Instead, he gave Dermot permission to recruit mercenaries from among his Norman knights. |
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Third, there is also a potential continuing supply of mercenaries as regular soldiers are demobilized. |
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Instead, they massed a large army, hired mercenaries, and attacked both places at once. |
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In 1640, he inherited an army made up of mercenaries who lacked loyalty in the best of times. |
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It is hard to believe that the country would hire foreign mercenaries for military and daily operations. |
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Before he fell, he raised the grenade launcher and pointed it at the small army of mercenaries and undead. |
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Is the Pentagon privatizing the military or is it simply hiring mercenaries? |
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Moving from project to project, workers will become intellectual mercenaries. |
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They are political mercenaries, hired because they can keep ministers at arms' length from the media and the less savoury side of politics. |
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Having little to offer other than their reputation as warriors, the Mexica hired themselves out as mercenaries to rival Toltec factions. |
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Later in the game, the mercenaries start deploying Claymore mines, which are triggered by tripwire. |
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All those who have been attracted to the Army are doing it for money, sort of mercenaries. |
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The mobile mercenaries of the fifth century had been veritable soldiers of fortune, for whom armed conflict was the only source of income. |
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Two of the mercenaries have taken it upon themselves to carry him, his diminutive legs being unequal to the task of running through marketplaces. |
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Unlike Rome, but like the Greeks, the Carthaginians also made extensive use of mercenaries. |
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Most of the mercenaries were dispersing, slowly walking, although for some it was more of a stagger, down the streets bragging to one another. |
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His timely rescue of London from a retreating force of Frankish mercenaries who had been in the pay of Allectus was a huge propaganda victory. |
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In 1210, he invaded Ireland with a fleet of 700 ships carrying his feudal host and a force of Flemish mercenaries. |
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Hard-faced mercenaries watched the crowd with the same intentness that she did. |
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One clause promised to buy off Conde's German mercenaries, led by John Casimir of the Palatinate, with a payment of 500,000 ecus. |
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In the South, Norman mercenaries gradually established their power in the course of the eleventh century. |
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The chief sent out each leader of each group of mercenaries to alert them of the coming battle. |
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His people, leaderless, turned into freebooters and mercenaries, spreading chaos wherever they went. |
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Several other soldiers started firing, forcing the mercenaries to take cover in the small crevices in the wall. |
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These people are actually mercenaries and should not be allowed to go and fight wars in other countries as hired guns. |
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I'm not ready to call these guys mercenaries, because I think there's a line between domestic PMCs and mercenaries or hired guns. |
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I just wish it wasn't at the hands of the patrols and mercenaries who were determined that I not do anyone any physical harm. |
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Both mercenaries had already finished loading their ammo packs to the brim with ammo for their selected weapons. |
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Except for the legions of Rome, all the early troops in Europe were mercenaries because there were no standing armies. |
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This area was patrolled by German mercenaries who went on a rampage of pillage and terrorising the local population. |
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Letting mercenaries cloak themselves as contractors opens up just such possibilities. |
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The side drum was introduced by Swiss and German mercenaries shortly before 1500 as a military instrument for keeping time on the march. |
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Already, scores of mercenaries were surrounding the camp, pelting it with flaming arrows and a whole assortment of javelins and throwing spears. |
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On all sides, ignoring him, barbarian mercenaries brandished their javelins, bows, pikes, two-edged swords. |
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In 1855 he entered Nicaragua with a small band of mercenaries armed with a new type of quick-action rifle. |
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Both risings were put down later in the summer, the royal forces being augmented by foreign mercenaries gathered for war against the Scots. |
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The ranks of the Swedish army by now contained many adventurers and dubious mercenaries, and it was a shadow of its former self. |
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So, in revenge for the killing of four American mercenaries, a city was seized, bombed, and a massacre of hundreds of civilians took place. |
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One of the military's major roles here is functioning as paid mercenaries and security guards for oil companies. |
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Warriors, ronins, mercenaries, all members of the enemy's army surprise attacked. |
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At Epsilon's signal, the mercenaries unceremoniously dumped their load at Darkstorm's feet and loosed the ropes that kept it bound. |
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They should instead take comfort in the fact that African askaris and Indian sepoys fought as mercenaries in the armies of the British Empire. |
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Threatened by a company of Bretons, the Sienese hired their own force of seven thousand mercenaries. |
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Of greater use to the Welsh kings of the tenth and eleventh centuries was the supply of Viking and Saxon mercenaries. |
