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Sounds like Shiloh. The Confederates did make a surprise attack. But it was the Union that won.
they planed to do it without the Romans knowing
Vikings
The Zealots didn't attack the Romans. The Romans were going to attack but all the Zealots killed themselves. Over 960 children, men and woman died. Now, that's a different story. They believe the Romans attacked, or were going to attack, because the Zealots would, in a way, pull pranks on the Romans. The Romans got tired of living over 1,000 feet below the Zealots because it also gave the Zealots a advantage at numerous things.Hoped this helped!:)
the christians attacked the Muslims but they did fight back and the war went on .
Don Quixote explains that the enchanter Friston turned the giants into windmills to rob him of his glory in battle. He believes that Friston did this to take away the recognition for his heroic act of defeating the giants, ultimately maintaining his delusion that he was fighting giants.
Don Quixote mistakenly perceives windmills as giants due to his delusions of grandeur from reading chivalric novels. He believes it is his duty as a knight errant to defeat these perceived giants in the name of honor and bravery.
Don Quixote tells Sancho Panza to defend his honor if common men attack him, but to not attack them first unless they insult his lineage. He advises Sancho to uphold his dignity without resorting to violence unless absolutely necessary.
Ani AnswerThe real battle against windmills is timing, if you throw a punch at a windmill you better time your attack well or the spinning blade will sever your arm.When you are battling windmills or fighting windmills, you are fighting against an imaginary evil. "Tilting at Windmills", an imagined evil, and foul enemy.
In Miguel de Cervantes' "Don Quixote," Don Quixote encounters a lion on the road. Despite his fear, he faces the lion head-on with his lance, believing it to be a fierce enemy. However, the lion ignores him and continues on its way, leaving Don Quixote bewildered at the anticlimactic encounter.
In the novel "Don Quixote" by Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote is knighted by an innkeeper who humorously plays along with Quixote's delusion of being a knight-errant. The innkeeper dubs him as a knight in a mock ceremony, further fueling Quixote's adventurous spirit.
They were a politically motivated attack agianst the whites and the city's leading african american citizens.
Yes, that was a very emotive call-to-arms.
Rosh's attack on the caravan in "The Bronze Bow" was motivated by his desire to disrupt the Roman occupation in Palestine and to strike back against the oppression of his people. He hoped to incite rebellion and resistance through acts of defiance like this attack.
Because the truce between Richard and Saladin did not last, so the Fourth Crusade happened.
Publicity for their 'cause' ! They chose the targets to create maximum media coverage for their acts of terrorism.
Man of La Mancha is a musical based on one of the most famous books in world history, Don Quixote by Miguel Cervantes, written around 1600. In the book, an elderly but vigorous man who is fond of stories about knights in shining armour imagines himself to be such a knight and goes riding around looking for adventure. In his insanity he has to imagine that the world is like the tales of knights and so on, even though it is quite prosaic and ordinary. One of the first examples of his craziness occurs when he sees a field full of windmills and imagines that they are a group of giants waving their arms. He attacks the windmill on his horse but is knocked off by one of the sails of the mill. He is then surprised to find that the giants have magically transformed themselves into windmills.