistoryonline.com/featured/battle-long-tan.html/2

kashira kureijii
12-13-2015, 10:59 AM
cool french ww1 rifle


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQan6gn37A4

kashira kureijii
01-21-2016, 06:37 PM
http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/implzd_zpsx5axq3wc.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/implzd_zpsx5axq3wc.jpg.html)

this pic is so badass

Felipe
01-22-2016, 10:17 AM
I like this thread...


Turns on TV
Tunes to the history channel
Ancient aliens...
Ancient aliens guy
Turns TV off

LOL
http://www.openminds.tv/wp-content/uploads/I-am-not-saying.jpg


I love them WWII motorcycles

http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2012/09/0mmharl928011.jpg

kashira kureijii
01-22-2016, 11:16 AM
I like this thread...


Turns on TV
Tunes to the history channel
Ancient aliens...
Ancient aliens guy
Turns TV off


IKR?
http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/89d1668d3f5cf3c7868014f52610e5d77587ad1317119a71c5 fd295c265b188b_zpsmqgj45iq.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/89d1668d3f5cf3c7868014f52610e5d77587ad1317119a71c5 fd295c265b188b_zpsmqgj45iq.jpg.html)


Not to mention this bullshit.

http://i1297.photobucket.com/albums/ag23/neko-romancer95/rmx-pawn-stars-logic_o_800983_zpsouvllome.jpg (http://s1297.photobucket.com/user/neko-romancer95/media/rmx-pawn-stars-logic_o_800983_zpsouvllome.jpg.html)

Ugh, last week I was at a hotel while I was going to my interviews,
turned to history channel and it was literally a show about them rowing a boat in an underground cave acting like the cave was the "gate to Hades"
"there are many mentions of Hell in a variety of religions" " but is there an actual gate to hell underneath the ground?"

:picardfp::picardfp::picardfp:

Felipe
01-23-2016, 02:05 AM
Your tipping the boat here lol

Next thing you know this thread is going to go south into a religious debate

History and conspiracies go together like peanut butter and jelly

Example:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d4/N.Tesla.JPG

kashira kureijii
01-31-2016, 05:41 PM
When alexander the great was conquering the east with the might of Western Civilization, King darius of Persia sent him a letter offering concessions.

"While Alexander was still at Marathus there came to him envoys from Darius with a letter from him and a request they conveyed verbally to release Darius' mother, wife and children. The letter's contents were to the effect that there had been friendship and alliance [1] between Philip and Artaxerxes [III], but when Artaxerxes' son Arses [2] came to the throne, Philip was the initial aggressor against Arses, though he had suffered no harm from the Persians. Since Darius' own accession Alexander had not sent any envoy to confirm the old friendship and alliance, but crossed with an army to Asia and did the Persians much harm. This was why Darius had come down [from Persia to Issus] to defend his country and preserve his ancestral rule. The battle had been decided as some god willed, but he, as one king to another, was asking for his captive wife, mother and children, and was prepared to make a treaty of friendship with Alexander and to be his ally. He requested Alexander to send envoys to accompany the Persian emissaries Meniscus and Arsimas and to exchange mutual assurances.


Alexander drafted a reply to this letter and sent Thersippus to accompany the envoys from Darius, with instructions to hand over the letter to Darius but not to engage in any negotiations. Alexander's letter read as follows: 'Your ancestors invaded Macedonia [3] and the rest of Greece [4] and did us harm although we had not done you any previous injury. I have been appointed commander-in-chief of the Greeks and it is with the aim of punishing the Persians that I have crossed into Asia, since you are the aggressors. You gave support to the people of Perinthus, who had done my father harm, and Ochus [5] sent a force to Thrace, which was under our rule. My father died at the hand of conspirators instigated by you [6], as you yourself boasted to everybody in your letters, you killed Arses [2] with the help of Bagoas [7] and gained your throne through unjust means, in defiance of Persian custom and doing wrong to the Persians. You sent unfriendly letters to the Greeks about me, to push them to war against me, and sent money to the Spartans and some other Greeks, which none of the other cities would accept apart from the Spartans. Your envoys corrupted my friends and sought to destroy the peace which I established among the Greeks [8].


I therefore led an expedition against you, and you started the quarrel. But now I have defeated in battle first your generals and satraps, and now you in person and your army, and by the grace of the gods I control the country. All those who fought on your side and did not die in battle but came over to me, I hold myself responsible for them; they are not on my side under duress but are taking part in the expedition of their own free will. Approach me therefore as the lord of all Asia. If you are afraid of suffering harm at my hands by coming in person, send some of your friends to receive proper assurances. Come to me to ask and receive your mother, your wife, your children and anything else you wish. Whatever you can persuade me to give shall be yours.