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These men appear to be mercenaries given garrison duties to protect towns in potential danger who had already provided men for the fyrd. |
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In the mid-1600s, the French used the buccaneers as mercenaries in an unofficial war against the Spanish. |
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They frequently knew the mercenaries fighting for the ultimately unsuccessful secessionists, and even talked to them by radio. |
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Earlier this year more than 70 suspected mercenaries were arrested for their alleged plan to help carry out that coup. |
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In addition, she keeps a small army of mercenaries and slaves to be activated whenever she sees fit. |
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For the most part, when war was deemed necessary they hired mercenaries to do the fighting. |
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Unlike mercenaries, soldiers need to know when they go to battle that they are going there for a purpose. |
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Many mercenaries slaughtered their way to power, casually betraying even close family to secure their fortunes. |
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Paul, as a native of Asia Minor, would have been familiar with the Hellenistic colony-cities of Judean mercenaries founded by the Seleucids to control the local inhabitants. |
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Simultaneously, a brigade of mercenaries and Congolese soldiers would seal off the city and expel the guerrillas. |
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The enemy had to know they were mercenaries, and mercs could be bought. |
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Mann and his associates, however, seem to have been blind to South Africa's determination to stamp out its legacy as a recruiting ground for mercenaries. |
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By the time the Moon opposes Neptune in Pisces, midweek, you already see through mercenaries masquerading as paragons of virtue. |
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Similarly it is not possible to say whether the English are shown to be a nation vindicated by the god of battles or a band of disputatious mercenaries who simply get lucky. |
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In movies and television they are still portrayed as Rambos, mercenaries, head cases, even as they approach retirement in the face of declining benefits. |
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Their high king, Vortigern, finding himself beset on all sides by barbarian invaders, hired Anglo-Saxon and Jutish mercenaries from Denmark and north Germany. |
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The arrest of a planeload of 64 mercenaries who are now standing trial in Zimbabwe raises questions about the involvement of Western intelligence agencies. |
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Others contend that Greek mercenaries who came to India with Alexander the Great left their genetic mark in coorg. |
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Without much delay, Rahaena's army of monster hunters and mercenaries charged forward, chipping away at the retreating legion like a whittler at wood. |
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Suddenly the reader is treated to a history of ties involving Roman orators and Croat mercenaries. |
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However, South Africa sees mercenaries as one of the blights on Africa. |
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He left, but many other mercenaries stayed, and two years later they were executed or expelled after a mutiny in Stanleyville. |
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Merchants, mercenaries, pirates, blockade runners, and all sorts of travelers come through Nerlack Lunar Base daily, slipping unnoticed onboard a ship will not be difficult. |
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Indeed, they now realise that the foreigners are, in fact, trained and equipped mercenaries despatched by a hostile country to act as its fifth column. |
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One side of the clearing had been roped off, and several dozen horses grazed there, most of them obviously worth more than the mercenaries watching them. |
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These are common tricks that are routinely conjured up by the conscience-hunters whose divine vocation it is to enlist mercenaries for their unholy schemes. |
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With the use of paid mercenaries from Germany, Finland and Scotland, and a strong fleet, the Swedes were able to conduct raids and escape quickly with their loot. |
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The raider combed through his beard with greasy fingers, contemplating the small quiet village that lay in the glen where he hid his band of mercenaries. |
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Croatian and other mercenaries serving the emperor ran riot, venting their anger and frustration at the privations they had suffered during the siege and killing thousands. |
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Jobless and destitute of funds, McClean enlists with the Black Knight Legion, a band of villainous mercenaries driven by the acquisition of financial gain. |
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The Viking mercenaries were probably drawn from Dublin and paid in silver in the form of coin or hack-silver, for there were no major Scandinavian settlements in Wales. |
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He claimed South African mercenaries were training rebels in Kindu to use the smuggled weapons, and demanded an international probe into the matter. |
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The peaceful citizens of this State persecuted by the marauding mercenaries should not be forced to mount demonstration to get the state machinery moving. |
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We are both freelance mercenaries, masterless in all sense of the word, and we will loan our skills to anybody and anything with enough money to throw around. |
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Some might deride those who sign up as mercenaries, but these troops would have significantly different motives than the usual soldier of fortune. |
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The Vikings brought silver, goods, and mercenaries from overseas and probably took at least as much away in Irish slaves, fine metalwork, and the products of the countryside. |
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The diary describes the area as thrang with Scots mercenaries. |
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These were nomads and farmers, seafarers and caravaneers, slaves and freemen, merchants and mercenaries, colonists and zealots. |
