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Military History Quarterly
Autumn 2005
Jonathan Phillips
Christian vs. Christian in the Fourth Crusade The chance to unify the faithful -- and gain a strong ally -- led to the conquest of Christendom's leading city. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military History
September 2007
Roger Crowley
The Guns of Constantinople History's first great artillery barrage, in 1453, shattered the Byzantine capital and changed warfare forever. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military History
Erik Hildinger
Belisarius' Bid for Rome As Byzantine Emperor Justinian revived the Eastern Roman empire, he sent his greatest general west to retake Rome. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military History
Richard Gordon
Stopping Attila: The Battle of Chalons Flavius Aetius' confrontation with Attila the Hun in AD 451 is widely regarded as a turning point in history, but it may only have hastened the fall of the Western Roman Empire. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military History
July 2005
Pierre Comtois
Battle for Baku On the plains of Central Asia, the men of 'Dunsterforce' fought Germans, Turks, Bolsheviks and Persian warlords with equal verve. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military History Quarterly
Spring 2007
David G. Frye
Rome's Barbarian Mercenaries How the "Roman" army came to be composed of barbarian troops of an often renegade nature is in many ways the story of Rome's fall. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
August 21, 2007
Julian Smith
Quake Fears, Ancient Finds Have Europe-Asia Tunnel on Nonstop Delay The Marmaray tunnel project is ambitious enough to worry even the most experienced engineers, but its location could give a seismologist night sweats. All this work is taking place just 12 miles from the North Anatolian Fault, Eurasia's version of the San Andreas. mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
March 1, 2001
Harry Marks
Top 10 Historic & Cultural Places If you're tired of beaches or ski resorts, then why don't you set off on a journey and discover 10 lands that have served as the home to great civilizations, legendary battles, great statesmen, revolutions, and various aspects that have defined and shaped the world, as we know it? mark for My Articles similar articles
Science News
September 9, 2000
Ivars Peterson
Defending the Roman Empire One issue that often came up in my board-game forays into international intrigue was how to deploy my limited forces to defend far-flung territories while I plotted to conquer the world. Such questions of military strategy can be handled mathematically. mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
September 17, 2002
Harry Marks
Tantalizing Turkey Nestled magnificently between Europe and Asia, Turkey stands alone as the place for the inquisitive traveler looking not only for regular sights and fun in the sun, but a peek into a lesson in history unlike any other. mark for My Articles similar articles