In future whenever you communicate with me, send to me as king of Asia; do not write to me as an equal, but state your demands to the master of all your possessions. If not, I shall deal with you as a wrongdoer. If you wish to lay claim to the title of king, then stand your ground and fight for it; do not take to flight, as I shall pursue you wherever you may be.'"


Later after the battle of Guagmela I think it was, king darius offered his own alliance, all the Land west of the euraphrates, and his daughter's hand in marriage, Alexanders reply was That already was going to have all land on both of the euraphrates, and that as for Darius' daughter, she was a captive of Alexander, and he would do with her as he wished!

Basically he was like "I already got that shit bruh, and I do what I want"

Like a boss man

kashira kureijii
01-31-2016, 06:07 PM
also when you are looking up quotes, and you begin to type in JU ( for julius ceasar quotes) Justin Bieber quotes comes up first! what kind of shitty era is this:picardfp::picardfp:

Felipe
02-01-2016, 05:52 AM
also when you are looking up quotes, and you begin to type in JU ( for julius ceasar quotes) Justin Bieber quotes comes up first! what kind of shitty era is this:picardfp::picardfp:

http://rs258.pbsrc.com/albums/hh253/jimifunguzz/Justin-Bieber-deal-with-it.gif?w=480&h=480&fit=clip

kashira kureijii
02-14-2016, 11:43 AM
https://www.warhistoryonline.com/military-vehicle-news/operational-super-heavy-tank.html/2

these tanks are cool

kashira kureijii
03-20-2016, 07:59 PM
Fransisco Pizarro conquering the entire inca emprire with only 350 guys.
If any of you have been to central and south america back in the deep jungles and shit, you can imagine how badass these guys were for just yolo swagging their way through unknown jungles full of savages.

for the short version, they find and capture the inca king,whom they know nothing about, make his subjects fill a room with gold as ransom, and then kill the king anyway. they then fight of an army of 60,000 natives with their 350 guys, and conquer the capital.
then the 2 main explorers almagro and pizarro argue over who gets to keep all the wealth and pizarro kills almagro

Western civilization man, like a boss

long version


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco_Pizarro

In 1531, Pizarro once again landed in the coasts near Ecuador, the province of Coaque and the region of esmeraldas, where some gold, silver, and emeralds were procured and then dispatched to Almagro, who had stayed in Panama to gather more recruits.[4]:139–140 Sebastián de Belalcázar soon arrived with 30 men.[4]:141 Though Pizarro's main objective was then to set sail and dock at Tumbes like his previous expedition, he was forced to confront the Punian natives in the Battle of Puná, leaving three or four Spaniards dead and many wounded. Soon after, Hernando de Soto, another conquistador who had joined the expedition, arrived with 100 volunteers and horses to aid Pizarro and with him sailed towards Tumbes,[4]:143 only to find the place deserted and destroyed. Their two fellow conquistadors expected they had disappeared or died under murky circumstances. The chiefs explained the fierce tribes of Punians had earlier attacked them and ransacked the place.[4]:152–153


As Tumbes no longer afforded the safe accommodations Pizarro sought, he decided to lead an excursion into the interior of the land in May 1532, and established the first Spanish settlement in Peru, San Miguel de Piura, and a repartimiento.[4]:153–154 An earlier settlement than this in South America was Santa Marta, Colombia, established in 1526, but this was the first in Peru.

Leaving 50 men back at the settlement under the command of Antonio Navarro, Pizarro proceeded with his conquest accompanied by 200 men on 24 Sept. 1532.[4]:155–156 After arriving at Zaran, Hernando de Soto was dispatched to a Peruvian garrison at Caxas. After a week, he returned with an envoy from the Inca himself, with some presents, and an invitation to visit the Inca ruler's camp.[4]:156–158

Following the defeat of his brother, Huáscar, Atahualpa had been resting in the Sierra of northern Peru, near Cajamarca, in the nearby thermal baths known today as the Inca Baths. Arriving Cajamarca on 15 Nov. 1532, Pizarro had a force of just 110 foot soldiers, 67 cavalry, three arquebuses, and two falconets. He sent Hernando Pizarro and Hernando de Soto to meet with Atahualpa in his camp. Atahuallpa agreed to meet Pizarro in his Cajamarca plaza fortress the next day. Fray Vincente de Valverde and native interpreter Felipillo approached Atahualpa in Cajamarca's central plaza. After the Dominican friar expounded the "true faith" and the need to pay tribute to the Emperor Charles the Fifth, Atahualpa replied, "I will be no man's tributary." His complacency, because fewer than 200 Spanish remained, as opposed to his 50,000-man army, of which 6000 accompanied him to Cajamarca, sealed his fate and that of the Inca empire.[4]:157,161,166–177