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Eventually, the Romans were forced to begin hiring mercenaries to fight alongside the legions. |
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Licinius, aided by Goth mercenaries, represented the past and the ancient pagan faiths. |
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The empire became a popular destination for many English nobles and soldiers, as the Byzantines were in need of mercenaries. |
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By then, however, there were already Norman mercenaries serving as far away as Trebizond and Georgia. |
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Taking his immediate household and a small number of mercenaries, he left Normandy and landed in England, striking into Wiltshire. |
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Diarmait turned to Henry for assistance in 1167, and the English king agreed to allow Diarmait to recruit mercenaries within his empire. |
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In the meantime Henry II had raised a very expensive army of more than 20,000 mercenaries with which to face the rebellion. |
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After the Battle of Poitiers, many French nobles and mercenaries rampaged, and chaos ruled. |
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The wars were fought largely by the landed aristocracy and armies of feudal retainers, with some mercenaries. |
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There were also sometimes contingents of foreign mercenaries, armed with cannon or handguns. |
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Many of these French mercenaries were from the garrison of Phillipe de Crevecoeur, Lord of Esquerdes. |
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Until the time of Napoleon, European states employed relatively small armies, made up of both national soldiers and mercenaries. |
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Initially, their arrival seems to have been at the invitation of the Britons as mercenaries to repulse incursions by the Hiberni and Picts. |
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Norman mercenaries landed in Leinster in 1169 at the request of Diarmait Mac Murchada, who sought their help in regaining his throne. |
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Medieval legend attributed widespread Saxon immigration to mercenaries hired by the British king Vortigern. |
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George agreed to send 12,000 hired Hessian and Danish mercenaries to Europe, ostensibly to support Maria Theresa. |
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Henry gave Diarmait permission to recruit mercenaries and authorized his subjects to help Diarmait. |
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Consisting of the disinherited noblemen and mercenaries, they were probably no more than a few hundred men strong. |
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When the need arose for soldiers it hired mercenaries or financed allies who fielded armies. |
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However, these mercenaries soon rose up against their masters, allegedly because they were not adequately supplied by them. |
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But there were already signs of decline, and some Saxons may already have been in England as mercenaries. |
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This led to a germanisation and barbarisation of the army, as the tax was used to recruit mercenaries. |
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As slingers, they served as mercenaries, first under the Carthaginians, and afterwards under the Romans. |
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In this varied, often mountainous terrain, the Mongols were out of their element, and they relied on local mercenaries for support. |
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During the Second Punic War the famous Carthaginian general Hannibal Barca utilized Gallic mercenaries in his invasion of Italy. |
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As a result, commanders of the period were increasingly drawing on larger numbers of mercenaries. |
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His body was escorted south by a company of mercenaries and he was buried in Worcester Cathedral in front of the altar of St Wulfstan. |
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The use of the national or feudal levy was gradually replaced by paid troops of domestic retinues or foreign mercenaries. |
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The Norwegians and the Flemish mercenaries hired by Tostig were largely without armour and carried only personal weapons. |
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These mercenaries were almost entirely men who either returned to their Scandinavian homeland or married into the local Slavic culture. |
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Ancient Carthage was a commercial power and had a strong navy, but relied on mercenaries for land soldiers. |
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Numerous Rus' served in the Byzantine army as mercenaries, most notably as the famous Varangian Guard. |
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Frisian mercenaries were hired to assist the Roman invasion of Britain in the capacity of cavalry. |
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After these invasions, the Huns begin to be noted as Foederati and mercenaries. |
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Many Huns were employed as mercenaries by both East and West Romans and by the Goths. |
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After Attila's death in 453, the Hunnic Empire collapsed, and many of the remaining Huns were often hired as mercenaries by Constantinople. |
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Native troops were therefore cashiered and replaced by foreign mercenaries on specific contract. |
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On two occasions between 635 and 636, Tang royal princesses were married to Turk mercenaries or generals in Chinese service. |
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Blurring distinctions even further were the mercenaries from both sides who simply fought for whoever paid the most. |
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Finally, mercenaries were an important factor, as many kings did not have enough soldiers available. |
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In response, the NPRC hired several hundred mercenaries from the private firm Executive Outcomes. |
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In April 1511, after fortifying Goa, he gathered a force of about 900 Portuguese, 200 Hindu mercenaries and about eighteen ships. |
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Ayutthayan kings employed foreign mercenaries who sometimes entered the wars with the kingdom's enemies. |
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Japanese mercenaries were hired to deal with the orang kaya, forty of whom were beheaded with their heads impaled and displayed on bamboo spears. |
