The Seven Years’ War, the American War of Independence, and the Napoleonic Wars—late 18th-century Europe was a stage set for conflict.
A modern teenager unexpectedly arrives in this turbulent era, only to find himself trapped in the crumbling kingdom of pre-revolutionary France.
To make matters worse, he is none other than the ill-fated King Louis XVI, destined for the guillotine.
A soul that traveled through, wandering in the Soviet Union in the 1940s, under the uniform of the People’s Committee of the Interior, how many stories are contained…
A history of the birth of the Bulgarian Empire, a history of struggle in a small Balkan country! The protagonist travels through Ferdinand I and leads the rise of Bulgaria.
A reasonable deduction essay, no brain damage! A must-see for the history party, and foreign history lovers should not miss it!
"Your Majesty, some people think you unified Europe simply by luck. What's your response?" The newly crowned European emperor said indignantly, "They don't understand Napoleon at all. If it weren't for me, who knows how many emperors and kings there would be in Europe. It was I who saved the people of Europe!"
The tyrant of iron and blood, the bulwark of Eastern Europe, the savior of the Soviet Union, the master of Constantinople, the liberator of the Third Rome, the new tsar of the north, the nightmare of Chechnya, the meat grinder of the free world, and the leader of the red regime, General Secretary Gennady Ivanovich Yanaev.
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Ancient Babylonian civilization, the defiant Tower of Babel, the mysterious Hanging Gardens—Iraq, your history is so glorious! But why are you shrouded in war today? Why has your wealth been plundered? Why are your people struggling amidst explosions and death? Who can save them?
God says: O you who believe, I will send down angels to help you!
If I were Qusay Hussein, if I had ever been in power, if I had gone back to Iraq in the 1980s, then—what would happen?
Book club 1 for "Iraq Turmoil": The Hanging Gardens of Babylon, 43692675; Book club 2 for "Iraq Turmoil": 27461062. The earthquake reconstruction is not just about rebuilding houses and factories, but also about restoring hope and dreams! Please support the disaster area, support China!
As the Hun's horses' hooves shattered the ice of the Rhine, the 16-year-old Roman farmer Marcus knew only two things: run, and revenge.
On the day his village burned to the ground, his parents' blood soaked his sandals, his sister's cries were swallowed by the barbarians' wild laughter. From a slave in the army to a blood-soaked centurion, he grasped the old centurion's sword and tore his way through the corrupt legions: officers fed the barbarians with rations, the emperor watched the flames of Rome drunkenly, and even the swords of Gothic mercenaries were sharper than Roman standards.
When the Vandals sacked the Eternal City, he dragged his dying sister out of the pile of corpses, but his only response was "Don't let Rome rot completely."
In 476, the last Western Roman emperor stepped down from the throne. Marcus stood among the broken pillars, the rust on his sword redder than the setting sun. The empire was dead, but the smoke from cooking stoves crushed by iron hooves, the sighs of dying veterans, the faded word "Rome" on the pages of books—he wanted to let them breathe a little longer in the setting sun.
This is not an epic about saving the world, but a story about a small person who uses his life to protect a spark of light in an era of collapse.
In 1922, military historian Contini returned to Italy...
Traveling through a tall, rich and handsome man, marrying a beautiful woman, and reaching the pinnacle of life, let's see how he led Italy to rise!