Atahualpa's refusal led Pizarro and his force to attack the Inca army in what became the Battle of Cajamarca on 16 November 1532. The Spanish were successful and Pizarro executed Atahualpa's 12-man honor guard and took the Inca captive at the so-called Ransom Room. By February 1533, Almagro had joined Pizarro in Cajamarca with an additional 150 men with 50 horses.[4]:186–194

Despite fulfilling his promise of filling one room (22 by 17 feet or 7 by 5 metres)[9] with gold and two with silver, Atahualpa was convicted of 12 charges, including killing his brother, and plotting against Pizarro and his forces. He was executed by garrote on 29 August 1533. Francisco Pizarro and de Soto were opposed to Atahualpa's execution, but Francisco consented to the trial due to the "great agitation among the soldiers", particularly by Almagro. De Soto was on a reconnaissance mission the day of the trial and execution, and upon his return expressed his dismay, stating, "he should have been taken to Castile and judged by the emperor."[4]:202–204,206[10] King Charles later wrote to Pizarro: "We have been displeased by the death of Atahualpa, since he was a monarch, and particularly as it was done in the name of justice."

Pizarro advanced with his army of 500 Spaniards toward Cuzco, accompanied by Chalcuchimac before he was burned at the stake. Manco Inca Yupanqui joined Pizarro after the death of Túpac Huallpa.[4]:191,210,216

During the exploration of Cuzco, Pizarro was impressed and through his officers wrote back to King Charles I of Spain, saying:

"This city is the greatest and the finest ever seen in this country or anywhere in the Indies... We can assure your Majesty that it is so beautiful and has such fine buildings that it would be remarkable even in Spain."

The Spanish sealed the conquest of Peru by entering Cuzco on 15 November 1533.[4]:216 Jauja in the fertile Mantaro Valley was established as Peru's provisional capital in April 1534,[6]:286 but it was too far up in the mountains and far from the sea to serve as the Spanish capital of Peru. Pizarro thus founded the city of Lima in Peru's central coast on 6 January 1535, which he considered as one of the most important things he had created in life.[4]:227–229

After the final effort of the Inca to recover Cuzco had been defeated by Almagro, a dispute occurred between Pizarro and him respecting the limits of their jurisdiction; both claimed the city of Cuzco. The king of Spain had awarded the Governorate of New Toledo to Almagro and the Governorate of New Castile to Pizarro. The dispute had originated from a disagreement on how to interpret the limit between both governorates.[4]:254–256

This led to confrontations between the Pizarro brothers and Almagro, who was eventually defeated during the Battle of Las Salinas (1538) and executed. Almagro's son, also named Diego and known as El Mozo, was later stripped of his lands and left bankrupt by Pizarro.

Atahualpa's wife, 10-year-old Cuxirimay Ocllo Yupanqui, was with Atahualpa's army in Cajamarca and had stayed with him while he was imprisoned. Following his execution, she was taken to Cuzco and given the name Dona Angelina. By 1538, it was known she was Pizarro's mistress, having borne him two sons, Juan and Francisco.[11]

kashira kureijii
04-26-2016, 11:10 AM
https://www.warhistoryonline.com/world-war-ii/top-10-surviving-nazi-built-buildings.html

Eagle's Nest is still around, they use it as a restaurant apparently

kashira kureijii
05-24-2016, 06:40 PM
WGKdcNCYW8g

Okinawa is Freaking brutal man. Just finished reading this book by this Sledge guy, it was real good. Marines are totally badass

I had this better video that was declassified marine footage, that was brutal and realistic and shit, but apparently it is no longer available for my country on youtube.

Strange that I can't watch US marine footage in the US...........

Any way it was a good book.

I also read this book about Shanghai in 1937, called "stalingrad on the yangzhe" or some such thing. It was a pretty good china theater book too. My only problem with it was that the author immediately took sides with the Chinese instead of being unbiased ( especially considering that it was the Chinese that broke truce and started the offensive). Anyway the book was alright, it was funny because throughout the book the author talks about how well the Chinese were doing and all this pro-Chinese stuff and in the end it lists the casualties and its like 300k chinese losses and like 39k japanese.
ya I guess the chinese were doing real good militarily......stupid author.

