For me when I heard about Montenegro's entry into ww1 I got goosebumps. >Osterreich offers generous terms to Montenegro to simply allow Austrian troops to move through their lands >Ost declares war on serbia >Montenegro a nation of 35,000 fighting men didn't hesitate to join a war they were ill-equipped to fight against an opponent which hundreds of times their manpower >Loyalty was more important than survival
>Reduced to approximately thirty able men, most members of the Sturmbataillon had been captured or escaped Berlin on their own, or in small groups. Most of those who made it to France were apprehended and sent to Allied prisons and camps. Fenet was sentenced to 20 years of forced labour, but was released from prison in 1959. Others were shot upon capture by the French authorities. General Philip Leclerc, the French divisional commander who had served under the Americans, was presented with a group of 11-12 captured Charlemagne Division men.[Note 1] The Free French General immediately asked them why they wore a German uniform, to which one of them replied by asking the General why he wore an American one (French Army uniform stocks had been plundered en masse by the Germans during the occupation). The group of French Waffen-SS men were later shot.[25
>General Leclerc was famously presented with a defiant group of 11-12 captured Charlemagne Division men. The Free French General immediately asked them why they wore a German uniform, to which one of them unwisely replied by asking the General why he wore an American one (the Free French wore modified US army uniforms). The group of French Waffen-SS men was then promptly executed without any form of military tribunal procedure.
Xavier Gomez
Haha negro :DDDD
Caleb Barnes
it's so much worse when Europeans resort to the sort of barbarism that should be reserved for the eastern front
Logan Ward
Subhumans gonna subhuman.
Wyatt Watson
Obviously the 300 and Alamo
Great Siege of Malta >Knights Hospitaller continue the crusades >Reduced in number, but still fighting mudslimes >50000 Ottomans Attack the Knight's small base of only a few thousand, in addition ot the turkroaches ships >Knights fought hard, 1500 died defending the outer walls > Turks Breached, then bombed city for many days >Went inside >A few hundred knights killed 10000 turkroaches at 95% casualties
Luis Morales
>one of them replied by asking the General why he wore an American one
B.T.F.O.
Adrian Turner
Insane
Caleb Young
The Battle of the Halbe >German 12th army kept a corridor open after the war was lost to allow the 9th + their 200k civilians escape to the Elbe where the Americans stopped their advance
I always wonder what would've happened if Germany had've surrendered to the Americans under the condition that no russian occupation would take place.
Ian Murphy
Fun facts: The Knights Hospitaller still exist (just in pussy form)
and the Knights would endure the longest siege in recorded history during the battle of Candia (16 fucking years the turkroaches bombarded her walls) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Candia
Christopher Collins
>slaughters thousands of Anzacs at Gallipoli
"Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives… you are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets where they lie side by side here in this country of ours… You the mothers who sent their sons from far away countries, wipe away your tears. Your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. Having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well."
Wyatt Robinson
mildly enraging
Henry Murphy
Siege of Nándorfehérvár or Belgrade (never knew it was called that in english) Dude on pic related took out the turkish that was about to put the flag on the castle to claim it by jumping down with him into the abyss. Sadly after that victory 65 years later the country still fell and we had 150 years of turkish occupation, dividing the country. But the man is still a hero who is honored everyday since.
Anthony Martinez
I would gladly die by saying banter.
Andrew Williams
We will never be friends with turkroaches. I pine for the day we go back to settle the score.
Adrian Perez
Back then a flag meant something, having one sown would've been a huge expense for the dyes and the labour. Now people put leaves on them or burn them because they don't get enough gubmint programz. The human race today sickens me.
John Martinez
Sibinjanin Janko? Neat
Mason Brown
Still I have some rescpect for the man. He had a vision for a non-shithole Turkey but they failed him.
Nicholas Jones
And what baffles me more is that burning a nation's flag can just happen on western soil and if you dare raise your voice about it how it is bad, you might end up in jail for trying to be true to your nation and keeping the "flag should never touch the ground" rule.
Jaxon Moore
>Soldiers, exactly at three o'clock, the enemy is to be crushed by your fierce charge, destroyed by your grenades and bayonets. The honor of Belgrade, our capital, must not be stained. Soldiers! Heroes! The supreme command has erased our regiment from its records. Our regiment has been sacrificed for the honor of Belgrade and the Fatherland. Therefore, you no longer need to worry about your lives: they no longer exist. So, forward to glory! For the King and the Fatherland! Long live the King, Long live Belgrade!
