Cool historical mottos/slogans/sayings and their meaning

I think it's pretty hard to beat "the sun never sets on the British empire"

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_empire_on_which_the_sun_never_sets#Spain
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Caedite eos. Novit enim Dominus qui sunt eius.
Kill them all; let God sort them out.

>was allegedly spoken by Papal legate and Cistercian abbot Arnaud Amalric prior to the massacre at Béziers

>Use that motto 2 centuries before the perfidious Albion
>The eternal Anglo strikes again

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_empire_on_which_the_sun_never_sets#Spain

FeelsBadMan

On hearing of the Scottish victory, Pope Martin V passed comment by reiterating a common medieval saying, that "Verily, the Scots are well-known as an antidote to the English."

Try being less shit.

Greece has the best.

I'm sorry for your loss

>Si vis pacem, para bellum
>If you want peace, prepare for war

There are a lot of cool sounding latin saying desu

Standard shit.

our motto is "by reason or by force", sounds rapey desu

this
>Molon labe

simple
and eternal

>eternal
Doubt a single person outside Greece knows about it, and if they do it's probably because of an American action film.

Arbeit macht Frei is a good one

eternal for the Greeks

I only knew about it as the motto for New Hampshire

The Germans gased the Jews and their children anyway.
They filled the rooms until they were really full.
Every time they were screaming but the Germans did not care.

I wish we could have won the war together

H-hey guys~

>Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité ou la mort

There is still hope, right?

>for the Greeks
Who cares then lol

I am sorry but Japan had no chances from the beginning.
Germany and its dog Italy attacked neutral Greece and digged their own grave.

Eternal shame upon Japan.

Read some old English books.

A.E.I.O.U.

γνῶθι σεαυτόν
Know Thyself

>Some western authors have assumed that Napoleon had gone out of his mind in ordering the Poles to charge batteries of 16 cannon over several kilometers of extremely difficult terrain. Others, however, think Napoleon ordered only the closest battery to be taken, in order to open the way for his infantry, and that Kozietulski had misunderstood the order.
>According to many memoirs of veterans of the battle, Kozietulski led his men in a charge with the official cry "Vive l'Empereur". However, popular legend has it that the true battle cry was the Polish "Naprzód psiekrwie, Cesarz patrzy" - "Forward, you sons of dogs, the Emperor is watching"

Technically Greece was all on the Italians. The Krauts saw it as a worthless diversion from Barbarossa

good one. though I'm pretty sure that saying one thing and writing down another was probably pretty common. the middle management on the field weren't the ones writing the history books and if they did they knew their audience. the nobles appreciated one kind of talk and the soldiers another.

>at, avrat, silah.
>horse, woman, weapon

used in nomadic old times

"Elephas indus culices non timet"
(The indian elephant does not fear mosquitoes)

"Proletarians of the world, unite!" :^)