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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Feb 1, 2018 22:02:07 GMT
von Bulow?
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Feb 1, 2018 22:48:30 GMT
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Feb 2, 2018 2:02:16 GMT
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Feb 2, 2018 2:22:27 GMT
Scharnhorst?
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Feb 2, 2018 5:04:19 GMT
That is correct. Proceed to the next question.
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Feb 2, 2018 11:20:04 GMT
Here's an Either/Or kind of question, inspired by one of the earlier members who posted questions:
Either: I am the true "face of Japan" during the first 2 known Japanese campaigns into Korea (the 2 Japanese invasion of Korea of the 1500s).
Or: The more well known maiden of France whose participation in the Hundred Years' Wars was what help turn the tide, resulting in a French victory in the end.
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Feb 2, 2018 12:38:57 GMT
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Feb 2, 2018 16:31:09 GMT
1 - ET lied to you. It was Hideyoshi Toyotomi, Nobunaga Oda was already (supposedly) dead by the time the invasions took place IRL, hence the wording "true face of Japan". 2 - Correct! (ET lied to us about specifically when she showed up during the war) Your turn, Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb!
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Feb 2, 2018 16:49:51 GMT
This is somewhat of a tangent, but how did England lose the Hundred Years War, when they had won three crippling victories against the French (Crecy, Poitiers, Agincourt), and they even captured the French King after Poitiers?
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Feb 2, 2018 21:46:30 GMT
Next question
The inventor of the "bombard".
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Feb 2, 2018 23:12:58 GMT
This is somewhat of a tangent, but how did England lose the Hundred Years War, when they had won three crippling victories against the French (Crecy, Poitiers, Agincourt), and they even captured the French King after Poitiers? They failed to crush the French. At the Siege of Orléans, their failure prevented the defeat of the French. This allowed the French to also recover from earlier losses & overturn this war.
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Feb 3, 2018 1:05:40 GMT
Ok. I guess the English were trying to maintain possession of French lands anyway, so even though they lost, all the territory they ended up losing wasn't necessarily theirs to begin with. Disclaimer, I don't know that much about this war, so don't get mad if I am totally incorrect!
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Feb 4, 2018 7:40:34 GMT
Hey, anyone?
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Feb 4, 2018 8:14:51 GMT
What's a "bombard" specifically? Is it a weapon or tactic?
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Post by Aleksandr Vasilevsky on Feb 4, 2018 8:42:43 GMT
What's a "bombard" specifically? Is it a weapon or tactic? Bombard is a cannon. One of first gunpowder siege equipment. Mainly used for sieges, as they are effective at breaking down walls.
That's pretty much all I remember. I don't remember creators of weaponry as that is a bit too much to remember.
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