Evan Morgan
His name was Titus Dugović funny how a Serbian/Croatian saved a Hungarian flag and castle, this wouldn't happen today.
Julian Sanchez
It's been confirmed he never said this or anything similar. Look it up.
William Murphy
Back then we used to remove kebab together all the time, I see no reason why we couldn't do the same now.
Most likely fiction, but if it's real I doubt there are pants big enough for this man's balls.
>In the first Northern Expedition, Zhuge Liang's efforts to conquer the Wei city Chang'an were undermined by the Shu defeat at the Battle of Jieting. With the loss of Jieting (present-day Qin'an County, Gansu), Zhuge Liang's current location, Xicheng (西城; believed to be located 120 li southwest of present-day Tianshui, Gansu), became exposed and was in peril of being attacked by the Wei army. In the face of imminent danger, with the main Shu army deployed elsewhere and only a small group of soldiers in Xicheng, Zhuge Liang came up with a ploy to hold off the approaching enemy.
>Zhuge Liang ordered all the gates to be opened and instructed soldiers disguised as civilians to sweep the roads while he sat on the viewing platform above the gates with two page boys flanking him. He put on a calm and composed image by playing his guqin. When the Wei army led by Sima Yi arrived, Sima was surprised by the scene before him and he ordered a retreat after suspecting that there was an ambush inside the city. Zhuge Liang later explained that his strategy was a risky one. It worked because Zhuge Liang had a reputation for being a careful military tactician who hardly took risks, so Sima Yi came to the conclusion that there was an ambush upon seeing Zhuge's relaxed composure.[8]
Landon Sullivan
Operation Cottage There's nothing more bro tier than for you and your allies to go and die for your country even if there's no one to fight against.
Colton Cook
At 4 am, at the same times as regular artillery started firing, German forces used poison gases against the defenders. Thinking that all of the defenders were dead, Germans started advancing. Fourteen battalions of Landwehr - at least 7000 infantry men - were participating in that attack. When German infantry reached the first line of defense, they were counter-attacked by what was left of 13th company of the 226th Zemlyansk regiment (about 60 men). Surprise attack and bloody clothing (Russian soldiers were coughing blood up because of poison gases destroying the lung tissue) put Germans in the state of shock and made them run. The five remaining Russian guns opened fire at this point aiming at the running mass of Germans. European papers called it «The attack of the dead (ru)».
Zachary Bailey
I've heard this one before great quote.
Jacob Jones
Dragutin Gavrilovic's Charge in Belgrade, 1915?
Noah Martinez
Wish I knew.
Aaron Butler
...
Xavier Powell
Glorious. Isn't that the siege where the Turks finally retreated because a random scouting party spooked them into thinking reinforcements had arrived?
Cooper Sanchez
>In the early 1990's when the South African Government knew that apartheid was coming to an end - they dismantled their nuclear arsenal. This saved the world from having an irrational nigger state from being able to blackmail the world for gibsmedats, and keeps the future open for a possible liberation of the South African people.
We haven't forgotten about you South Africa, we'll repay you, for all you've done for us!
Nathaniel Collins
This will go down in history.
John Perez
I wonder which nation had the duty of taking those nukes off South Africa's hands? (((Oy Vey)))
Camden King
...
Samuel Gray
ITT: Faggots who dont understand "bro" (but what else would you expect from a bunch of NEETs?) Bro in this context means backing your ally, no matter the cost or obvious futility.
Hudson Phillips
>look it up
Source it faggot.
Angel Gray
south africa giving their nukes away so the niggers wouldn't have them is pretty world bro tier.
John Parker
>canada
Carson Kelly
>Great Siege of Malta >Knights Hospitaller continue the crusades >Reduced in number, but still fighting mudslimes >50000 Ottomans Attack the Knight's small base of only a few thousand, in addition ot the turkroaches ships >Knights fought hard, 1500 died defending the outer walls > Turks Breached, then bombed city for many days >Went inside >A few hundred knights killed 10000 turkroaches at 95% casualties
Well, it's not going to happen, but *this* should be a movie.
Josiah White
(((hollywood))) would fuck it up though christians would probably considered child rapers the slimes would be liberators
Andrew Sanchez
We honour their sacrifice, the rape of the Afrikaaners will be repaid thousandfold upon their captors when they are liberated.
Tyler Nelson
God Bless them
Kevin Rivera
really good book on it: Empires of the Sea: The Siege of Malta, the Battle of Lepanto, and the Contest for the Center of the World by Roger Crowley