CmirDarthanna
Connoisseur.
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2018
- Messages
- 11,647
- Likes received
- 109,572
Watch as he somehow gets Vampires and Werewolves as available units.
Last edited:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
LoL and supersoldiers.Watch as he somehow gets Vampire and Werewolves as available units.
Will china be communist in this timeline? Hopefully the nationalist government can properly discipline West Taiwan into becoming a respectable nation. Kek.
Scratching their heads…hmm?Kek. I can imagine future historians scratching their heads how someone can be so successful despite having their brain deprived of so much blood from a constantly raging erection.
Actually no, they didn't. There is NO historical record about this, nor mentions of this figure of speech that doesn't postdate the event by a ludicrous period of time. Also, people tried salting their gardens in real life and it only changed the kind of weeds that grew, and they grew even faster than before. Also also, salt was super expensive to the point where it was used to pay the wages of the legionnaires. No way would Rome have wasted it for this. "Salary" comes from the latin word for "salt" because of this very reason.No they really did salt the ground, this was probably a small area as after three wars the Carthaginians were less than 10,000 people living in a city surrounded by Roman Africa who had just been forced to give up all weapons shield and armour on pain of death. Then the Romans sent a new treaty wherein every Carthaginian agreed to move 15 miles inland so that Carthange could have its walls and buildings torn down. This was the point where the Carthaginians finally ended as they said no, we're all slaughtered to the last or enslaved, the buildings were torn down and the fields were salted, probably not heavily salted because salt was expensive. But on the other hand the Romans literally forced the army to take away the building stones and dump them off ships so they could not be reassembled because just pulling everything down was not enough. We are unsure however of how many stones were loaded on ships and thrown overboard how many were repurposed in Sicily or Roman Africa, how much fields were salted, how much was embezzled etc. But surviving letters, orders and Senate correspondence indicate some amount of all of this was done, it's just difficult to tell in what amounts after 1800 years.
Ah, the Cartagina Delenda Est guy.I think it was fall of empires podcast Carthage where I heard about the salting of the ground, but I am pretty sure it was one angry senator (ex-consul?) of three were sent to Africa to deal with Numidia, passed by Carthage on his way and saw that they were doing all right. Or in angry Roman senator words they lived lives as if they had won all the wars they had ever fought with Rome. The port was busy, the nobles rich, farmland fertile and the streets clean. He then spent the next 10-15ish years railing against Carthage because his dad died in the third (2nd oops) Punic war. Whenever the senate met he gave a speech, invited to parties he gave a speech, when it came time to decide where consuls would be sent, you guessed it he argued they be sent to destroy Carthage. I think he might of died 5ish years after carthage was finally razed and he died a poorer man (for a Roman 0.01%) having spent much of his time and money ensuring Carthage would never rise again because he hated them that much.
So does this mean the union would fracture into different warlord states since Stalin was the only thing holding the nation together?
Odds are thats what the second phase carol was planning. Its alot easier to conquer places if they are fighting each other and not expecting an armed fist to the rear.So does this mean the union would fracture into different warlord states since Stalin was the only thing holding the nation together?