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    Attack of the Dead Men, "Angel's Glow", and More! The Halloween Special

    en-usOctober 30, 2019
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    About this Episode

    himself. A mysterious green glow on the wounded at the battle of Shiloh. A listener has a tale that involves the Yom Kippur War and an uncanny coincidence. Alright, let's get stuck in!


     

    This week’s main source - https://www.rbth.com/history/328908-russian-attack-of-dead, https://allthatsinteresting.com/angels-glow,

    Cover Art - Vasily Nesterenko

    Music - 12 Emergency Center

    To support the show got to https://www.patreon.com/user?u=8278347 and search Cauldron Podcast

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    Recent Episodes from Cauldron - A Military History Podcast

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    War A to Z ▪️Abenaki Wars

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    When the English colonists first came to the New World there was friction but, given the limits of the colonists population and power, no large scale conflict. The Abenaki homelands consisted of most of modern day New England and North East Canada. At first they had no issue with the English, so long as they stuck to the coasts. The fishing and fur trading hubs created by the newcomers was as a commercial positive for the Abenaki. The issue arose when the English population grew and the colonists began to settle the interior lands. The Abenaki were hard pressed as they fought the mighty Iroquois for domination of the fur trade and now found themselves dealing with a growing threat from the Europeans. The slaughter and sacking of a key Pequot village along the Mystic River in 1637 was one of many such defeats that finally made the situation clear to the Abenaki; the only way for them to maintain their homelands was through violence...

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    For sources email me at cburke111@cauldronpodcast.com

    Music - Alpha Mission by Jimena Contreras courtesy of Youtube free sound library

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    Music by DopeBoys

    Sources Upon Request

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    War A to Z▪️ Abbasid Revolution

    War A to Z▪️ Abbasid Revolution

    War A to Z

    ▪️

    Abbasid Revolution

    ▪️

    Date- 747 A.D. - 750 A.D.

    Location - Khorasan province Iran

    Participants - Umayyads vs Abbasids

    Key Players - Caliph Marwan, Governor Nasir Ibn Sayyar, Muhammad Ali, Abu Muslim

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    ▪️

    The Issue - The powerful Umayyad Caliphate, the second of the original four in early Islamic history, had a rocky relationship with its many subjects. The Umayyads were an Arab dynasty but could prove no direct relationship or bloodline to the Prophet’s family, and they had a willingness to tax all subjects at very high rates, Arab and non-Arab alike. Because they treated Arabs better than anyone, and should no preference for non-Arab muslims, the Umayyad’s had few friends in their lands. Some of the more discriminatory policies led to unrest and two leaders started to form an opposition party; Muhammad Ibn Ali, who could boast a blood tie to the Prophet and Abu Muslim, an Iranian leader that gave voice to the over taxed non-Arab and non-muslims. Wearing black and touting a black flag, mirroring the Prophets own battle flag, the Abbasids began their revolution in 745.

    ▪️

    The Result - The ensuing five years saw dozens of battles, from Merv to Nahavand, Isfahan to Mosul. The Abbasid forces crippled the Umayyad power structure and forced the governor of Khorasan to flee from city to city until at last he died in 748 A.D. The ignominious death of Governor Sayyar was to be repeated by the Caliph himself. As Abu Muslim’s forces marched on Harrran, Caliph Marwan ran for safety making it all the way to Egypt. Unfortunately for him, Marwan didn’t live long in the land of the pharaohs, he was murdered in 750 A.D. The resulting power vacuum caused by the Umayyad collapse allowed Abu Muslim to roll up Syria, Iraq, and Iran into the Abbasid Empire. A legitimate Islamic government was installed and tax laws and revenues regulated by the ruling Muslim dynasty. Abu al-Abbas was chosen as their first caliph and he ruled from the new capital of the Islamic world - Baghdad.

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    Source - MacGill’s Military History

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    War A to Z ▪️ Abbas I The Great

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    ▪️

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    Battle of Marengo 14 June 1800

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    “For this campaign I see so very ill a prospect that I am extremely out of heart.” 

    So wrote the man most responsible for today’s battle and one of Britain’s greatest military victories, the battle of Blenheim.

    Music by DopeBoys

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    Battle of Schellenberg 2 July 1704

    "I had scarcely finished speaking when the enemy's battery opened fire upon us, and raked us through and through. They concentrated their fire upon us, and with their first discharge carried off Count de la Bastide, the lieutenant of my own company with whom at the moment I was speaking, and twelve grenadiers, who fell side by side in the ranks, so that my coat was covered with brains and blood. So accurate was the fire that each discharge of the cannon stretched some of my men on the ground. I suffered agonies at seeing these brave fellows perish without a chance of defending themselves, but it was absolutely necessary that they should not move from their post.” - Jean Martin de la Colonie

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    Music by DopeBoys

    Sources Upon Request

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    And Thanks For Listening!