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Scholars have thus suggested that they could be mercenaries valued by all sides. |
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He arrived in the midst of a siege and took refuge in a Portuguese camp of mercenaries who had betrayed the Viceroy. |
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It was in Glarus, whose soldiers were used as mercenaries in Europe, that Zwingli became involved in politics. |
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During this time India supplied mercenaries to the Persian army then fighting in Greece. |
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These mercenaries received the right to bear arms in the service of the Democratic government. |
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The veteran soldiers thus looked for other forms of employment, often becoming mercenaries. |
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For a time mercenaries became important as trainers and administrators, but soon these tasks were also taken by the state. |
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The army, mainly consisting of mercenaries, extensively and viciously plundered the surrounding bishopric during the siege. |
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They hired 30,000 mercenaries from beyond the Alps and awaited the arrival of the Romans. |
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I'm a sell-sword. I make my living because I keep my word. Unreliable mercenaries don't get paid. |
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It's good, if only for a day, to see the mercenaries adopt the missionary position. |
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Landing parties along the narrow shore were thwarted at first by a spirited defense led by the English and Danish mercenaries who made up Constantinople's Varangian Guard. |
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Tracking a team of mercenaries across 12 countries, returning muscleman Luke Hobbs needs help from the likes of international criminal Dom and former cop Brian. |
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There are records of Celtic mercenaries in Egypt serving the Ptolemies. |
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First nation states lacked the funds needed to maintain standing forces, so they tended to hire mercenaries to serve in their armies during wartime. |
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As he marched back to Cordoba his own Berber mercenaries abandoned him. |
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Norsemen, Flemish spearmen, Frankish knights, Moorish mounted archers, and Berber light cavalry were the main types of mercenaries available and used in the conflict. |
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However, the use of mercenaries by Andronikos II would often backfire, with the Catalan Company ravaging the countryside and increasing resentment towards Constantinople. |
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Hunnish mercenaries were also seen on several occasions in the succession struggles of the Eastern and Western Roman Empire during the late 4th century. |
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Several months after Orestes took power, a coalition of Heruli, Scirian and Turcilingi mercenaries demanded that he give them a third of the land in Italy. |
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With the economic demands created by the stagnation of the Ottoman Empire, the force diminished and included only mercenaries such as the seimeni. |
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Alan mercenaries were involved in the affair with the Catalan Company. |
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The Dutch continued to employ these militias but due to their unreliability tended to favor employing Swiss and Malay mercenaries in their campaigns in the island. |
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Until Richard II, the Norman rulers did not hesitate to call Viking mercenaries for help to get rid of their enemies around Normandy, such as the king of the Francs himself. |
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In addition, Rome increasingly used foreign mercenaries to defend itself. |
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The presence of Hessian soldiers caused considerable anxiety amongst the colonists, both Patriot and Loyalist, who viewed them as brutal mercenaries. |
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Furthermore, despite the fact that at its height, the British fielded some 56,000 men in the colonies exclusive of mercenaries and militia, they lacked sufficient numbers. |
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The British also hired German mercenaries to do much of their fighting. |
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To muster a force, the British had to launch recruiting campaigns in Britain and Ireland and hire mercenaries from the small German states such as Hesse. |
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Many island countries are also vulnerable to predation by mercenaries and other foreign invaders, although their isolation also makes them a difficult target. |
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More than 15,000 mercenaries were hired as rowmen and soldiers. |
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After the Romans leave, Vortigern comes to power, and invites the Saxons under Hengist and Horsa to fight for him as mercenaries, but they rise against him. |
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As early as 839, when Swedish emissaries are first known to have visited Byzantium, Scandinavians served as mercenaries in the service of the Byzantine Empire. |
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However, other such mercenaries often became spies and informers. |
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Anxious to secure his bride, Henry recruited mercenaries formerly in French service to supplement his following of exiles and set sail from France on 1 August. |
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Confident that many magnates and even many of Richard's officers would join him, Henry set sail from Harfleur on 1 August 1485, with a force of exiles and French mercenaries. |
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France gained a total standing army of around 6,000 men, which was sent out to gradually eliminate the remaining mercenaries who insisted on operating on their own. |
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Norman mercenaries were first encouraged to come to the south by the Lombards to act against the Byzantines, but they soon fought in Byzantine service in Sicily. |
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The council opted to hire Saxon mercenaries, following Roman practice. |
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It became less Roman, the duties of border protection and territorial administration being more and more taken by foreign mercenaries officered by Romans. |
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