I also read a great book called Iron Kingdom, about the history of Prussia, which I would also recommend

zerodameaon
05-24-2016, 11:15 PM
My history piece is the B-52. I may have been in the Navy but these things are amazing. Designed to carry nukes they helped us with MAD. Though unlike the B-70, once ICBMs became a thing these did not just go away, they transitioned rolls to a conventional bomber. They are expected to have a 100 year service life, and to think the B-2 is already getting replaced and isn't even 20yo.

As for family history, my grandpa trained for the invasion of Japan, the US dropping those bombs likely saved more lives then they took as the losses were projected to be so high they didn't bother to train how to get back out of Japan. Then his son, my uncle, married a German girl who was the daughter of a low rank nazi officer. When my grandpa asked him why he fought for Hitler he responded with "why did you fight for FDR, because you were patriotic, and you were shown all these horrible things we did." The same thing happened to us, you were responsible for many war crimes. As for me, I was part of the crew that attempted to rescue the second ship taken hostage by pirates in over 100 years. Both ships happened to be in Dejbuti at the same time.

kashira kureijii
05-25-2016, 05:21 PM
My history piece is the B-52. I may have been in the Navy but these things are amazing. Designed to carry nukes they helped us with MAD. Though unlike the B-70, once ICBMs became a thing these did not just go away, they transitioned rolls to a conventional bomber. They are expected to have a 100 year service life, and to think the B-2 is already getting replaced and isn't even 20yo.

As for family history, my grandpa trained for the invasion of Japan, the US dropping those bombs likely saved more lives then they took as the losses were projected to be so high they didn't bother to train how to get back out of Japan. Then his son, my uncle, married a German girl who was the daughter of a low rank nazi officer. When my grandpa asked him why he fought for Hitler he responded with "why did you fight for FDR, because you were patriotic, and you were shown all these horrible things we did." The same thing happened to us, you were responsible for many war crimes. As for me, I was part of the crew that attempted to rescue the second ship taken hostage by pirates in over 100 years. Both ships happened to be in Dejbuti at the same time.

Thats a kickass family history dude, I've only seen B2's flying around, I would like to see a B52 at least once. especially during takeoff when they dump water or whatever into the jet engines for more power and it makes those cool steam trails.

My WW2 family history is really just dutch people under occupation. No real military stuffs. My grandparents did hide jews and shit, and my great opa on my other side smuggled weapons for resistance people. My grandfather also was in the Dutch-Indonesian war that happened after WW2, but I think he was just a mechanic. One grandfather was a US MP, and had to go round up deserters, draft dodgers, and black-market stuff in the US

Dutch resistance people kinda sound like douche-bags though. I've read this one story about how during winter one year, resistance members skated across this river at night, knocked on the Nazi governors door, and shot him right in the face when he answered, then they skated away.

zerodameaon
05-25-2016, 05:58 PM
The trails you see are because they are dumping so much fuel into the engines they don't quite burn it all. They used to have water injection which was even smokier though the newer engines don't need that like they did in the 50s. When we would light off the gas turbine engines on my ship they would puff so much white smoke, per the engineers all four engines lighting off would use about 55 gallons of fuel together in about 5 seconds.

You won't see our names in any history books, but these family histories are almost as important. They pass on things that the big history books forget, or overlook. Generation memories are an interesting subject, inter-generational adds to that. What your grandparents did was important as well.

kashira kureijii
05-25-2016, 06:02 PM
Ah, didnt know they stopped using the water injection. Thats cool that you are up to date on that stuff, and know about it.

Also yes, i would agree that family history stuff is important, because it also adds a personal element as well


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Splintercellsz
06-12-2016, 04:09 PM
WGKdcNCYW8g

Okinawa is Freaking brutal man. Just finished reading this book by this Sledge guy, it was real good. Marines are totally badass

I had this better video that was declassified marine footage, that was brutal and realistic and shit, but apparently it is no longer available for my country on youtube.

Strange that I can't watch US marine footage in the US...........

Any way it was a good book.

I also read this book about Shanghai in 1937, called "stalingrad on the yangzhe" or some such thing. It was a pretty good china theater book too. My only problem with it was that the author immediately took sides with the Chinese instead of being unbiased ( especially considering that it was the Chinese that broke truce and started the offensive). Anyway the book was alright, it was funny because throughout the book the author talks about how well the Chinese were doing and all this pro-Chinese stuff and in the end it lists the casualties and its like 300k chinese losses and like 39k japanese.
ya I guess the chinese were doing real good militarily......stupid author.

I also read a great book called Iron Kingdom, about the history of Prussia, which I would also recommend
Look into the TV series called "The Pacific". It's about that book. Great series, I throughly enjoyed it.

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