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Second Carlist War happened in 1846.

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First Carlist War happened in 1833.

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Third Carlist War happened in 1872.

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Ramon Grabolosa has written:

'Carlins i liberals' -- subject(s): History, Spain Carlist War, 1873-1876

1 answer


Eduardo Uriarte has written:

'1833 [i.e. Mil novecientos treinta y tres]' -- subject(s): History, Spain Carlist War, 1833-1840

1 answer


Carmax

I found Houston Used Carlist to be a great resource for locating used cars. They've recently enhanced the site to also list cars in Dallas and other major Texas cities.

1 answer


The Tortilla Espanola is a Spanish omelet. This omelet originated from Carlist General Zumalacarregui who was very hungry and finds himself demanding food at a farmhouse. The owner of the farmhouse had only potatoes and eggs and crushed them together to make a tortilla.

1 answer


A Perodua Kembara is a mini SUV that is manufactured by the Japanese company Diahatsu. The Perodua Kembara is the version that is sold in Malaysia and can be found on Malaysian car sites such as ST Cars and Carlist. There does not appear to be any availability in North America.

1 answer


Antonio Priala y Criado has written:

'Historia de la guerra civil, y de los partidos liberal y carlista' -- subject(s): History, Spain Carlist War, 1833-1840

1 answer


Spain has been a republic on two separate occasions: Once during the Third Carlist War (from 1873-1874) -- the Republic did not survive the war -- and once more from the abdication of King Alfonso XIII until the Spanish Civil War (1931-1939). Currently, Spain is a constitutional monarchy, very similar to the United Kingdom, but it is not considered a republic.

1 answer


Jaime del Burgo has written:

'Veteranos de la causa'

'El fracaso de Oroquieta' -- subject(s): History

'Carlos VII y su tiempo' -- subject(s): Biography, History, Pretenders to the throne, Princes, Spain Carlist War, 1873-1876

'Pamplona' -- subject(s): Guidebooks

'Antecedentes de la 1. [i.e. Primera] Guerra Carlista' -- subject(s): History, Politics and government, Spain Carlist War, 1833-1840

'Recuerdos del alzamiento nacional' -- subject(s): History

'El Pirineo navarro' -- subject(s): Guidebooks

'Para la historia de la primera guerra carlista' -- subject(s): Chronology, History, Spain Carlist War, 1833-1840

5 answers


Arguably the royal adjective Carolingian might be revived. This was used in the days of Charlemagne ( c.800) and sometimes the condensed form of Caroline ( not the girl"s name) used as an adjective, as in the Caroline minscule- the first size of small type used. Carlist might also be used. First King in the United Kingdom since- well George VI. Coins and stamps, not to mention government insignia would have to be altered to C3R. Charles the third- Rex ( King). It will be an interesting thing to observe.

1 answer


Richardson has written:

'Hardscrabble, or, The fall of Chicago' -- subject(s): Fiction, Indians of North America, History

'Matilda Montgomerie' -- subject(s): Fiction, History, United States War of 1812

'Eight years in Canada' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Politics and government, Politique et gouvernement

'Major John Richardson's short stories'

'Westbrook, the outlaw, or, The avenging wolf'

'Richardson's War of 1812' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Canada War of 1812, History, United States War of 1812

'Frascati's, or, Scenes in Paris' -- subject(s): Swindlers and swindling, Fiction

'Personal memoirs of Major Richardson, (author of \\' -- subject(s): History, Spain Carlist War, 1833-1840, Histoire

'Movements of the British Legion' -- subject(s): British Legion, Great Britain, Great Britain. Army, History, Spain Carlist War, 1833-1840

'Hardscrabble' -- subject(s): Indians of North America, Fiction

'Tecumseh and Richardson' -- subject(s): Ojibwa Indians

'Matilda Montgomerie, or, The prophecy fulfilled'

'Wacousta, or, The prophecy' -- subject(s): Pontiac's Conspiracy, 1763-1765, Fiction

'The guards in Canada'

'Westbrook, the outlaw' -- subject(s): Outlaws, Fiction

1 answer


The Tortilla Espanola is a Spanish omelet. This omelet originated from Carlist General Zumalacarregui who was very hungry and finds himself demanding food at a farmhouse. The owner of the farmhouse had only potatoes and eggs and crushed them together to make a tortilla.

4 answers


He was an American war correspondent, born in New Lexington, Ohio, in 1844, died in Constantinople (Istanbul today), Turkey, in 1878. In his brief life he wrote for the New York Herald and London Daily News, eyewitness reports of the Franco Prussian War, Carlist War in Spain, Russian incursion into Central Asia and the conquest of the Moslem city of Khiva, and the Russo-Turkish War in Bulgaria. He also joined an expedition in 1875 to the arctic, His dispatches from Bulgaria in 1876 on Turkish atrocities in Bulgarian villages, are considered among the greatest of all newspaper correspondence. He died of typhus in Constantinople, his body returned to the United States for burial in New Lexington where his tombstone reads, MACGAHAN, LIBERATOR OF BULGARIA.

1 answer


Luis del Campo has written:

'Pamplona y toros, siglo XVIII' -- subject(s): Bullfights, History

'?Es peligroso el encierro de Pamplona?' -- subject(s): Bullfights, Running the bulls

'Pamplona durante la primera guerra carlista' -- subject(s): History, Spain Carlist War, 1833-1840

5 answers


Centuries

6th centuryYearDateEvent573The Visigothic Kingdom extended across Spain. 7th century{{Visigothic Kingdom persecuted jews 8th centuryYearDateEvent711The Moors invaded Spain, displacing the Visigoths, and established Al-Andalus. 9th centuryistian kingdoms emerged in northern Spain. Aragon, Castile and Navarre. The kingdoms of Aragon and Castile gradually expanded south. (They were greatly helped by disunity among the Muslims). 11th centuryYearDateEvent1094The Castilian knight El Cid conquered Valencia from the Moors. 12th centuryYearDateEvent1159The Kingdom of Portugal was established. 13th centuryYearDateEvent1228Moorish influence was reduced to the Kingdom of Granada. 14th centuryEurope in 1300 was well on the way to rapid expansion. It was rapidly increasing in intellectual and mathematical sophistication. Technically, thanks to water power and the mechanical discoveries that flowed from it, Europe was in the midst of what many historians call the Medieval Industrial Revolution. One reason there seems to be such a break between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance was that there was in fact a break. The 14th Century was a time of turmoil, diminished expectations, loss of confidence in institutions, and feelings of helplessness at forces beyond human control. Historian Barbara Tuchman entitled her book on this period A Distant Mirror because many of our modern problems had counterparts in the 14th Century. Even the extinction of the human race, something we ponder in discussing nuclear war, was faced by medieval Europeans, in fact, far more directly than we ever have. 15th centuryYearDateEvent146919 OctoberIsabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon were married, laying the foundation for the unification of the kingdoms of Castile and Aragon into Spain.147410 DecemberThe reign of Isabella began.1475War of the Castilian Succession: The war began.1478The Spanish Inquisition was founded.1479War of the Castilian Succession: The war ended.20 JanuaryThe reign of Ferdinand began.4 SeptemberBy the Treaty of Alcáçovas, Portugal recognized Spanish control of the Canary Islands.1492Christopher Columbus first explored the New World.Reconquista: The Reconquista ended.Jews were expelled from Spain by the Alhambra Decree.1493Spanish colonization of the AmericasSpanish colonization of the Americas began.1494The Treaty of Tordesillas was signed.1499Italian War of 1499-1504: Ferdinand allied with the French King Louis XII of France. 16th centuryYearDateEvent1504Isabella died.1516Ferdinand died.Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, became King of Castile and Aragon.155425 JulyEnglish Queen Mary I of England married Spanish Prince Philip.1556Charles abdicated in favor of Philip, who became King Philip II of Spain.1557Battle of St. Quentin (1557): Spain won the battle.1561Philip moved his court to Madrid.1568Dutch Revolt: A revolt began against Habsburg control of the Netherlands.1571Battle of Lepanto (1571): The Holy League was victorious.1578Dutch Revolt: The revolt ended.1580The Iberian Union of the crowns of Aragon, Castile and Portugal was established..1585Anglo-Spanish War (1585): The war began.15888 AugustThe Spanish Armada was defeated in the English Channel.1598Philip III of Spain was crowned. 17th centuryYearDateEvent1604Anglo-Spanish War (1585): The war ended.1605The Treaty of London (1604) was signed.no1609The Twelve Years' Truce was signed.The Moriscos were expelled.1618Thirty Years' War: The war began.1621Philip IV of Spain was crowned.1640Portuguese Restoration War: The war began.The Iberian Union was dissolved.1648The Treaty of Westphalia was signed.1659The Peace of the Pyrenees was signed.1665Philip IV died.1668The Treaty of Lisbon was signed.1675Charles II of Spain was crowned.1700Charles died. 18th centuryYearDateEvent1701War of the Spanish Succession: The war began.1761Seven Years' War: Spain declared war on Great Britain.1778American Revolutionary War: Spain supported the United States.1789Spain opened the slave trade to Havana. 19th centuryYearDateEvent1806British invasions of the Río de la Plata: The invasions began.1807British invasions of the Río de la Plata: The invasions ended.1808Peninsular War: The war began.2 MayDos de Mayo Uprising: An uprising took place in Madrid against the French occupation of the city.1809Bolivian Independence War: The war began.1811Venezuelan War of Independence: The war began.1812The Spanish Constitution of 1812 was issued.1814Peninsular War: The war ended.1815Spanish reconquest of New Granada: The reconquest began.1816Spanish reconquest of New Granada: The reconquest ended.1820Trienio Liberal: The period began.1823Trienio Liberal: The period ended.1824Bolivian Independence War: The war ended.1833First Carlist War: The war began.1839First Carlist War: The war ended.1846Second Carlist War: The war began.1849Second Carlist War: The war ended.1864Chincha Islands War: The war began.1866Chincha Islands War: The war ended.1868Ten Years' War: A war with Cuba began.1872Third Carlist War: The war began.1873The First Spanish Republic was established.1874Spain under the Restoration: The period began.The First Spanish Republic was disestablished.1876Third Carlist War: The war ended.1878Ten Years' War: The war ended.189825 AprilSpanish-American War: The war began.12 AugustSpanish-American War: The war ended. 20th centuryYearDateEvent1914World War I: The war began. Spain remained neutral.1918World War I: The war ended.1920Rif War (1920): The war began.1926Rif War (1920): The war ended.1931The Second Spanish Republic was established.Spain under the Restoration: The period ended.1936Spanish Civil War (to 1939)1937Spanish Civil War, 1937: The war took place.26 AprilBombing of Guernica: The bombing took place.1938Spanish Civil War, 1938-1939: The war began.1939Spain under Franco: The period began.The Second Spanish Republic was disestablished.1945Spain under Franco: The period ended.1957Ifni War: The war began.1958Ifni War: The war ended.1959Spanish miracle: A period of economic growth began.1973Spanish miracle: The period ended.1975History of Spain (1975-present): The period began.6 NovemberThe Green March forced Spain to hand over its last remaining colonial possession, Spanish Sahara, to Morocco.19 NovemberFrancisco Franco died; the monarchy was restored to Juan Carlos I of Spain.1976Spanish transition to democracy: The transition began.1978The Spanish Constitution of 1978 was issued.1981Spanish society after the democratic transition: A democratic society waas established.23 February23-F: An attempted coup took place.1986Spain joined the European Union.19921992 Summer Olympics: The Summer Olympics were held in Barcelona.1998Judge Baltasar Garzón issued an international arrest warrant for former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. 21st centuryYearDateEvent20021 JanuarySpain adopted the Euro.200411 March2004 Madrid train bombings: Madrid train bombings killed one hundred and ninety-one and injured over two thousand. Prime Minister José María Aznar blamed theBasque terrorists ETA.14 MarchAznar's People's Party lost an election after the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero promised to withdraw Spanish troops from Iraq.20062006 Madrid Barajas International Airport bombing: A bombing by ETA ended an active ceasefire and peace negotiations.2008Moroccan national Jamal Zougam was found guilty of the 2004 train bombings in Madrid.Garzón was charged with criminal conduct in three cases, causing an international scandal and protests.Spain won the Euro Cup Final, establishing the team as an international soccer power house.2010Spain won the FIFA World Cup.Garzón was granted leave to work as a consultant to the International Criminal Court at The Hague.

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Mariano José de Larra (1809-1837) was a Spanish romanticist writer noted for his biting satire. Larra was born in Madrid, but his father, serving as a regimental doctor in the French army, was compelled to leave the Peninsula with his family in 1812. In 1817 Larra returned to Spain, knowing less Spanish than French. His nature was disorderly, his education imperfect, and, after futile attempts to obtain a degree in medicine or law, he made an imprudent marriage at the age of twenty, broke with his relatives and became a journalist. On April 27, 1831, he produced his first play, No más mostrador, based on two works by Scribe and Dieulafoy, respectively. On September 24, 1834, he produced Macías, a play based on his own historical novel, El doncel de don Enrique el Doliente (1834). As a journalist, Larra's increased liberty of the press after the death of Ferdinand VII gave his caustic talent an ampler field. He was already famous under the pseudonyms of Juan Pérez de Munguía and Fígaro which he used in El Pobrecito Hablador and La Revista Española respectively. He defended Liberalism against the Carlist rebellion and was elected as deputy for Ávila; thus, a great career seemed to lie before him.

But the era of military pronunciamientos (declarations by which a military coup d'état is made official) ruined his personal prospects and patriotic plans. His writing took on a more somber tinge; domestic troubles increased his pessimism, and, after suffering a disastrous love-affair, he committed suicide in February 1837.

1 answer


During the reign of Charles IV, in spite of the fears that the French Revolution provoked, several events took place that accentuated the decline of the Inquisition. In the first place, the state stopped being a mere social organizer and began to worry about the well-being of the public. As a result, they considered the land-holding power of the Church, in the señoríos and, more generally, in the accumulated wealth that had prevented social progress.[58] On the other hand, the perennial struggle between the power of the throne and the power of the Church, inclined more and more to the former, under which, Enlightenment thinkers found better protection for their ideas. Manuel Godoy and Antonio Alcalá Galiano were openly hostile to an institution whose only role had been reduced to censorship and was the very embodiment of the Spanish Black Legend, internationally, and was not suitable to the political interests of the moment: The Inquisition? Its old power no longer exists: the horrible authority that this bloodthirsty court had exerted in other times was reduced... the Holy Office had come to be a species of commission for book censorship, nothing more...[59]

In fact, prohibited works circulated freely in the public bookstores of Seville, Salamanca or Valladolid.

The Inquisition was abolished during the domination of Napoleon and the reign of Joseph I (1808-1812). In 1813, the liberal deputies of the Cortes of Cádiz also obtained its abolition[60], largely as a result of the Holy Office's condemnation of the popular revolt against French invasion. But the Inquisition was reconstituted when Ferdinand VII recovered the throne on July 1, 1814. It was again abolished during the three year Liberal interlude known as the Trienio liberal. Later, during the period known as the Ominous Decade, the Inquisition was not formally re-established,[61] although, de facto, it returned under the so-called Meetings of Faith, tolerated in the dioceses by King Ferdinand. These had the dubious honour of executing the last heretic condemned, the school teacher Cayetano Ripoll, garroted in Valencia on July 26 1826 (presumably for having taught deist principles), all amongst a European-wide scandal at the despotic attitude still prevailing in Spain. Juan Antonio Llorente, who had been the Inquisition's general secretary in 1789, became a Bonapartist and published a critical history in 1817 from his French exile, based on his privileged access to its archives.

The Inquisition was definitively abolished on July 15, 1834, by a Royal Decree signed by regent Maria Cristina de Borbon, a liberal queen, during the minority of Isabel II and with the approval of the President of the Cabinet Francisco Martínez de la Rosa. (It is possible that something similar to the Inquisition acted during the First Carlist War, in the zones dominated by the Carlists, since one of the government measures praised by Conde de Molina Carlos Maria Isidro de Borbon was the re-implementation of the Inquisition to protect the Church). During the Carlist Wars it was the conservatives who fought the progresists who wanted to reduce the Church's power amongst other reforms to liberalise the economy.

Cite: (link below)

1 answer


During the reign of Charles IV, in spite of the fears that the French Revolution provoked, several events took place that accentuated the decline of the Inquisition. In the first place, the state stopped being a mere social organizer and began to worry about the well-being of the public. As a result, they considered the land-holding power of the Church, in the señoríos and, more generally, in the accumulated wealth that had prevented social progress.[58] On the other hand, the perennial struggle between the power of the throne and the power of the Church, inclined more and more to the former, under which, Enlightenment thinkers found better protection for their ideas. Manuel Godoy and Antonio Alcalá Galiano were openly hostile to an institution whose only role had been reduced to censorship and was the very embodiment of the Spanish Black Legend, internationally, and was not suitable to the political interests of the moment: The Inquisition? Its old power no longer exists: the horrible authority that this bloodthirsty court had exerted in other times was reduced... the Holy Office had come to be a species of commission for book censorship, nothing more...[59]

In fact, prohibited works circulated freely in the public bookstores of Seville, Salamanca or Valladolid.

The Inquisition was abolished during the domination of Napoleon and the reign of Joseph I (1808-1812). In 1813, the liberal deputies of the Cortes of Cádiz also obtained its abolition[60], largely as a result of the Holy Office's condemnation of the popular revolt against French invasion. But the Inquisition was reconstituted when Ferdinand VII recovered the throne on July 1, 1814. It was again abolished during the three year Liberal interlude known as the Trienio liberal. Later, during the period known as the Ominous Decade, the Inquisition was not formally re-established,[61] although, de facto, it returned under the so-called Meetings of Faith, tolerated in the dioceses by King Ferdinand. These had the dubious honour of executing the last heretic condemned, the school teacher Cayetano Ripoll, garroted in Valencia on July 26 1826 (presumably for having taught deist principles), all amongst a European-wide scandal at the despotic attitude still prevailing in Spain. Juan Antonio Llorente, who had been the Inquisition's general secretary in 1789, became a Bonapartist and published a critical history in 1817 from his French exile, based on his privileged access to its archives.

The Inquisition was definitively abolished on July 15, 1834, by a Royal Decree signed by regent Maria Cristina de Borbon, a liberal queen, during the minority of Isabel II and with the approval of the President of the Cabinet Francisco Martínez de la Rosa. (It is possible that something similar to the Inquisition acted during the First Carlist War, in the zones dominated by the Carlists, since one of the government measures praised by Conde de Molina Carlos Maria Isidro de Borbon was the re-implementation of the Inquisition to protect the Church). During the Carlist Wars it was the conservatives who fought the progresists who wanted to reduce the Church's power amongst other reforms to liberalise the economy.

Cite: (link below)

1 answer


Since 1800: The Peninsular war against Napoleon. Crimea.The Zulu wars. The Sudan. The Boer War. WW1. WW2. Korea. Suez. The Falklands. Gulf War I & 2

More specifically since 1800 (in no order): Temne War, the French revolution, Napoleonic wars, War of 1812, Second Anglo-maratha war, Greek war of Independence, First Anglo-Burmese War, Portuguese Civil War, First Carlist War, First Anglo-Afghan War, First Opium War, First Anglo-Sikh War, Second Burmese War, Crimean War, Second Opium War, Anglo-Persian War, Indian Rebellion, Third Ashanti War, First Anglo-Afghan war, Second Anglo-Afghan War, Third Anglo-Afghan war, Anglo-Zulu War, First Boer War, Mahdist War, Third Anglo-Burmese War, Anglo-Zanzibar War, Boxer Rebellion, Second Boer War, Anglo-Aro War, World War I, Irish War of Independence, World war 1, world war 2, Korean war, Mau mau uprising, Suez crisis, Falklands war, Gulf war, Desert fox war, Kosovo war, War in Afghanistan (fourth Anglo-Afghan war), War in Iraq.

There are many more but it would take to long to list them all.

5 answers


well, civil wars are always fought with one country, a civil war is a country at war with itself. if you're asking which countries have had civil wars, then here is a list of them: * Algerian Civil War, 1991-2002 * American Civil War, 1861-1865 * An Shi Rebellion, December 16, 755-February 17, 763 * Austrian Civil War, February 12, 1934 to February 16, 1934 * Bleeding Kansas, 1854-1858 * Bolivian Civil War, 1898-1899 * Boshin War (Japan), 1868-1869 * Cambodian Civil War ,1970-1975 * Carlist Wars (Spain), 1833-1839, 1846-1849, 1872-1876 * Chilean Civil War, 1891 * Chinese Civil War, 1928-1937, 1945-1949 * Colombian Civil War, 1860-1862 * Costa Rican Civil War, 1948 * List of English civil wars ** The Anarchy, 1135-1153 (refers to the disorder during the reign of King Stephen of England) ** Wars of the Roses, c. 1455-1485 ** English Civil War, 1642-1651 *** sometimes subdivided into First English Civil War, Second English Civil War and Third English Civil War * Finnish Civil War, 1918 * First Islamic Civil War, 656-661 * French Wars of Religion, 1562-1598 * Genpei War (Japan), 1180-1185 * Greek Civil War, 1946-1949 * Guatemalan Civil War, 1960-1996 * Hukbalahap insurgency in the Philippines, 1946-1954 * Hussite wars (Bohemia), 1419-1437 * Irish Civil War, 1922-1923 * Irish Confederate Wars some parts of which were a civil war. * Jementah Civil War, 1879 * Klang War; also known as Selangor Civil War, 1867-1874 * Korean War 1950-1953 * La Violencia (Colombia), 1948-1958 * Later Three Kingdoms, 892-936 * Lebanese Civil War, 1975-1990 * Liberian Civil War, 1990-1997 * Mexican Revolution, 1910-1917 * Mozambican Civil War, see Rome General Peace Accords, 1975-1992 * Musket Wars (New Zealand), early 19th century * War of national liberation (NOB, NOR) in area of Yugoslavia, 1941-1945 * Nigerian Civil War, 1967-1970 * Norwegian Civil War era, 1130-1240 * Ōnin War (Japan), 1467-1477 * Ottoman Civil War, 1509-1512 * Pakistani Civil War, 1971 * Palestinian Civil Wars, 1936-1939, 1947-1948 * Paraguayan Civil War, 1947 * Peasants' War (Germany), 1524-1525 * Peruvian Civil War, 1980-2000 * Portuguese Civil War, 1828-1834 * Rhodesian Bush War, 1965-1980 * Rokosz of Lubomirski, 1665-1666 in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth * Rokosz of Zebrzydowski, 1606-1609 in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth * Roman civil wars, List of Roman Republic and Empire Civil Wars * Romania had a brief civil war in 1989, after the fall of Nicolae Ceauşescu, between Communists and those against the former regime. * Russian Civil War, 1917-1921 * Rwandan Civil War, 1990-1994 * Salvadoran Civil War (El Salvador), 1979-1991 - see also History of El Salvador * Satsuma Rebellion (Japan), 1877 * Second Islamic Civil War, 683-685 * Secret War (Laos) 1962-1975 * Sengoku Period (Japan), 1467-1615 * Sonderbund war (Switzerland), November 1847 * South American wars of independence, 1808-1829 * Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939 * Taiping Civil War (China), 1851-1864 * The Brothers' Civil War, 1067-1072 (The war between King Alfonso of León and King Sancho of Castile) * Three Kingdoms Period 220-280 (This is something of an international conflict, but the Emperors of all three kingdoms claimed legitimate succession from the Han dynasty, thus making it a civil war) * Thousand Days Civil War (Colombia), 1899-1902 * Thirty Years Wars (Holy Roman Empire), 1618-1648 * Uruguayan Civil War, 1839-1851 * Vietnamese Civil War, 1954-1975 * Warring States Period (China), 475-221 BC (this is not universally considered a civil war, but rather an international conflict. However, each of the combatant states nominally acknowledged the authority of the Zhou kings of China, thus bringing them into one kingdom. This ended in 256 BC, however this was a mere 35 years before the end of conflict) * War of Reform (Mexico) 1857-1861 * War of the two brothers (Inca Empire) 1527-1532 * Wars of Scottish Independence, late 13th century/early 14th century * Wars of the Three Kingdoms (England, Ireland, Scotland) 1639-1651 involved a number of civil wars) * Zulu Civil War, 1817-1819 * Somali civil war, 1991-present this isn't a full list, but hopefully you find what you need.

3 answers


Friedrich Engels has written:

'Auf Reisen' -- subject- s -: Description and travel

'Naturens Dialektik'

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Capital'

'Ludwig Feuerbachy el fin de la filosofi a cla sica alemana'

'Di familye' -- subject- s -: Family, History

'The history of Ireland - unfinished -' -- subject- s -: History

'Revolution und kontre-revolution in Deutschland' -- subject- s -: History

'El Manifiesto Del Partido Comunista - Clasicos Filosofia -'

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Briefe an Bebel' -- subject- s -: Socialism

'Familiens, privatejendommens og statens oprindelse'

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Landmarks of scientific socialism' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'Deutsche Bauernkrieg' -- subject- s -: Peasants' War, 1524-1525, Social conditions, Politics and government, Historiography, Social conditons, Peasant uprisings, Communism and Christianity, Reformation

'Ursprung der Familie' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive societies, Property, State, The, Family, The State

'Familiens, privatejendommens og statens oprindelse'

'The early development of the family' -- subject- s -: Primitive societies, Property, State, The, Genealogy, History, The State

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'Anteil der Arbeit an der Menschwerdung des Affen' -- subject- s -: Evolution, Work

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Die deutsche Reichsverfassungskampagne' -- subject- s -: Politics and government, History

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Entwicklung des Sozialismus von der Utopie zur Wissenschaft' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Marks - Medieval land tenure -, Mark, Historical materialism, Utopian socialism, History, Dialectical materialism

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Di familye' -- subject- s -: Family, History

'Socialism: utopian and scientific : with the essay on \\' -- subject- s -: Socialism

'On historical materislism' -- subject- s -: Materialism

'Naturens Dialektik'

'Der briefweschael zwischen Friedrich Engels und Karl Marx, 1844 bis 1883' -- subject- s -: Socialism

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Correspondence of F. Engels & Paula and Laura Lafargue'

'Di familye' -- subject- s -: Family, History

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Principios de comunismo'

'Familiens, privatejendommens og statens oprindelse'

'Frederick Engels on Capital'

'La situation des classes laborieuses en Angleterre'

'Ludwig Feuerbachy el fin de la filosofi a cla sica alemana'

'Naturens Dialektik'

'Di familye' -- subject- s -: Family, History

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Perkembangan sosialisme dari utopi mendjadi ilmu' -- subject- s -: Socialism

'The British labour movement' -- subject- s -: Labour Party - Great Britain -, Political activity, Labor and laboring classes, Labour movement, Labor movement, Working class

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Engels'

'Ludwig Feuerbach et la fin de la philosophie classique allemande'

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'The origins of the family, private property and the state'

'Capital'

'Capital'

'Naturens Dialektik'

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'On historical materislism' -- subject- s -: Materialism

'The Condition of the Working-Class in England in 1844 with a Preface written in 1892'

'Di familye' -- subject- s -: Family, History

'Capital'

'Naturens Dialektik'

'Ludwig Feuerbach und der Ausgang der klassischen deutschen Philsophie' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'Di familye' -- subject- s -: Family, History

'Ludwig Feuerbachy el fin de la filosofi a cla sica alemana'

'Unbekanntes von Friedrich Engels und Karl Marx' -- subject- s -: Correspondence

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Naturens Dialektik'

'Capital'

'Die Lage der arbeitenden Klasse in England' -- subject- s -: Economic conditions, Working class, Labor and laboring classes, Great Britain, History

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'Correspondance' -- subject- s -: Correspondance, Correspondence, Communists, Socialists, Laura Marx Lafargue

'Familiens, privatejendommens og statens oprindelse'

'Friedrich Engels'

'Naturens Dialektik'

'Familiens, privatejendommens og statens oprindelse'

'Di familye' -- subject- s -: Family, History

'Naturens Dialektik'

'El origen de la famila, la propiedad privada y el Estado' -- subject- s -: Primitive societies, Property, History, Genealogy, The State

'Ludwig Feuerbach und der Ausgang der klassischen deutschen Philosophie' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Dialectical materialism, Materialism, Dialectic, German Philosophy

'Ludwig Feuerbachy el fin de la filosofi a cla sica alemana'

'Naturens Dialektik'

'Biographische Skizzen' -- subject- s -: Socialists, Biography

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Selected writings' -- subject- s -: Socialism

'On Marx's Capital' -- subject- s -: Study and teaching, Marxian economics, Capitalism

'The Bakuninists at work' -- subject- s -: Anarchism, History, Spain Carlist War, 1873-1876

'Engels as military critic' -- subject- s -: Military History, Military art and science

'Principals of communism'

'Briefe an Bebel' -- subject- s -: Socialism

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'Letters of the young Engels, 1838-1845' -- subject- s -: Correspondence

'Familiens, privatejendommens og statens oprindelse'

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Anti-Du hring' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Die heilige Familie oder Kritik der kritischen Kritik' -- subject- s -: Idealism, Materialism, Philosophy, History

'Familiens, privatejendommens og statens oprindelse'

'The fourteenth of March 1883'

'Shakai shugi no hatten' -- subject- s -: Socialism

'Zur Wohnungsfrage' -- subject- s -: Property, Housing, Dwellings, Working class, Labor and laboring classes

'El Origen De La Familia, De La Propiedad'

'The origins of the family, private property and the state, in the light of the researches of Lewis. H. Morgan'

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Herr Eugen Duhring's revolution in science'

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Die Entwicklung des Sozialismus von der Utopie zur Wissenschaft' -- subject- s -: Socialism, History

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Der Ursprung der Familie des Privateigentums und des Staats' -- subject- s -: Primitive societies, Property, History, Genealogy, The State

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'Familjens, privategendomens och statens ursprung'

'Capital'

'Familiens, privatejendommens og statens oprindelse'

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'La campagne constitutionnelle en Allemagne' -- subject- s -: Histoire

'Jia ting, si you zhi he guo jia di qi yuan' -- subject- s -: History, Primitive Society, Property, Family

'Ludwig Feuerbachy el fin de la filosofi a cla sica alemana'

'Correspondence [of] Frederick Engels [and] Paul and Laura Lafargue'

'Capital'

'Zi ran bian zheng fa' -- subject- s -: Science, Philosophy, Dialectical materialism

'Fan Dulin lun' -- subject- s -: Socialism, Philosophy, Economics, Dialectical materialism

'The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State' -- subject- s -: History, Nonfiction, OverDrive

'Naturens Dialektik'

'The revolutionary act' -- subject- s -: Revolutions, Working class, Political participation, Political activity, Social movements

'Letters on historical materialism, 1890-94'

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'The peasant question in France and Germany' -- subject- s -: Peasantry, Rural conditions, Political activity

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

'Handmarks of scientific socialism'

'Ludwig Feuerbach dan achir filsafat klasik Djerman' -- subject- s -: Dialectical materialism

1 answer


The Spanish persecutions of the descendants of Lakan Dula, the last king of a pre - hispanic kingdom based on what we know today as Manila, continued and intensified, but a lot of descendants maintained their native surnames like lakandula, dula, dulay, gatdula, dulayan, abdullah, rebadulla, dulatre, duldulao, dulayba, lakandola, lacandalo, lacandola, lacandula, dula - torre and many others revolving around the root word "dula". During the intense persecution of the Spaniards on the native aristocracy, some descendants have to disregard the "dula" root word and adopted totally different native sounding surnames for disguise, like magsaysay, lontoc, agbayani, acuna, salonga, gatchalian, bacani, macapagal, guingona, gatpandan, pangilinan, sumuroy, dagohoy, kalaw, salalima, soliman, pilapil, mabini, pagdanganan, macalintal, angara, bamba, datumanong, panganiban, katigbak, macarambon, sakay, aglipay, kasilag, salamat, karingal, kiram, daza, lacanilao, lacanlale, gatchalian, manalo, lagumbay, tamano, ilagan, bunye, pangandaman, maliksi, neri, silang, badoy, puno, lapid, ziga, nalupta, binay, gatbonton, sinsuat, capulong, puyat, gatmaitan, macuja, dagami, ablan, capinpin, punongbayan, madlangbayan, gatlabayan, batungbakal, cabangbang, roa, sumulong, gustilio, calungsod, capangoy, kapunan, etc, but continued fighting for the liberation of the natives from Spain. Some of the descendents hid their Lakan Dula heritage by changing their names into the likes of guevara, aguinaldo, legaspi, aquino, mendoza, osmena, de Leon, estanislao, laurel, fernando, ejercito, delapaz, mercado, santos, bonifacio, de guzman, etc, while some adopted chinese surnames of their mother like lim, uy, go, tan, etc, but they continued to pursue a belligerant posture against Spain. There are however few who were forced to collaborate with the Spanish authority. Wishing to avoid the persecution experienced by his latter ancestors, Lakan Dula's great grandson Juan Macapagal, for instance, aided the Spanish authorities in suppressing the 1660 Kapampangan revolt of Francisco Maniago, and the Pangasinan revolt of Andrés Malong, and the 1661 Ilocano revolt. To some natives, this is an act of treason against their cause, but some leaders understand this as a heroism to save the future descendants of Lakan Dula.

What was historically regarded as a mere historical artifacts, the kingdom recently attracted interest among respected historians and anthropologist because of a recent findings that Lakan Banao Dula and his descendants seem to be systematically hiding his bloodline into secured places near sea and river routes with an intention to recapture the kingdom in a future time. He seem to be hiding a cadet branch of the bloodline revolving around the traditional reign of the first born son of the first born son which is practice even today by conservative Filipino families. In history and heraldry, a cadet branch consists of the male-line descendants of a monarch or patriarch's younger sons (cadets). In the ruling dynasties and noble families of much of Europe and Asia, the family's major assets-realm, titles, fiefs, property and income-have historically been passed from a father to his firstborn son in what is known asprimogeniture; younger sons-cadets-inherited less wealth and authority to pass to future generations of descendants. In families and cultures in which this was not the custom or law, as in the feudal Holy Roman Empire, equal distribution of the family's holdings among male members was eventually apt to so fragment the inheritance as to render it too small to sustain the descendants at the socio-economic level of their forefather. Moreover, brothers and their descendants sometimes quarreled over their allocations, or even became estranged. While agnatic primogeniture became a common way of keeping the family's wealth intact and reducing familial disputes, it did so at the expense of younger sons and their descendants. Both before and after adoption of inheritance by primogeniture, younger brothers sometimes vied with older brothers to be chosen their father's heir or, after the choice was made, sought to usurp the elder's birthright (cf. Jacob and Esau).

The first born son of Lakan Dula is Batang Dula (younger Dula in local Tagalog dialect). Batang Dula is married to a Spanish girl. The eldest son of Batang Dula is David Dula y Goiti who was hidden somewhere in the Visayan Islands. This seem to provide a clue of a probable existence of cadet branch of the Kingdom of Lakan Dula. In such cases, primary responsibility for promoting the family's prestige, aggrandizement, and fortune fell upon the senior branch for future generations. A cadet, having less means, was not expected to produce a family. If a cadet chose to raise a family, its members were expected to maintain the family's social status by avoiding derogation, but could pursue endeavors that might be considered demeaning for the senior branch, such as emigration to another sovereign's realm, or engagement in commerce, or a profession such as law, academia, or civil service. In some cases, cadet branches eventually inherited the crown of the senior line, e.g. the Bourbon Counts of Vendôme mounted the throne of France (after civil war) in 1593; the House of Savoy-Carignan succeeded to the kingdoms of Sardinia (1831) and Italy (1861); the Counts Palatine of Zweibrücken obtained the Palatine Electorate (1799) and the Kingdom of Bavaria (1806); and a deposed Duke of Nassau was restored to sovereignty in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg (1890). In other cases, a junior branch came to eclipse more senior lines in rank and power, e.g. the Kings of Prussia and German Emperors who were junior by primogeniture to theCounts and Princes of Hohenzollern, and the Electors and Kings of Saxony who were a younger branch of the House of Wettin than the Grand Dukes of Saxe-Weimar. A still more junior branch of the Wettins, headed by the rulers of the small Duchy of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, would, through diplomacy or marriage in the 19th and 20th centuries, obtain the royal crowns of, successively, Belgium, Portugal, Bulgaria and the Commonwealth realms. Also, marriage to cadet males of the Houses of Oldenburg (Holstein-Gottorp), Polignac, and Bourbon-Parma brought those dynasties patrilineally to the thrones of Russia, Monaco, and Luxembourg, respectively. The Dutch royal house has, at different times, been a cadet branch of Mecklenburg and Lippe(-Biesterfeld). In the Commonwealth realms, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, and his male-line descendants are cadet members of the house of Glücksburg. By contrast, it was also sometimes possible for cadet branches to sink in status, either due to diminished fortune or genealogical distance from the reigning line. Such was the case of the Capetian branch of the princes de Courtenay, the last male of which died in 1733 without ever having been recognized by the French crown as dynastic princes du sang despite their undisputed but remote male-line descent from Louis VI of France. Likewise, the principi di Ottajano, an extant branch of the House of Medici eligible to inherit the grand duchy of Tuscany when the last male of the senior branch died in 1737, were bypassed by the intervention of Europe's major powers, which allocated the titleelsewhere. Although the Romanovs mounted Russia's throne in 1613 due to kinship-by-marriage to a tsar (Ivan the Terrible) descended from the 9th century founding rulerRurik, when in 1880 Tsar Alexander II wed Catherine Dolgorukov, a Rurikid princess, the marriage and its progeny were deemed morganatic. Some Philippine historians theorized that the cadet branch of Lakan Dula Kingdom is headed by a guy named Tallano, or some says that its a Macapagal, or the Sultanate of Sulo. But the more conservative one are saying that the real descendants actually know who is really their hereditary leader, because he is identified in their own history.But the secretive hereditary leader and the real descendants are keeping this kingdom's well - protected secret among themselves because they probably thought that it is not yet time to consolidate.They might even deny it in public when asked. Some examples of secretive cadet branch of kingdom where as follows:

  • House of York; descendants of the fourth son of Edward III Plantagenet, King of England, who, in the course of the Wars of the Roses (1455-1485), displaced the agnatically senior line of Plantagenets, the Lancaster branch, on the English throne (1461), only to be finally displaced themselves by a Lancastrian cognatic descendant, Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, who obtained the crown by conquest from Richard III (August 1485). As Henry VII, he took as queen consort the heiress of the cadet branch, Elizabeth of York, in January 1486. Their son, Henry VIII, thus united in his person and on the throne of England both branches of the Plantagenets, while inaugurating the House of Tudor which would rule England until 1603.
  • House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg; descendants of a younger son of King Christian III of Denmark (of the House of Oldenburg), who eventually became monarchs of Denmark, Norway and Greece and of which Charles, Prince of Wales, is patrilineally a member.
  • House of Bourbon; descendants of a younger son of Louis IX of France who, in the person of Henry IV of France inherited the throne of France from the senior Capetian line of the Valois in 1589; and from which sprang the Bourbon kings of Spain (including the Carlist and French legitimist lines), the kings of the Two Sicilies, and the sovereignDukes of Parma, who currently reign in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg in a cadet line. Also from Louis XIII de Bourbon descends the cadet branch known as the House of Orléans,[1] to which the Citizen-king Louis-Philippe, the Orleanist claimants to the throne of France (Henri, comte de Paris, duc de France) belong, as does the House of Orleans-Braganza.
  • House of Guise; Although the Dukes of Lorraine exercised continental independence, nominally they were vassals of the Holy Roman Emperors and their geo-political importance resided less in the size of their realm than in their crucial location between the competing French and German nations. A younger brother of Duke Antoine, Claude of Lorraine, was appanaged with the lordship of Guise in France and betook himself to the French court in search of his fortune. There, he was granted the title Duke of Guiseas a member of the Peerage of France, he and his male-line descendants henceforth being accorded the rank of prince étranger. As the Protestant Reformation threatened the unity of France the conspicuous loyalty of Claude's descendants to the Roman Catholic Church, combined with their barely concealed ambition upon the throne of the lastValois kings, infused the Guises with unequalled power in French politics. Their role in Paris and France's wars extended their influence in European affairs, until the accession of the House of Bourbon to the throne in 1593, far beyond that of their senior cousins reigning in Nancy.
  • Mandela: Nelson Mandela, the late president of the Republic of South Africa, was a male-line great-grandson of King Ngubengcuka of the Thembu nation of Southern AfricanXhosas. Be that as it may, he was, and fellow members of the Mandela branch of the Thembus' royal Madiba dynasty are, ineligible to succeed to the ancestral throne because they all descend from Ngubengcuka's morganatic marriage to a woman of a ritually inferior family. As such, their traditional role in the kingdom is that of hereditaryprivy counsellors to Thembu monarchs, unable to succeed to the throne themselves. In addition to this, the family's recognized leader also serves by tradition as the tribal chieftain of Mvezo under the authority of his relative the paramount chief of Thembuland, currently King Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo. Strictly speaking, however, the subordinate status of the Mandelas in relation to other descendants of the royal family is more due to their morganatic descent than to cadetship.
  • Spencer: the comital branch of the Spencer family descended from John Spencer, the youngest son of Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland and Lady Anne Churchill. The couple's eldest son Robert inherited his father's title of Earl of Sunderland while their second son Charles inherited the title of Duke of Marlborough upon the death of his auntHenrietta. When Robert, 4th Earl of Sunderland died without an heir, his titles passed to his brother Charles, 3rd Duke of Marlborough; with it the Marlboroughs (later known as the Spencer-Churchills) became the senior branch of the Spencer family. John's only son, also named John, became the 1st Earl Spencer. From the line of the Earls Spencer descend many prominent figures, including Diana, Princess of Wales, whose son Prince William, Duke of Cambridge was born heir eventual to the Crown of the United Kingdom.
  • Wellington; Arthur Wellesley, the younger brother of Richard Wellesley, the 2nd Earl of Mornington, started his career as a protégé of his older brother. He entered the military, a traditional occupation of younger sons. From 1809 to 1814 he won a series of very significant victories, and was awarded a series of ascending titles; Baron Douro, Viscount Wellington, Earl of Wellington, Marquess of Wellington and, finally, Duke of Wellington. A descendant of Baron Cowley, youngest brother of Richard Wellesley, became Earl of Cowley in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, his junior line of the family thereby also achieving a higher status than that of the Earldom of Mornington in thePeerage of Ireland.

1 answer


France is one of the very few nations who have won multiple war without support from others. These wars include:

(Keep in mind that these wars were fought and won by france on It's own)

Anglo-French War 1202-1214

Saintonge War 1242

War of Saint-Sardos 1324

Hundred Years' War 1337-1453

Mad War 1485-1488

Franco-Spanish War 1635-1659

War of Devolution 1667-1668

War of the Reunions 1683-1684

French conquest of Corsica 1768-1769

War of the First Coalition 1792-1797

War of the Pyrenees 1793-1795

French conquest of Algeria 1830-1847

Franco-Moroccan War 1844

Pastry War 1838-1839

French-Tahitian War 1844-1847

Tonkin Campaign 1883-1896

Sino-French War 1884-1886

Franco-Syrian War 1919-1921

There's also a number of wars wich France has fought and won with other nations. These wars include:

Franco-Flemish War

Old Zürich War

War of the League of Cambrai

Thirty Years' War

Franco-Dutch War

War of the Quadruple Alliance

American Revolutionary War (Fighting with the Americans)

War of the Second Coalition

War of the Third Coalition

War of the Fourth Coalition

War of the Fifth Coalition

First Carlist War

Crimean War

Second Opium War

Cochinchina Campaign

Italian War of 1859

Boxer Rebellion

World war 1

Rif War

World War 2 (French resistance)

Korean War

Suez War

Western Sahara War

Chadian-Libyan conflict

Gulf War

Kosovo War

2011 military intervention in Libya

France has arguably the most successful military history in the world, And BY FAR the best Win/loss ratio in battles throughout history

Here's a some battles which France has won:

Battle of Soissons, Battle of Tolbiac, Battle of Vouillé, Siege of Arles, Battle of Dorestad, Battle of Amblève, Battle of the Boarn, Battle of Toulouse, Battle of Tours, Battle of Nîmes, Battle of Avignon, Battle of Narbonne, Battle of the River Berre, Conquest of the Spanish March, Saxon Wars, Siege of Pavia, Conquest of Lombardy, Campaigns against the Avars, Annexion of Bavaria, Battle of Saucourt-en-Vimeu, Siege of Paris, Battle of Trans, Battle of Hastings, Siege of Acre, Battle of Muret, Siege of Damietta, Siege of Château Gaillard, Battle of Roche-au-Moine, Battle of Bouvines, Battle of Taillebourg, Battle of Furnes, Siege of Lille, Battle of Zierikzee, Battle of Mons-en-Pévèle, War of Saint-Sardos, Battle of Cassel, Battle of Arnemuiden, Siege of Tournai, Battle of Saint-Omer, Battle of Champtoceaux, Battle of Morlaix, Battle of Lunalonge, Battle of Ardres, Battle of Cocherel, Castilian Civil War, Battle of Montiel, Battle of Pontvallain, Battle of La Rochelle, Battle of Chiset, Franco-Castilian raids on the English coast, Battle of Roosebeke, Battle of Baugé, Battle of La Brossinière, Siege of Orléans, Battle of Jargeau, Battle of Meung-sur-Loire, Battle of Beaugency, Siege of Compiègne, Battle of Patay, Raid on Reims, Battle of Gerbevoy, Siege of Verneuil, Battle of Formigny, Battle of Castillon, Battle of St. Jakob an der Birs, Siege of Châteaubriant, Siege of Fougères, Battle of Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier, Battle of Seminara, Battle of Fornovo, Battle of Novara, Battle of Agnadello, Sack of Brescia, Battle of Ravenna, Battle of Marignano, Battle of Pampluna, Siege of Mézières, Siege of Marseille, Siege of Nice, Battle of Ceresole, Siege of Mirandola, Battle of Ponza, Corsica, Battle of Renty, Siege of Calais, Battle of Salga, Siege of Fort Crozon, Battle of Fontaine-Française, Siege of Amiens, Siege of Saint-Martin-de-Ré, Siege of La Rochelle, Battle of Veillane, Battle of Les Avins, Battle of Tornavento, Battle of Rheinfelden, Battle of Guetaria, Battle of Breisach, Siege of Arras, Battle of Cádiz, Siege of Turin, Battle of Montjuïc, Battle of Montmeló, Battle of Lerida, Battle of Rocroi, Battle of Cartagena, Battle of Freiburg, Battle of Nördlingen, Battle of Zusmarshausen, Battle of Lens, Battle of Arras, Siege of Landrecies, Battle of the Dunes, Battle of Saint Gotthard, Siege of Charleroi, Siege of Tournai, Siege of Lille, Siege of Groenlo, Siege of Maastricht, Battle of Sinsheim, Battle of Seneffe, Battle of Entzheim, Battle of Mulhouse, Battle of Turckheim, Battle of Salzbach, Battle of Stromboli, Battle of Augusta, Battle of Palermo, Siege of Valenciennes, Battle of Tobago, Battle of Tobago, French capture of Gorée, Battle of Cassel, Battle of Saint-Denis, Siege of Strasbourg, Siege of Courtrai, Capture of Dixmude, Siege of Luxembourg, Bombardment of Genoa, Siege of Philippsburg, Sack of Palatinate, Battle of Bantry Bay, Battle of Fleurus, Battle of Beachy Head, Battle of Staffarda, Battle of Quebec, Siege of Mons, Battle of La Prairie, Battle of Leuze, Siege of Namur, Battle of Steenkerque, Battle of Lagos, Battle of Landen, Battle of Marsaglia, Siege of Charleroi, Battle of Torroella, Battle of Camaret, Action of 29 June 1694, Battle of Dogger Bank, Raid on Cartagena, Siege of Barcelona, Battle of Hudson's Bay, Battle of Friedlingen, Siege of Kehl, Battle of Cap de la Roque, Battle of Ekeren, Battle of Höchstädt, Battle of Speyerbach, Raid on Deerfield, Battle of Cassano, Battle of Calcinato, Battle of Castiglione, Battle of Almansa, Battle of Beachy Head, First siege of Port Royal, Battle of Toulon, Second siege of Port Royal, Battle at The Lizard, Battle of St. John's, Battle of Syracuse, Battle of Brihuega, Battle of Villaviciosa, Quebec Expedition, Battle of Denain, Siege of Barcelona, Capture of Pensacola, Villasur expedition, Siege of Kehl, Siege of Pizzighettone, Siege of Philippsburg, Battle of San Pietro, Siege of Gaeta, Battle of Guastalla, Battle of Sahay, Battle of Toulon, Action of 8 May 1744, Raid on Canso, Battle of Villafranca, Battle of Casteldelfino, Battle of Madonna dell'Olmo, Battle of Fontenoy, Battle of Melle, Fall of Ghent, Northeast Coast Campaign, Battle of Bassignano, Raid on Saratoga, Siege of Brussels, Battle of Port-la-Joye, Battle of Rottofreddo, Siege of Fort Massachusetts, Battle of Madras, Raid on Lorient, Battle of Rocoux, Battle of Grand Pré, Battle of Lauffeld, Siege of Bergen op Zoom, Siege of Genoa, Siege of Maastricht, Siege of Fort St. Philip, Battle of Minorca, Battle of Hastenbeck, Raid on Rochefort, Battle of Saint Cast, Battle of Lutterberg, Battle of Bergen, Battle of Corbach, Battle of Kloster Kampen, First siege of Cassel, Battle of Grünberg, Battle of Nauheim, Battle of Fort Necessity, Braddock expedition, Battle of the Monongahela, Battle of Petitcodiac, Battle of Fort Bull, Battle of Fort Oswego, Battle of Sabbath Day Point, Siege of Fort William Henry, Louisbourg Expedition, Attack on German Flatts, Battle on Snowshoes, Battle of Bloody Creek, Siege of Louisbourg, Battle of Carillon, Battle of Fort Duquesne, Invasion of Martinique, Battle of Beauport, Battle of Sainte-Foy, Battle of Cuddalore, Battle of Pondicherry, Battle of Ponte Novu, First Battle of Ushant, Invasion of Dominica, Capture of Saint Vincent, Capture of Grenada, Battle of Grenada, Action of 9 August 1780, Siege of Pensacola, Battle of Porto Praya, Battle of Fort Royal, Invasion of Tobago, Naval battle off Cape Breton, Invasion of Minorca, Siege of Yorktown, Battle of the Chesapeake, Siege of Brimstone Hill, Capture of Demerara and Essequibo, Battle of St. Kitts, Battle of Sadras, Capture of Montserrat, First Battle of Cuddalore, Battle of Providien, Hudson Bay Expedition, Battle of Trincomalee, Capture of the Turks and Caicos Islands, Third Battle of Cuddalore, Siege of Thionville, Battle of Valmy, Siege of Lille, First Siege of Mayence, Battle of Jemappes, Siege of Namur, First Battle of Arlon, Siege of Dunkirk, Battle of Hondshoote, Battle of Méribel, Siege of Toulon, Battle of Wattignies, Battle of Woerth-Froeschwiller, Battle of Geisberg, Second Battle of Wissembourg, Invasion of Guadeloupe, Second Battle of Arlon, Battle of Villers-en-Cauchies, Battle of Mouscron, Battle of Tourcoing, Battle of Fleurus, Battle of the Vosges, Battle of Sprimont, Battle of Aldenhoven, First Battle of Dego, Siege of Luxembourg, Battle of Quiberon, Battle of Île d'Yeu, Battle of Peyrestortes, Battle of Boulou, Battle of the Baztan Valley, Battle of San-Lorenzo de la Muga, Battle of Orbaitzeta, Battle of the Black Mountain, Siege of Roses, Battle of the Gulf of Roses, Battle of Ettlingen, Battle of Neresheim, Battle of Neuwied, Battle of Diersheim, Battle of Loano, Battle of Montenotte, Battle of Millesimo, Second Battle of Dego, Battle of Ceva, Battle of Mondovì, Battle of Fombio, Battle of Lodi, Battle of Borghetto, Siege of Mantua, Battle of Lonato, Battle of Castiglione, Battle of Rovereto, Battle of Bassano, Battle of the Bridge of Arcole, Battle of La Favorite, Battle of Rivoli, Tyrol Invasion, Veronese Easters, Battle of Castlebar, Battle of Collooney, Action of 20 November 1798, Action of 14 December 1798, Capture of Malta, Battle of Chobrakit, Battle of the Pyramids, Revolt of Cairo, Siege of El Arish, Siege of Jaffa, Battle of Mount Tabor, First Battle of Abukir, Battle of Bergen, Second Battle of Zürich, Battle of Linth, Battle of Castricum, Battle of Heliopolis, Battle of Messkirch, Battle of Engen, Second Battle of Stockach, Battle of Höchstädt, Battle of Hohenlinden, First Battle of Algeciras Bay, Raids on Boulogne, Battle of Montebello, Siege of Genoa, Battle of Marengo, Battle of Pozzolo, Battle of Diamond Rock, Battle of Wertingen, Battle of Haslach-Jungingen, Battle of Elchingen, Battle of Ulm, Battle of Verona, Battle of Caldiero, Battle of Amstetten, Battle of Schöngrabern, Battle of Austerlitz, Siege of Gaeta, Battle of Campo Tenese, Battle of Mileto, Battle of Schleiz, Battle of Saalfeld, Battle of Jena, Battle of Auerstaëdt, Capitulation of Erfurt, Battle of Halle, Siege of Magdeburg, Battle of Prenzlau, Capitulation of Pasewalk, Capitulation of Stettin, Battle of Lübeck, Siege of Hameln, Greater Poland Uprising (1806), Battle of Czarnowo, Battle of Golymin, Battle of Pultusk, Battle of Mohrungen, Battle of Eylau, Battle of Ostroleka, Siege of Danzig, Battle of Guttstadt-Deppen, Battle of Heilsberg, Battle of Friedland, Siege of Stralsund, Dos de Mayo Uprising, Battle of Cabezón, Battle of Medina de Rioseco, Battle of Pancorbo, Battle of Burgos, Battle of Espinosa, Battle of Tudela, Battle of Somosierra, Siege of Saragossa, Battle of Uclés, Battle of Corunna, Battle of Valls, Battle of Medellín, Battle of Braga, Battle of Ciudad-Real, First Battle of Porto, Siege of Gerona, Battle of María, Battle of Almonacid, Battle of Ocana, Battle of Alba de Tormes, Siege of Astorga, Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo, Combat of Barquilla, Battle of the Côa, Siege of Almeida, Battle of Fuengirola, Battle of the Gebora, Battle of Pombal, Battle of Redinha, Battle of Casal Novo, Blockade of Almeida, Battle of Sagonte, Battle of Bornos, Battle of Bornos, Battle of Maguilla, Battle of Majadahonda, Siege of Burgos, First Siege of San Sebastiàn, Battle of Maya, Battle of Roncesvalles, Battle of Les Sables-d'Olonne, Battles of Bergisel, Battle of Teugen-Hausen, Battle of Ratisbon, Battle of Abensberg, Battle of Landshut, Battle of Eckmühl, Battle of Ebersberg, Battle of Piave River, Battle of Sankt Michael, Battle of Stralsund, Battle of Raab, Battle of Wagram, Walcheren Campaign, Action of 31 May 1809, Action of 18 November 1809, Action of 3 July 1810, Battle of Grand Port, Battle of Saltanovka, Battle of Ostrovno, Battle of Smolensk, First Battle of Polotsk, Battle of Valutino, Battle of Borodino, Occupation of Moscow, Battle of Maloyaroslavets, Battle of Krasnoi, Battle of Berezina, Battle of Lützen, Battle of Bautzen, Battle of Dresden, Battle of Hanau, Battle of Brienne, Battle of Champaubert, Battle of Montmirail, Battle of Château-Thierry, Battle of Vauchamps, Battle of Mormans, Battle of Montereau, Capture of Fort l'Écluse, Battle of Craonne, Battle of Reims, Battle of Saint-Dizier, Battle of Ligny, Battle of Quatre Bras, Battle of Wavre, Battle of La Suffel, Battle of Rocquencourt, Battle of Trocadero, Battle of Navarino, Morea expedition, Franco-Trarzan War, Invasion of Algiers, Ten days campaign, Siege of Antwerp, Battle of Maison Carée, Battle of the Sikkak, Second Siege of Constantine, Battle of Mazagran, Battle of the Mouzaïa Pass, Battle of the Smala, Battle of Terapegui, Battle of Huesca, Bombardment of Tangiers, Bombardment of Mogador, Battle of Isly, Bombardment of San Juan de Ulúa, Battle of Vuelta de Obligado, Bombardment of Tourane, Battle of Mahaena, Battle of Fautaua, Siege of Rome, Battle of Zaatcha, Battle of Bomarsund, Battle of Alma, Siege of Sevastopol, Battle of Balaclava, Battle of Inkerman, Battle of Eupatoria, Battle of Malakoff, Battle of the Chernaya, Battle of Kinburn, French conquest of Senegal, Siege of Medina Fort, First Battle of Taku Forts, Second Battle of Taku Forts, Third Battle of Taku Forts, Battle of Zhangjiawan, Battle of Palikao, Siege of Saigon, Battle of Ky Hoa, Capture of My Tho, Capture of Bien Hoa, Capture of Vinh Long, Battle of Montebello, Battle of Palestro, Battle of Magenta, Battle of Solferino, Battle of Shanghai, Battle of Fortín, Battle of Las Cumbres, Battle of Barranca Seca, Battle of Cerro del Borrego, Battle of Orizaba, Battle of San Pablo del Monte, First battle of Acapulco, Battle of Nopalucan, Capture of Jonuta, Battle of Camarón, Battle of San Pablo del Monte, Second battle of Acapulco, Battles for Shimonoseki, Battle of Mentana, Battle of Borny-Colombey, Battle of Mars-la-Tour, Battle of Dijon, Battle of Coulmiers, Battle of Villepion, Battle of Villersexel, Mokrani Revolt, Battle of Tit, Battle of Taghit, Battle of El-Moungar, Capture of Nam Định, Battle of Gia Cuc, Battle of Phủ Hoài, Battle of Thuan An, Battle of Palan, Son Tây Campaign, Bắc Ninh Campaign, Capture of Hung Hoa, Pacification of Tonkin, Battle of Fuzhou, Kep Campaign, Battle of Yu Oc, Siege of Tuyen Quang, Lang Son Campaign, Battle of Nui Bop, Battle of Shipu, Battle of Hoa Moc, Battle of Ky Lua, Pescadores Campaign, Paknam incident, Conquest of Tunisia, Mandingo Wars, Battle of Cotonou, Battle of Atchoupa, Battle of Dogba, Battle of Poguessa, Battle of Adégon, Siege of Akpa, Battle of Cana, First Madagascar expedition, Second Madagascar expedition, Gentil Missions, Voulet-Chanoine Mission, Foureau-Lamy Mission, Battle of Kousséri, Wadai War, Second Franco-Moroccan War, Siege of the International Legation, Battle of Tientsin, Battle of Yangcun, Battle of Beicang, Gasalee Expedition, Battle of Peking, Kamerun Campaign, Battle of Chra, Battle of Le Cateau, Battle of St. Quentin, Occupation of German Samoa, Battle of Grand Couronné, First Battle of the Marne, First Battle of Arras, Battle of the Yser, First Battle of Ypres, Second Battle of Ypres, First Battle of Krithia, Battle of Verdun, Monastir Offensive, Battle of Malka Nidzhe, Kaocen Revolt, Battle of the Hills, Second battle of Verdun, Battle of Malmaison, Third Battle of the Aisne, Second Battle of the Marne, Battle of Cantigny, Battle of Skra-di-Legen, Battle of Belleau Wood, Second Battle of the Marne, Battle of Château-Thierry, Battle of Amiens, Hundred Days Offensive, Vardar Offensive, Battle of Dobro Pole, Battle of Épehy, Battle of Arara, Battle of Megiddo, Meuse-Argonne Offensive, Battle of Courtrai, Battle of the Sambre, Siege of Damascus, Battle of Maysalunm, Occupation of Constantinople, Siege of Aintab, French Intervention in Morocco, Battle of Hannut, Battle of Montcornet, Battle of Abbeville, Operation Paula, Italian invasion of France, Operation Compass, Battle of Ko Chang, Battle of Kufra, Battle of Keren, Siege of Tobruk, Battle of Bir Hakeim, Second Battle of El Alamein, Battle of Ksar Ghilane, Operation Pugilist, Allied invasion of Sicily, Bernhardt Line, Battle of Monte Cassino, Operation Dingson, Normandy landings, Sword Beach, Invasion of Elba, Operation Dragoon, Liberation of Paris, Saint-Nazaire Pocket, Allied advance from Paris to the Rhine, Liberation of Nice, Battle of the Bulge, Operation Nordwind, Colmar Pocket, Western Allied invasion of Germany, Second French Indochina Campaign, Operation Tiderace, Battle of Hanoi, Operation Papillon, Operation Lea, Operation Ceinture, Battle of Phu Tong Hoa, Battle of Vinh Yen, Battle of Mao Khe, Battle of the Day River, Battle of Nghia Lo, Battle of Na San, Operation Bretagne, Operation Mouette, Operation Castor, First and Second Battles of Wonju, Battle of the Twin Tunnels, Battle of Chipyong-ni, Battle of Heartbreak Ridge, Battle of Algiers, Battle of Agounennda, Operation Kadesh, Reconquest of Spanish Sahara, Operation Jumelles, Opération Lamantin, Battle of Kolwezi, Opération Daguet, Gulf War air campaign, Djiboutian Civil War, Operation Restore Hope, Mission Héraclès, Operation Anaconda, Battle of Afghanya, Uzbin Valley ambush, Operation Eagle's Summit, Battle of Alasay, Operation Moshtarak, 2004 French-Ivorian clashes, Battle of N'Djamena, Operation Democracy in Comoros, Operation Thalathine, September 16, 2008 incident off Somalia, April 9, 2009 incident off Somalia, Battle of Misrata, Second Battle of Benghazi, Opération Harmattan, Battle of Ajdabiya, Operation Unified Protector, Battle of Sirte, Battle of Abidjan.

1 answer


France is one of the very few nations who have won multiple war without support from others. These wars include:

(Keep in mind that these wars were fought and won by france on It's own)

Anglo-French War 1202-1214

Saintonge War 1242

War of Saint-Sardos 1324

Hundred Years' War 1337-1453

Mad War 1485-1488

Franco-Spanish War 1635-1659

War of Devolution 1667-1668

War of the Reunions 1683-1684

French conquest of Corsica 1768-1769

War of the First Coalition 1792-1797

War of the Pyrenees 1793-1795

French conquest of Algeria 1830-1847

Franco-Moroccan War 1844

Pastry War 1838-1839

French-Tahitian War 1844-1847

Tonkin Campaign 1883-1896

Sino-French War 1884-1886

Franco-Syrian War 1919-1921

There's also a number of wars wich France has fought and won with other nations. These wars include:

Franco-Flemish War

Old Zürich War

War of the League of Cambrai

Thirty Years' War

Franco-Dutch War

War of the Quadruple Alliance

American Revolutionary War (Fighting with the Americans)

War of the Second Coalition

War of the Third Coalition

War of the Fourth Coalition

War of the Fifth Coalition

First Carlist War

Crimean War

Second Opium War

Cochinchina Campaign

Italian War of 1859

Boxer Rebellion

World war 1

Rif War

World War 2 (French resistance)

Korean War

Suez War

Western Sahara War

Chadian-Libyan conflict

Gulf War

Kosovo War

2011 military intervention in Libya

France has arguably the most successful military history in the world, And BY FAR the best Win/loss ratio in battles throughout history

Here's a some battles which France has won:

Battle of Soissons, Battle of Tolbiac, Battle of Vouillé, Siege of Arles, Battle of Dorestad, Battle of Amblève, Battle of the Boarn, Battle of Toulouse, Battle of Tours, Battle of Nîmes, Battle of Avignon, Battle of Narbonne, Battle of the River Berre, Conquest of the Spanish March, Saxon Wars, Siege of Pavia, Conquest of Lombardy, Campaigns against the Avars, Annexion of Bavaria, Battle of Saucourt-en-Vimeu, Siege of Paris, Battle of Trans, Battle of Hastings, Siege of Acre, Battle of Muret, Siege of Damietta, Siege of Château Gaillard, Battle of Roche-au-Moine, Battle of Bouvines, Battle of Taillebourg, Battle of Furnes, Siege of Lille, Battle of Zierikzee, Battle of Mons-en-Pévèle, War of Saint-Sardos, Battle of Cassel, Battle of Arnemuiden, Siege of Tournai, Battle of Saint-Omer, Battle of Champtoceaux, Battle of Morlaix, Battle of Lunalonge, Battle of Ardres, Battle of Cocherel, Castilian Civil War, Battle of Montiel, Battle of Pontvallain, Battle of La Rochelle, Battle of Chiset, Franco-Castilian raids on the English coast, Battle of Roosebeke, Battle of Baugé, Battle of La Brossinière, Siege of Orléans, Battle of Jargeau, Battle of Meung-sur-Loire, Battle of Beaugency, Siege of Compiègne, Battle of Patay, Raid on Reims, Battle of Gerbevoy, Siege of Verneuil, Battle of Formigny, Battle of Castillon, Battle of St. Jakob an der Birs, Siege of Châteaubriant, Siege of Fougères, Battle of Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier, Battle of Seminara, Battle of Fornovo, Battle of Novara, Battle of Agnadello, Sack of Brescia, Battle of Ravenna, Battle of Marignano, Battle of Pampluna, Siege of Mézières, Siege of Marseille, Siege of Nice, Battle of Ceresole, Siege of Mirandola, Battle of Ponza, Corsica, Battle of Renty, Siege of Calais, Battle of Salga, Siege of Fort Crozon, Battle of Fontaine-Française, Siege of Amiens, Siege of Saint-Martin-de-Ré, Siege of La Rochelle, Battle of Veillane, Battle of Les Avins, Battle of Tornavento, Battle of Rheinfelden, Battle of Guetaria, Battle of Breisach, Siege of Arras, Battle of Cádiz, Siege of Turin, Battle of Montjuïc, Battle of Montmeló, Battle of Lerida, Battle of Rocroi, Battle of Cartagena, Battle of Freiburg, Battle of Nördlingen, Battle of Zusmarshausen, Battle of Lens, Battle of Arras, Siege of Landrecies, Battle of the Dunes, Battle of Saint Gotthard, Siege of Charleroi, Siege of Tournai, Siege of Lille, Siege of Groenlo, Siege of Maastricht, Battle of Sinsheim, Battle of Seneffe, Battle of Entzheim, Battle of Mulhouse, Battle of Turckheim, Battle of Salzbach, Battle of Stromboli, Battle of Augusta, Battle of Palermo, Siege of Valenciennes, Battle of Tobago, Battle of Tobago, French capture of Gorée, Battle of Cassel, Battle of Saint-Denis, Siege of Strasbourg, Siege of Courtrai, Capture of Dixmude, Siege of Luxembourg, Bombardment of Genoa, Siege of Philippsburg, Sack of Palatinate, Battle of Bantry Bay, Battle of Fleurus, Battle of Beachy Head, Battle of Staffarda, Battle of Quebec, Siege of Mons, Battle of La Prairie, Battle of Leuze, Siege of Namur, Battle of Steenkerque, Battle of Lagos, Battle of Landen, Battle of Marsaglia, Siege of Charleroi, Battle of Torroella, Battle of Camaret, Action of 29 June 1694, Battle of Dogger Bank, Raid on Cartagena, Siege of Barcelona, Battle of Hudson's Bay, Battle of Friedlingen, Siege of Kehl, Battle of Cap de la Roque, Battle of Ekeren, Battle of Höchstädt, Battle of Speyerbach, Raid on Deerfield, Battle of Cassano, Battle of Calcinato, Battle of Castiglione, Battle of Almansa, Battle of Beachy Head, First siege of Port Royal, Battle of Toulon, Second siege of Port Royal, Battle at The Lizard, Battle of St. John's, Battle of Syracuse, Battle of Brihuega, Battle of Villaviciosa, Quebec Expedition, Battle of Denain, Siege of Barcelona, Capture of Pensacola, Villasur expedition, Siege of Kehl, Siege of Pizzighettone, Siege of Philippsburg, Battle of San Pietro, Siege of Gaeta, Battle of Guastalla, Battle of Sahay, Battle of Toulon, Action of 8 May 1744, Raid on Canso, Battle of Villafranca, Battle of Casteldelfino, Battle of Madonna dell'Olmo, Battle of Fontenoy, Battle of Melle, Fall of Ghent, Northeast Coast Campaign, Battle of Bassignano, Raid on Saratoga, Siege of Brussels, Battle of Port-la-Joye, Battle of Rottofreddo, Siege of Fort Massachusetts, Battle of Madras, Raid on Lorient, Battle of Rocoux, Battle of Grand Pré, Battle of Lauffeld, Siege of Bergen op Zoom, Siege of Genoa, Siege of Maastricht, Siege of Fort St. Philip, Battle of Minorca, Battle of Hastenbeck, Raid on Rochefort, Battle of Saint Cast, Battle of Lutterberg, Battle of Bergen, Battle of Corbach, Battle of Kloster Kampen, First siege of Cassel, Battle of Grünberg, Battle of Nauheim, Battle of Fort Necessity, Braddock expedition, Battle of the Monongahela, Battle of Petitcodiac, Battle of Fort Bull, Battle of Fort Oswego, Battle of Sabbath Day Point, Siege of Fort William Henry, Louisbourg Expedition, Attack on German Flatts, Battle on Snowshoes, Battle of Bloody Creek, Siege of Louisbourg, Battle of Carillon, Battle of Fort Duquesne, Invasion of Martinique, Battle of Beauport, Battle of Sainte-Foy, Battle of Cuddalore, Battle of Pondicherry, Battle of Ponte Novu, First Battle of Ushant, Invasion of Dominica, Capture of Saint Vincent, Capture of Grenada, Battle of Grenada, Action of 9 August 1780, Siege of Pensacola, Battle of Porto Praya, Battle of Fort Royal, Invasion of Tobago, Naval battle off Cape Breton, Invasion of Minorca, Siege of Yorktown, Battle of the Chesapeake, Siege of Brimstone Hill, Capture of Demerara and Essequibo, Battle of St. Kitts, Battle of Sadras, Capture of Montserrat, First Battle of Cuddalore, Battle of Providien, Hudson Bay Expedition, Battle of Trincomalee, Capture of the Turks and Caicos Islands, Third Battle of Cuddalore, Siege of Thionville, Battle of Valmy, Siege of Lille, First Siege of Mayence, Battle of Jemappes, Siege of Namur, First Battle of Arlon, Siege of Dunkirk, Battle of Hondshoote, Battle of Méribel, Siege of Toulon, Battle of Wattignies, Battle of Woerth-Froeschwiller, Battle of Geisberg, Second Battle of Wissembourg, Invasion of Guadeloupe, Second Battle of Arlon, Battle of Villers-en-Cauchies, Battle of Mouscron, Battle of Tourcoing, Battle of Fleurus, Battle of the Vosges, Battle of Sprimont, Battle of Aldenhoven, First Battle of Dego, Siege of Luxembourg, Battle of Quiberon, Battle of Île d'Yeu, Battle of Peyrestortes, Battle of Boulou, Battle of the Baztan Valley, Battle of San-Lorenzo de la Muga, Battle of Orbaitzeta, Battle of the Black Mountain, Siege of Roses, Battle of the Gulf of Roses, Battle of Ettlingen, Battle of Neresheim, Battle of Neuwied, Battle of Diersheim, Battle of Loano, Battle of Montenotte, Battle of Millesimo, Second Battle of Dego, Battle of Ceva, Battle of Mondovì, Battle of Fombio, Battle of Lodi, Battle of Borghetto, Siege of Mantua, Battle of Lonato, Battle of Castiglione, Battle of Rovereto, Battle of Bassano, Battle of the Bridge of Arcole, Battle of La Favorite, Battle of Rivoli, Tyrol Invasion, Veronese Easters, Battle of Castlebar, Battle of Collooney, Action of 20 November 1798, Action of 14 December 1798, Capture of Malta, Battle of Chobrakit, Battle of the Pyramids, Revolt of Cairo, Siege of El Arish, Siege of Jaffa, Battle of Mount Tabor, First Battle of Abukir, Battle of Bergen, Second Battle of Zürich, Battle of Linth, Battle of Castricum, Battle of Heliopolis, Battle of Messkirch, Battle of Engen, Second Battle of Stockach, Battle of Höchstädt, Battle of Hohenlinden, First Battle of Algeciras Bay, Raids on Boulogne, Battle of Montebello, Siege of Genoa, Battle of Marengo, Battle of Pozzolo, Battle of Diamond Rock, Battle of Wertingen, Battle of Haslach-Jungingen, Battle of Elchingen, Battle of Ulm, Battle of Verona, Battle of Caldiero, Battle of Amstetten, Battle of Schöngrabern, Battle of Austerlitz, Siege of Gaeta, Battle of Campo Tenese, Battle of Mileto, Battle of Schleiz, Battle of Saalfeld, Battle of Jena, Battle of Auerstaëdt, Capitulation of Erfurt, Battle of Halle, Siege of Magdeburg, Battle of Prenzlau, Capitulation of Pasewalk, Capitulation of Stettin, Battle of Lübeck, Siege of Hameln, Greater Poland Uprising (1806), Battle of Czarnowo, Battle of Golymin, Battle of Pultusk, Battle of Mohrungen, Battle of Eylau, Battle of Ostroleka, Siege of Danzig, Battle of Guttstadt-Deppen, Battle of Heilsberg, Battle of Friedland, Siege of Stralsund, Dos de Mayo Uprising, Battle of Cabezón, Battle of Medina de Rioseco, Battle of Pancorbo, Battle of Burgos, Battle of Espinosa, Battle of Tudela, Battle of Somosierra, Siege of Saragossa, Battle of Uclés, Battle of Corunna, Battle of Valls, Battle of Medellín, Battle of Braga, Battle of Ciudad-Real, First Battle of Porto, Siege of Gerona, Battle of María, Battle of Almonacid, Battle of Ocana, Battle of Alba de Tormes, Siege of Astorga, Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo, Combat of Barquilla, Battle of the Côa, Siege of Almeida, Battle of Fuengirola, Battle of the Gebora, Battle of Pombal, Battle of Redinha, Battle of Casal Novo, Blockade of Almeida, Battle of Sagonte, Battle of Bornos, Battle of Bornos, Battle of Maguilla, Battle of Majadahonda, Siege of Burgos, First Siege of San Sebastiàn, Battle of Maya, Battle of Roncesvalles, Battle of Les Sables-d'Olonne, Battles of Bergisel, Battle of Teugen-Hausen, Battle of Ratisbon, Battle of Abensberg, Battle of Landshut, Battle of Eckmühl, Battle of Ebersberg, Battle of Piave River, Battle of Sankt Michael, Battle of Stralsund, Battle of Raab, Battle of Wagram, Walcheren Campaign, Action of 31 May 1809, Action of 18 November 1809, Action of 3 July 1810, Battle of Grand Port, Battle of Saltanovka, Battle of Ostrovno, Battle of Smolensk, First Battle of Polotsk, Battle of Valutino, Battle of Borodino, Occupation of Moscow, Battle of Maloyaroslavets, Battle of Krasnoi, Battle of Berezina, Battle of Lützen, Battle of Bautzen, Battle of Dresden, Battle of Hanau, Battle of Brienne, Battle of Champaubert, Battle of Montmirail, Battle of Château-Thierry, Battle of Vauchamps, Battle of Mormans, Battle of Montereau, Capture of Fort l'Écluse, Battle of Craonne, Battle of Reims, Battle of Saint-Dizier, Battle of Ligny, Battle of Quatre Bras, Battle of Wavre, Battle of La Suffel, Battle of Rocquencourt, Battle of Trocadero, Battle of Navarino, Morea expedition, Franco-Trarzan War, Invasion of Algiers, Ten days campaign, Siege of Antwerp, Battle of Maison Carée, Battle of the Sikkak, Second Siege of Constantine, Battle of Mazagran, Battle of the Mouzaïa Pass, Battle of the Smala, Battle of Terapegui, Battle of Huesca, Bombardment of Tangiers, Bombardment of Mogador, Battle of Isly, Bombardment of San Juan de Ulúa, Battle of Vuelta de Obligado, Bombardment of Tourane, Battle of Mahaena, Battle of Fautaua, Siege of Rome, Battle of Zaatcha, Battle of Bomarsund, Battle of Alma, Siege of Sevastopol, Battle of Balaclava, Battle of Inkerman, Battle of Eupatoria, Battle of Malakoff, Battle of the Chernaya, Battle of Kinburn, French conquest of Senegal, Siege of Medina Fort, First Battle of Taku Forts, Second Battle of Taku Forts, Third Battle of Taku Forts, Battle of Zhangjiawan, Battle of Palikao, Siege of Saigon, Battle of Ky Hoa, Capture of My Tho, Capture of Bien Hoa, Capture of Vinh Long, Battle of Montebello, Battle of Palestro, Battle of Magenta, Battle of Solferino, Battle of Shanghai, Battle of Fortín, Battle of Las Cumbres, Battle of Barranca Seca, Battle of Cerro del Borrego, Battle of Orizaba, Battle of San Pablo del Monte, First battle of Acapulco, Battle of Nopalucan, Capture of Jonuta, Battle of Camarón, Battle of San Pablo del Monte, Second battle of Acapulco, Battles for Shimonoseki, Battle of Mentana, Battle of Borny-Colombey, Battle of Mars-la-Tour, Battle of Dijon, Battle of Coulmiers, Battle of Villepion, Battle of Villersexel, Mokrani Revolt, Battle of Tit, Battle of Taghit, Battle of El-Moungar, Capture of Nam Định, Battle of Gia Cuc, Battle of Phủ Hoài, Battle of Thuan An, Battle of Palan, Son Tây Campaign, Bắc Ninh Campaign, Capture of Hung Hoa, Pacification of Tonkin, Battle of Fuzhou, Kep Campaign, Battle of Yu Oc, Siege of Tuyen Quang, Lang Son Campaign, Battle of Nui Bop, Battle of Shipu, Battle of Hoa Moc, Battle of Ky Lua, Pescadores Campaign, Paknam incident, Conquest of Tunisia, Mandingo Wars, Battle of Cotonou, Battle of Atchoupa, Battle of Dogba, Battle of Poguessa, Battle of Adégon, Siege of Akpa, Battle of Cana, First Madagascar expedition, Second Madagascar expedition, Gentil Missions, Voulet-Chanoine Mission, Foureau-Lamy Mission, Battle of Kousséri, Wadai War, Second Franco-Moroccan War, Siege of the International Legation, Battle of Tientsin, Battle of Yangcun, Battle of Beicang, Gasalee Expedition, Battle of Peking, Kamerun Campaign, Battle of Chra, Battle of Le Cateau, Battle of St. Quentin, Occupation of German Samoa, Battle of Grand Couronné, First Battle of the Marne, First Battle of Arras, Battle of the Yser, First Battle of Ypres, Second Battle of Ypres, First Battle of Krithia, Battle of Verdun, Monastir Offensive, Battle of Malka Nidzhe, Kaocen Revolt, Battle of the Hills, Second battle of Verdun, Battle of Malmaison, Third Battle of the Aisne, Second Battle of the Marne, Battle of Cantigny, Battle of Skra-di-Legen, Battle of Belleau Wood, Second Battle of the Marne, Battle of Château-Thierry, Battle of Amiens, Hundred Days Offensive, Vardar Offensive, Battle of Dobro Pole, Battle of Épehy, Battle of Arara, Battle of Megiddo, Meuse-Argonne Offensive, Battle of Courtrai, Battle of the Sambre, Siege of Damascus, Battle of Maysalunm, Occupation of Constantinople, Siege of Aintab, French Intervention in Morocco, Battle of Hannut, Battle of Montcornet, Battle of Abbeville, Operation Paula, Italian invasion of France, Operation Compass, Battle of Ko Chang, Battle of Kufra, Battle of Keren, Siege of Tobruk, Battle of Bir Hakeim, Second Battle of El Alamein, Battle of Ksar Ghilane, Operation Pugilist, Allied invasion of Sicily, Bernhardt Line, Battle of Monte Cassino, Operation Dingson, Normandy landings, Sword Beach, Invasion of Elba, Operation Dragoon, Liberation of Paris, Saint-Nazaire Pocket, Allied advance from Paris to the Rhine, Liberation of Nice, Battle of the Bulge, Operation Nordwind, Colmar Pocket, Western Allied invasion of Germany, Second French Indochina Campaign, Operation Tiderace, Battle of Hanoi, Operation Papillon, Operation Lea, Operation Ceinture, Battle of Phu Tong Hoa, Battle of Vinh Yen, Battle of Mao Khe, Battle of the Day River, Battle of Nghia Lo, Battle of Na San, Operation Bretagne, Operation Mouette, Operation Castor, First and Second Battles of Wonju, Battle of the Twin Tunnels, Battle of Chipyong-ni, Battle of Heartbreak Ridge, Battle of Algiers, Battle of Agounennda, Operation Kadesh, Reconquest of Spanish Sahara, Operation Jumelles, Opération Lamantin, Battle of Kolwezi, Opération Daguet, Gulf War air campaign, Djiboutian Civil War, Operation Restore Hope, Mission Héraclès, Operation Anaconda, Battle of Afghanya, Uzbin Valley ambush, Operation Eagle's Summit, Battle of Alasay, Operation Moshtarak, 2004 French-Ivorian clashes, Battle of N'Djamena, Operation Democracy in Comoros, Operation Thalathine, September 16, 2008 incident off Somalia, April 9, 2009 incident off Somalia, Battle of Misrata, Second Battle of Benghazi, Opération Harmattan, Battle of Ajdabiya, Operation Unified Protector, Battle of Sirte, Battle of Abidjan.

Oh, and by the way, look up how many wars The United states has won on their own. Just for fun!

1 answer


You asked for all of them!!!!

Admiral Ackbar - portrayed by Timothy M. Rose and voiced by Erik Bauersfeld Commands the Rebel fleet in their attack against the second Death Star in Return of the Jedi. Ackbar was a Mon Calamari leader and military commander. Aptly given a name that means "selfless servant," Ackbar devoted himself to the cause of galactic freedom and became the foremost military commander of the Alliance to Restore the Republic, having previously been an Imperial slave, and the later New Republic.[4]Ailyn VelBoba Fett's daughter, appears in Bloodlines. Designs to kill her father, Boba Fett as she believes he abandon both her mother and she when she is captured by Jacen Solo's Galactic Army Guard. She dies under interrogation by Jacen Solo, further pushing Jacen towards the Dark Side of the Force and his ultimate rebirth as Darth Caedus.Stass Allie - portrayed by Lily Nyamwasa and Nina FallonHuman Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones and Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith.Allana SoloJacen Solo and Tenel Ka's daughter in the Legacy of the Force series. Adopted by Han Solo and Leia Organa-Solo at the end of Invincible and given the name Amelia in public to keep her true parents secret.Padmé Amidala - portrayed by Natalie PortmanChild queen of, later Senator from, Naboo, who marries Anakin Skywalker and dies giving birth to Luke Skywalker and Leia Organa.[5]Mas Amedda - portrayed by Jerome Blake and David BowersVice chair of the Galactic Senate.[6] Blake played the character in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, Bowers played him in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, and both actors appeared in the role for Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith.[6]Bail AntillesAn Alderaanian senator. Sundered Heart owner.[7]Raymus Antilles - portrayed by Rohan Nichol and Peter GeddisCaptain of the Tantive IV in Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith and Episode IV: A New Hope, and as captain of the Sundered Heart in the game Star Wars: Empire at War.Wedge Antilles - portrayed by Denis Lawson and Colin HigginsA Rebel and New Republic starfighter pilot.[8]Queen Breha Antilles Organa - portrayed by Rebecca Jackson MendozaRuler of Alderaan, wife of Bail Organa, and adoptive mother of Leia Organa.Tavion AxmisAntagonist in Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy.Ponda BabaAqualish mercenary who attacks Luke Skywalker in A New Hope.[9] When the original Kenner action figure for Baba was released, the then-unnamed alien was called simply "Walrus Man".[9] His proper name (as well as the name of his species) was given in 1989 for his appearance in a Star Wars role-playing game.[9]Cad Bane - voiced by Corey BurtonA ruthless bounty hunter and main antagonist in The Clone Wars who appears in Star Wars: The Clone Wars: Republic Heroes.[10]Darth BaneDark lord of the Sith in the Darth Bane book series.Bao-Dur - voiced by Roger G. SmithZabrak technician in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords. Bao-Dur invented the mass shadow generator that ended the battle on Malachor V.Garm Bel IblisA Republic senator and initial member of the Rebel Alliance.[11]Sio Bibble - portrayed by Oliver Ford DaviesGovernor of Naboo in the prequel trilogy.[12]Depa Billaba - portrayed by Dipika O'Neill JotiJedi Master on the Jedi High Council. Was sent to Haruun Kal by the council. She fell to the dark side and fell into a coma.[13]Jar Jar Binks - portrayed by Ahmed BestHapless but good-natured Gungan throughout the prequel trilogy. Also known to be clumsy.[14]Jolee Bindo - voiced by Kevin Michael RichardsonA human "Gray" Jedi who lived during the times of the Old Republic and went into self-imposed exile on Kashyyyk. He joined Darth Revan to help triumph over the Sith Empire in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic.Deliah BlueA companion of Cade Skywalker and Jariah Syn during the Sith-Imperial War in the Legacy comic series.Blue MaxDroid that is part of Han Solo's crew in The Han Solo Adventures by Brian Daley.[15]Bossk - portrayed by Alan HarrisA Trandoshan bounty hunter in The Empire Strikes Back.[16] He also appeared in the book Tales from the Bounty Hunters, in the story "The Prize Pelt", and in Star Wars: Empire at War: Forces of Corruption.BolluxDroid that is part of Han Solo's crew in The Han Solo Adventures by Brian Daley.[17]Borvo the Hutt - voiced by Clint BajakianA Hutt smuggler on Naboo featured in Star Wars: Episode I: Battle for Naboo.Brianna - voiced by Grey DeLisleThe "Last Handmaiden" on a Jedi Academy located on Telos IV in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords.Noa Briqualon - portrayed by Wilford BrimleyMarooned on Endor in Ewoks: The Battle for Endor.[18]C-3PO - portrayed by Anthony DanielsProtocol droid who appears throughout the Star Wars movies and Expanded Universe.[19]CB-99Was a droid Jabba the Hutt used to keep his will. After his death shortly before the Battle of Endor, Zorba the Hutt, Jabba's father, reclaimed Jabba's will and everything he owned through the droid. He was first featured in the novel Zorba the Hutt's Revenge.Joruus C'baothInsane clone of Jedi master Jorus C'baoth and an antagonist in Timothy Zahn's Thrawn trilogy.[20] Zahn originally conceived the character as an insane clone of Obi-Wan Kenobi.[20]Darth CaedusSith Lord born as Jacen Solo, the oldest son of Han Solo and Leia Organa Solo and Jaina Solo's twin brother.Lando Calrissian - portrayed by Billy Dee WilliamsOld friend of Han Solo. Businessman and scoundrel who leads the Rebels' space attack against the Death Star in Return of the Jedi.[21] He eventually resigns his military commission and returns to being a businessman.[21]CharalForce-wielding antagonist in Battle for Endor.[22]Chewbacca - portrayed by Peter MayhewHan Solo's partner and co-pilot of the Millennium Falcon.[23] His father, Attichitucuk, appears as a playable character in Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds. Chewbacca and his wife, Mallatobuck, have a son named Lumpawarrump.[23]Nas ChokaYuuzhan Vong warmaster who succeeded Tsavong Lah. Surrendered on behalf of the Yuuzhan Vong after Shimrra's death, ending the conflict.General Airen CrackenRebel and New Republic intelligence officer. West End Games Star Wars roleplaying supplements sometimes were published as "Cracken's" guides to their topic.Arvel Crynyd - portrayed by Hilton McRaeA-wing pilot who crashes into the Star Dreadnought Executor, causing it to spin out of control, in Return of the Jedi

commander Cody:clone trooper portrayed by Temuera Morrison Salacious B. Crumb - portrayed by Tim Rose and voiced by Mark DodsonKowakian monkey-lizard in Jabba the Hutt's court.[24] Rose's antics controlling the Crumb puppet led to an increase in the character's prominence.[24]Admiral Natasi DaalaAntagonist introduced in the Jedi Academy trilogy, returning in Darksaber, Planet of Twilight, and Death Star.[25] In the Legacy of the Force series, Daala becomes the chief of state of the Galactic Federation of Free Alliances.Biggs Darklighter - portrayed by Garrick HagonLuke Skywalker's friend from Tatooine who helps in attacking the Death Star.[26] Biggs' reunion with Luke was cut from the theatrical release of A New Hope but restored for the Special Edition release.[26]Bren Derlin - portrayed by John RatzenbergerRebel officer in The Empire Strikes Back.[27]Desann - voiced by Mark KlastorinDark Jedi antagonist in Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast.Grand Moff Vilim DisraImperial antagonist in the Hand of Thrawn duology and in the novel Allegiance.Teneniel DjoWitch of Dathomir appearing in The Courtship of Princess Leia. Married to Isolder, mother of Tenel Ka.Jan Dodonna - portrayed by Alex McCrindleRebel general who plans the starfighter attack on the first Death Star,[28] and the first character to utter the phrase, "May the Force be with you".Count Dooku - portrayed by Christopher LeeSeparatist leader and Sith apprentice also known as Darth Tyranus.[29] Dooku severs Anakin Skywalker's right forearm in Attack of the Clones, and Skywalker kills Dooku in Revenge of the Sith.[29]Grand Moff DunhausenA high-ranking Imperial officer and member of the Central Committee of Grand Moffs. Dunhausen is predominantly known for two things: his scheming nature and for always wearing a pair of blaster-shaped earrings. He owns the droid 3B6-RA-7. He is first featured in the novel The Glove of Darth Vader.Captain DunwellAssists Trioculus in his search for Darth Vader's glove. Killed after his submarine explodes. First featured in the novel The Glove of Darth Vader.Durge - voiced by Daran NorrisA character in the 2003 Clone Wars animated series.[30]Kyp DurronJedi Master who first appears in Kevin J. Anderson's Jedi Academy Trilogy.[31]Darth DesolousA male Pau'an Dark Lord of the Sith. Once a revered Jedi Master, he loses his proper identity after falling to the dark side of the Force. Appears in the video game Star Wars: The Force Unleashed.

ECaptain Juno Eclipse - voiced by Nathalie CoxFemale Imperial pilot and Galen Marek's love interest in The Force Unleashed.[32]E-3POProtocol droid seen in Episode V.Ebe EndocottOf Triffian species, Ebe is one of the eighteen podracers seen in Episode I.EV-9D9Droid working in Jabba the Hutt's palace in Return of the Jedi.[33]Doctor Cornelius Evazan - portrayed by Alfie CurtisCharacter who antagonizes Luke Skywalker in A New Hope.[34]Keyan FarlanderRebel Alliance starfighter pilot and Jedi. The Farlander Papers enclosed with some copies of the Star Wars: X-Wing provided backstory to the game's unnamed protagonist.Jagged FelStarfighter pilot and Baron Soontir Fel's son, appearing in the New Jedi Order and Legacy of the Force series.Roan FelDeposed galactic emperor in the Star Wars: Legacy series.Baron Soontir FelElite Imperial starfighter pilot in Dark Horse Comics and the New Jedi Order series. Brother-in-law to Commander Wedge Antilles.Davin FelthImperial stormtrooper 1023 who discovered that the escape pod that the Empire is looking for contained droids. He kills his superior officer Mod Terrik after becoming disgusted with the Empire's tyranny, giving the Millennium Falcon the time needed to escape from Tatooine.Jango Fett - portrayed by Temuera MorrisonBounty hunter, clones of whom composed the Republic's Army in the prequel trilogy. Boba Fett - portrayed by Jeremy Bulloch (V-VI), Daniel Logan (II), and Jason Wingreen (voice, V), Temuera Morrison (voice in the 2004 release of the Original Trilogy)Clone of Jango Fett raised by Jango on Kamino as his son. Becomes a bounty hunter.]Borsk Fey'lyaBothan politician, introduced in the Thrawn trilogy, who rises to become chief of state of the New Republic. He is held accountable for imprisoning Admiral Ackbar in the Hand of Thrawn trilogy by Timothy Zahn.Kit Fisto - portrayed by Zachariah Jensen and Daniel Zizmor (Attack of the Clones) and Ben Cooke (Revenge of the Sith)The design of Kit Fisto was first developed as a male Sith concept by concept artist Dermot Power. When the alien Sith apprentice idea was abandoned, Power revisited the tentacle-headed alien as a Jedi, with a less malevolent face, yet still with an imposing presence. In fact, Fisto has quickly been dubbed the ever-smiling character of the Star Wars Saga, so much so that at his death to the hands of the then-soon-to-be Emperor Palpatine, he was found by Anakin Skywalker near the Chancellor's desk with nothing less than a smile slapped across his nautolan face. Darth Sidious killed Kit Fisto.Fode - voiced by Scott CapurroA male Troig in The Phantom Menace who commentates for the Boonta Eve Classic.Bib Fortuna - portrayed by Michael Carter and voiced by Erik BauersfeldA male Twi'lek from the planet Ryloth who serves as Jabba the Hutt's majordomo in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi.Adi Gallia - portrayed by Gin ClarkeCorellian Jedi master in the prequel trilogy.Garindan - portrayed by Sadie EddonAlso known as Long-Snoot. Is a long-snouted creature who leads Imperial stormtroopers to the Millennium Falcon.Gonk DroidA rectangular-cubed shaped droid that walks very slowly. It is a series of worker droids. It is a playable character in the Lego Star Wars series of games and gives ammo to a player in Star Wars Battlefront II. In the Star Wars Customizable Card Game, Gonk and other similar droids are referred to as 'power droids,' which allow players to utilize certain other cards.Mirta GevBoba Fett's granddaughter, who first appears in Bloodlines.Joelle GoldaA Ratlike Jedi Council member in Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith and the Clone Wars series.Greeata - portrayed by Celia FushilleA Rodian backup singer and dancer for the Max Rebo Band.Greedo - portrayed by Paul Blake and Maria de AragonRodian bounty hunter who serves Jabba the Hutt. At the Mos Eisley Cantina in A New Hope, he attempts to kill Han Solo, something he has "been looking forward to... for a long time", but Solo shoots him instead.General Grievous - voiced by Matthew WoodCyborg supreme commander of the Separatist droid armies killed by Obi-Wan Kenobi in Revenge of the Sith.Nute Gunray - portrayed by Silas CarsonViceroy of the Trade Federation killed by Darth Vader in Revenge of the Sith.HK-47 - voiced by Kristoffer TaboriAssassin droid who joins the player's party in both Knights of the Old Republic and The Sith Lords It is also part of the Trials of Obi-Wan expansion pack to the massively multiplayer online game Star Wars: Galaxies.Rune Haako - portrayed by Jerome Blake/James Taylor (Episode 12) and Sandy Thompson (Episode III)Second in command to Nute Gunray.San Hill - voiced by Chris TruswellChairman of the Intergalactic Banking Clan, killed by Darth Vader in Revenge of the Sith.Grand Moff Bertroff HissaLeading figure in an attempt to overthrow Ysanne Isard as the head of the Galactic Empire. Hissa founded the Central Committee of Grand Moffs, who installed Trioculus as their figurehead. First appears in the novel The Glove of Darth Vader.Corran HornX-wing pilot and Jedi Knight.[47] I, Jedi is narrated from his first-person perspective.[47] Michael Stackpole, who created the character for the X-Wing series, depicts Horn in the Star Wars Customizable Card Game.IG-88Bounty hunter introduced in The Empire Strikes Back. Ralph McQuarrie's production sketches show a sleeker design than the droid that appears in The Empire Strikes Back.[48] The term "IG-88" itself is not the original label: the script calls the character a "chrome war droid", and during production it was called "Phlutdroid".[48] The production puppet consisted of recycled props from A New Hope, including the Mos Eisley Cantina drink dispenser as its head.Ysanne IsardFormer head of Imperial Intelligence and leader of the Empire in the Rogue Squadron book series. Isard and her clone are killed in Isard's Revenge.Irek IsmarenAntagonist in Children of the Jedi and the New Jedi Order's Enemy Lines duology.IsolderCharacter who courts Princess Leia in The Courtship of Princess Leia. Killed by Darth Caedus in Invincible. Married to Teneniel Djo, father of Tenel Ka.Jabba the Hutt- voiced by Larry Ward and operated by Mike Edmonds, Dave Barclay, Toby Philpott, and John CoppingerA crime boss employing bounty hunters in The Phantom Menace, The Clone Wars, A New Hope, and Return Of The Jedi, killed by Leia Organa aboard his skiff in Return Of The Jedi.[51]Mara Jade Skywalker - portrayed by Shannon McRandle"Emperor's Hand" to Palpatine during his reign; Luke Skywalker's wife.Queen Jamillia - portrayed by Ayesha DharkerQueen of Naboo succeeding Padmé Amidala.JaraelA young female Arkanian in the comic book series Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic (comics)Carnor JaxMember of the Emperor's Royal Guard who bribed the Emperor's physician to poison Palpatine's clones. Antagonist of the Crimson Empire II series.Jedi ExileThe player's unnamed character in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II The Sith Lords.JerecDark Jedi and main antagonist in Star Wars Jedi Knight: Dark Forces II.Moff Jerjerrod - portrayed by Michael PenningtonCommanding officer of the second Death Star.Dexter Jettster - voiced by Ronald FalkAn alien that wears an apron. He is a good friend of Obi-Wan's.Qui-Gon Jinn - portrayed by Liam NeesonJedi Master who trained Obi-Wan Kenobi and took Anakin Skywalker away from Tatooine to be trained as a Jedi.Bardan JusikJedi Knight who fought in the clone wars, later left the Jedi Order to become a medic, and eventually joined the Mandalorians.Tenel KaJedi Knight lover of Jacen Solo and mother of their daughter Allana. Daughter of Isolder and Teneniel Djo.Captain Kael - voiced by Bruce RobertsonCaptain in the Naboo Royal Security Forces during the invasion of Naboo. Featured in Star Wars: Episode I: Battle for Naboo.Davi KangThe Exchange leader of Taris, uses elite mercenaries such as Canderous Ordo and Calo Nord. Killed in the orbital bombardment of Tais. Featured in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic.Kir KanosAnti-hero of the Crimson Empire series.]Talon KarrdeSmuggler introduced in Timothy Zahn's Thrawn trilogy.[Kyle KatarnThe player's character in the first two Dark Forces video games.[58]Obi-Wan Kenobi - portrayed by Alec Guinness and Ewan McGregor(films) and James Arnold Taylor (The Clone Wars)Jedi Master who trains Anakin Skywalker and Luke Skywalker.[59]Ki-Adi-Mundi - portrayed by Silas CarsonCerean Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in the prequel trilogy.KlaatuJabba the Hutt's skiff guard(s) from Return of the Jedi. Originally named "Woof" by ILM designers, Klaatu is a green dog-like humanoid. The character was included in trading cards and miniature figurines.KenThe son of Triclops and grandson of Palpatine. Born on Kessel and taken to live in the Lost City of the Jedi underneath Yavin 4. He was found by Luke Skywalker who then joined the Rebel Alliance. It is unknown what happened to Ken after the defeat of Trioculus. First appears in The Lost City of the Jedi.Derek "Hobbie" Klivian - portrayed by Richard OldfieldRogue Squadron pilot in The Empire Strikes Back.Agen Kolar - portrayed by Tux AkindoyeniZabrak Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith and the Clone Wars series.Plo Koon - portrayed by Alan Ruscoe and Matt Sloan (films) and James Arnold Taylor (The Clone Wars)Kel Dor Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in the prequel trilogy and Expanded Universe. Discovered Togruta Padawan Ahsoka Tano, participated in many battles of the Clone Wars, and was shot down by his clone troopers at the end of the war.General Rahm Kota - voiced by Cully FredericksonStarkiller's mentor in The Force Unleashed.Kreia - voiced by Sara KestelmanFeatured in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords, she acts as a mentor to the Jedi Exile. A former Jedi Master and one of the few survivors of the Jedi Civil War and its aftermath, Kreia is secretive and manipulative, and her true history and motivations remain a mystery throughout most of the game. As part of Gamespy's 2005 Game of the Year awards, Kreia received the award for "Best Character."[63]Exar KunFallen Jedi who establishes a dark-side presence on Yavin IV.Warmaster Tsavong LahWarmaster during the Yuuzhan Vong invasion.Beru Lars - portrayed by Bonnie Piesse and Shelagh FraserOwen Lars' girlfriend in Attack of the Clones; in Revenge of the Sith, is his wife, the two take custody of Luke Skywalker. She is killed and incinerated by stormtroopers in A New Hope.Cliegg Lars - portrayed by Jack ThompsonMoisture farmer who purchased Shmi Skywalker and C-3PO, freed and married Shmi, becoming the stepfather of Anakin Skywalker whom he meets only briefly in Attack of the Clones.[ Lost his leg when pursuing the Sand People who had kidnapped Shmi. The name - and variations of - Cliegg has been in Star Wars drafts since 1974.[Owen Lars - portrayed by Phil Brown and Joel EdgertonSon of Cliegg Lars and stepbrother of Anakin Skywalker.He and his wife take custody of Luke Skywalker in Revenge of the Sith. He is killed by stormtroopers.Lobot - portrayed by John HollisLando Calrissian's cyborg aide in The Empire Strikes Back.Logray - portrayed by Mike EdmondsLowbaccaWookiee Jedi knight and Chewbacca's nephew.LumiyaIntroduced in Marvel's Star Wars comics, and returns in the Legacy of the Force series as the dark Jedi who turns Jacen Solo to the dark side of the Force.General Crix Madine - played by Dermot CrowleyImperial officer who defects to the Rebel Alliance.Darth Malak - voiced by Rafael FerrerAntagonist in Knights of the Old Republic whom the player's character defeats in the game's final battle.Galen Marek - voiced by Samuel Witwer

For information about Witwer's performance, see Star Wars: The Force Unleashed#Plot. Darth Vader's secret apprentice, also known as Starkiller, in the The Force Unleashed multimedia project. Canonically becomes a Jedi and is killed by Palpatine.[74]Darth Maul - portrayed by Ray Park and voiced by Peter SerafinowiczDarth Sidious' apprentice in The Phantom Menace, killed by Obi Wan Kenobi.Droopy McCool - portrayed by Deep RoyMember of the Max Rebo Band. He is a Kitonak.MD-5A medical droid serving Trioculus that first appears in The Glove of Darth Vader.Tion Medon - portrayed by Bruce SpenceLocal administrator on Utapau in Revenge of the Sith.General Rom Mohc - voiced by Jack AngelCreator of the Dark Trooper program in Dark Forces and the game's final boss.Kasan Moor - voiced by Olivia HusseyFormer commander of the 128th TIE Interceptor Squadron, member of Rogue Squadron. Featured in the video game Star Wars: Rogue Squadron.Sly Moore - portrayed by Sandi FindlayOne of Palpatine's personal aides.Mon Mothma - portrayed by Caroline Blakiston and Genevieve O'ReillyRepublic senator; later, co-founder and leader of the Rebel Alliance.[Admiral Conan Antonio Motti - portrayed by Richard LeParmentierOfficer aboard the Death Star over-confident in its power.[79] George Lucas, in a May 1, 2007, appearance on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, gave Motti's full name as "Conan Antonio Motti".Grand Moff MuzzerWas an Imperial Grand Moff. He was shot in the leg by Tibor, Zorba the Hutt's personal bounty hunter when the Moffship pulled the Zorba Express into the moffship, but survived. He was first featured in the novel The Glove of Darth Vader.Momaw NadonIthorian seen in the Mos Eisley cantina in A New Hope. Named "Hammerhead" during the Kenner action figure runs of the 70's and 80's.Boss Rugor Nass - portrayed by Brian BlessedGungan leader in The Phantom Menace, and attends Padmé Amidala's funeral in Revenge of the Sith.[80]Captain Lorth Needa - portrayed by Michael CulverCaptain of the Star Destroyer Avenger killed by Darth Vader for failing to capture the Millennium Falcon in The Empire Strikes Back.[81]Darth NihilusSith Lord who appears in The Sith Lords and Star Wars: Legacy. Darth Traya found and trained Nihilus; Nihilus and Darth Sion later betrayed her. The player's character eventually defeats Nihilus.Nien Nunb - portrayed by Richard Bonehill and Mike QuinnSullustan and Lando Calrissian's co-pilot in Return of the Jedi.[82]Barriss Offee - portrayed by Nalini KrishanJedi Padawan of Luminara Unduli.[83]Ric Olié - portrayed by Ralph BrownPilots the queen's ship and an N-1 starfighter in The Phantom Menace.Cal OmasPolitician and leader of the Galactic Federation of Free Alliances in the New Jedi Order and Legacy of the Force series.Omega SquadA four-man Republic Commando unit featured in the books Star Wars Republic Commando: Hard Contact and Star Wars Republic Commando: Triple Zero.Carth Onasi - voiced by Raphael SbargeA Republic officer and renowned pilot who joins the player character's quest in Star Wars: Knights Of The Old Republic, where if the player chooses a female protagonist, he is a potential love interest.[85] He also appears as an Admiral in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II if the player designates that Revan was light-side in the game.OnimiDepicted throughout most of the New Jedi Order series as a "shamed one", The Unifying Force reveals that Onimi in fact controls Overload Shimrra. Jacen Solo kills Onimi in the series' final book.Oola - portrayed by Femi TaylorDancer in Jabba the Hutt's palace. She was eaten by Jabba's rancor.[86]Canderous Ordo - voiced by John CyganA Mandalorian warrior who joins the player character's quest in Star Wars: Knights Of The Old Republic. He eventually becomes Mandalore and will join the player character's quest in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II.Bail Organa - portrayed by Jimmy SmitsLeia Organa's adoptive father and one of the Rebel Alliance's founding members. He was killed in the destruction of Alderaan.[7] Adrian Dunbar portrayed Organa for scenes cut from The Phantom Menace.[7] Smits voiced the character for The Force Unleashed.[87]Princess Leia Organa - portrayed by Carrie FisherLuke Skywalker's sister and Han Solo's wife.[88] Leader in the Rebel Alliance and the New Republic.[88]

Orrin- a male Neimoidian ally of the CIS during the Clone Wars. Jan Ors - voiced by Angela Harry (Jedi Knight), Julie Eccles (voice, Dark Forces), Vanessa Marshall (voice, Jedi Outcast)Kyle Katarn's pilot and love interest.General Otto - voiced by Tom KaneImperial officer who deserted the Empire. First appears in the game Star Wars Demolition and appears later in Star Wars Galaxies.Admiral Kendal Ozzel - portrayed by Michael SheardInitial commander of Darth Vader's Super Star Destroyer Executor in The Empire Strikes Back.[89] Vader kills Ozzel for his incompetence. George Lucas remarked that Sheard produced "the best screen death" he'd seen.[90]Emperor Palpatine - portrayed by Ian McDiarmid and Clive RevillNaboo senator also known as Darth Sidious.[91] Dark Lord of the Sith whose machinations turn the Galactic Republic into the Galactic Empire.[91] Lures Anakin Skywalker to the dark side of the Force and dubs him Darth Vader.[91] Eventually killed by a redeemed Darth Vader.[91]Captain Panaka - portrayed by Hugh QuarshieCaptain of the queen's guard in The Phantom Menacewho eventually becomes an Imperial moff.[92]Gilad PellaeonImperial officer introduced in Timothy Zahn's Thrawn trilogy who rises to lead the Imperial Remnant.[93]Even Piell - portrayed by Michaela CottrelLannik Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in the prequel trilogy.[94]Firmus Piett - portrayed by Kenneth ColleyImperial officer who succeeds Admiral Ozzel as commanding officer of the Executor.[95] Dies when the Executor is destroyed in Return of the Jedi.[95]Darth PlagueisSith Lord, mentioned in Revenge of the Sith, who trained Palpatine.[91]Poggle the Lesser - voiced by Marton CsokasArchduke of Geonosis and one of the Separatist leaders killed by Darth Vader on Mustafar.[96]Jek Tono Porkins - portrayed by William HootkinsA corpulent X-wing pilot codenamed "Red Six" killed in A New Hope.[97]

QUlic Qel-DromaJedi/Sith in the Tales of the Jediseries.[98]Danni QueeNew Jedi Order character whose research helps in the fight against the Yuuzhan Vong in the New Jedi Order series.Ooryl QryggA Gand member of Rogue Squadron in Michael A. Stackpole's X-Wing series. RR2-D2 - portrayed by Kenny BakerAstromech droid that appears in all six Star Wars films and in the Star Wars Expanded Universe.[99]R4-P17Droid that accompanies Obi-Wan Kenobi on his mission to Kamino in Attack of the Clones.R5-D4Droid whose motivator blows in the midst of a transaction with Owen Lars on Tatooine, resulting in the ownership of R2-D2 by Luke Skywalker.[100] Note that in A New Hope, Luke describes R5-D4 as an "R2 unit", implying a relationship between the types.Dack Ralter - portrayed by John MortonLuke Skywalker's snowspeeder gunner in The Empire Strikes Back.[101] The spelling of the character's first name vacillates between Dack and Dak.[101]Oppo Rancisis - portrayed by Jerome BlakeThisspiasian Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in the prequel trilogy, master of Battle Meditation.[102]Atton RandA former Sith Assassin assigned to find and kill Jedi for Darth Revan, though he left Revan's service after discovering that he was force sensitive. He is the second character to join your party in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords. And is one of your two love interests if your character is female.[103]Max Rebo - portrayed by Simon WilliamsonLeader of the Max Rebo Band in Return of the Jedi.[104]Dash Rendar - voiced by John CyganA smuggler developed for the Shadows of the Empire multimedia project, prominently appearing as the protagonist of the Shadows of the Empire video game.[105]Ree-YeesA banished Gran convicted of murder on his homeworld, Kinyen. Ree-Yees expatriated to Tatooine, where he established himself in Jabba's Palace. Later, Ree-Yees plotted to assassinate Jabba the Hutt for the Galactic Empire, in exchange for a retraction of his murder sentence.[106]Darth Revan - voiced by Rino RomanoThe player's character in Knights of the Old Republic. Revan can be either male or female, though Revan is canonically male and follows the lightside path.General Carlist Rieekan - portrayed by Bruce BoaRebel commanding officer on Hoth in The Empire Strikes Back.[107]Rogue SquadronRebel Alliance and New Republic starfighter pilots featured in the original trilogy and expanded universe.Rookie One - portrayed by Jamison Jones (Rebel Assault II)The player's character in Rebel Assault and Rebel Assault II.RukhNoghri who assassinates Grand Admiral Thrawn in The Last Command.[108]Sabé - portrayed by Keira KnightleyOne of Padmé Amidala's handmaidens in The Phantom Menace.[109] Sabé is the queen's decoy; for parts of the movie, the Sabé character is addressed as Amidala.[109] Knightley was cast as Sabé due to her striking resemblance to Padmé's actress Natalie Portman.Thrackan Sal-SoloHan Solo's cousin and an antagonist in the Corellian trilogy. He is also prominent Legacy of the Forceseries, where he is killed.Admiral Sarn - portrayed by Gary MartinezLeader of the Phantom TIE program in Star Wars: Rebel Assault II.Sebulba - voiced by Lewis MacLeodPodracer who competes against Anakin Skywalker in The Phantom Menace. Sebulba was once a slave, but his podracing skills bought his freedom. [110]Aayla Secura - portrayed by Amy Allen (film),[111] voiced by Jennifer Hale (The Clone Wars)[112]Twi'lek Jedi who appears in Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith, Dark Horse Comics' Republic and Clone Warsseries, and The Clone Wars television series.Moff Kohl SeerdonAntagonist in Star Wars: Rogue Squadron.Zev Senesca - portrayed by Christopher MalcolmA Rogue Squadron pilot in The Empire Strikes Back.[113]Shedao ShaiA supreme commander and the advance leader for the Yuuzhan Vong invasion of the Star Wars galaxy at the beginning of The New Jedi Order series. Corran Horn defeats Shai in a duel.Bastila Shan - voiced by Jennifer HaleJedi in Knights of the Old Republic who joins the player's character's quest (even falling in love with them if the player is male) but is seduced to the Dark Side.[114] If the protagonist aligns with the light side of the Force, he defeats Bastila in a lightsaber duel and she redeems herself by helping the Republic fleet.[114] If the protagonist is a dark-side character, the player has the option of killing Bastila or allowing her to live and become his Lover and apprentice.[114]ShimrraYuuzhan Vong Supreme Overlord, controlled by Onimi, in the New Jedi Orderseries.Darth Sidious - portrayed by Clive Revill and Ian McDiarmidPalpatine's Sith alter ego.[91]Sifo-DyasJedi master who ordered the creation of the clone trooper army in the prequel trilogy. He is dubbed Zaifo Vias in Brazilian version, because his name is sort of a joke name on Portuguese.Aurra Sing - portrayed by Michonne BourriagueBounty hunter in The Phantom Menace and the "Clone Wars".[115]Sintas VelBoba Fett's wife, mentioned in Bloodlines.Darth Sion - voiced by Louis MellisAn antagonist in The Sith Lords. Darth Traya trained both Sion and Nihilus, who in turn betray her. He holds his ravaged body together with the Force. The player's character eventually defeats Sion.Anakin Skywalker - portrayed by Jake Lloyd (I), