CHINA
the country known as your mother.
Germany bby :)
The french built the Louisburg Fort in 1763. It costed the french over a hundred dollar which was alot of money back then.
His father was Mongol and his mother was Olkhunut. He was always seen as a Mongol, because back then Mongolian culture was very patrilinear and patriarchal.
The death of the Great Khan meant that the Mongol leaders had to journey back to their capital at Karakorum to elect a new leader. The threat of Mongol invasion of Europe ended, and Europe remained Christian and medieval, ushering in the Dark Ages, religious intolerance, disease, poverty and philosphical stagnation. Meanwhile, the Mongol Empire from the Danube to the Pacific Ocean enjoyed relative peace, learning, a growth of culture and craftsmanship, and religious and racial tolerance unknown before then.
France. This was a "false" line that was mistaken for a secure means to keep the Germans at arms length.
The question as posed is unanswerable. Napoleon invaded many cities, states, and empires and in each invasion there were at least two armies (the French army and the army of the invaded country). As a result, without clarifying which invasion we are talking about and which army in that invasion, this question is impossible to answer.
The expression is not actually "rode on the sheep's back" but "built on the sheep's back". Australia is often referred to as the country that was built on the sheep's back. That is because the wool industry is one of Australia's earliest industries, and the one that initially propelled Australia into success as a self-sufficient colony, able to trade with England in its own right. Australia's economic success and political development was "built on the sheep's back".
The Bay of Pigs.
they used there spears and killed a couple of the british people to stop them invading there country.
Probably not. Due to the huge size of the Mongol empire at its height, and the Mongol practice of intermarrying with their subject peoples, it's been estimated that nearly one out of 10 people living today to can trace ancestry back to a Mongol.
The D-Day invasion stood for the Allied powers hitting back at the Germans with forces on the ground.