Who is Julius Caesar? Facts vs Myth
•September 2, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
So who is Julius Caesar? Facts can sometimes become clouded within his incredibly long legacy. More »
•September 2, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
So who is Julius Caesar? Facts can sometimes become clouded within his incredibly long legacy. More »
•August 14, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
Lt. Col. Harold E. Raugh, Jr. shares with us his military book reviews for the April 2005 issue of Military Heritage Magazine. More »
•August 14, 2014 • Read Comments (5)
When she died in 1979, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung called Hanna Reitsch ‘the most successful woman flier of all time.’ More »
•August 9, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
Having gambled all for love, Mark Antony sent his warships into the Ionian Sea for one last toss of the dice at Actium. More »
•July 30, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
In May 1942, a Japanese submarine force snuck into Australia’s Sydney Harbor for a daring, suicidal attack.
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•July 21, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
Ironically, it was the British who taught Field Marshal Erwin Rommel some of his most valuable lessons during Operation Cruaser. More »
•July 15, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
From 1939 to 1945, World War II engulfed the Allied and Axis nations in a conflict of unprecedented proportion, shaping the future for generations. More »
•June 20, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
The accomplishments of Hannibal were great, even in his own time, but the underestimation of the resiliency of his enemy proved to be his undoing. More »
•June 6, 2014 • Be the First to Comment
To Colonel Edson Raff, jumping out of a plane was “like getting out of the bed in the morning.” So why was he commanding a tank regiment on D-Day? More »
•May 29, 2014 • 1 Comment
Sniper Elite III looks to provide a more accurate portrayal of sniper operations in World War II, while balancing the gritty action of a video game. More »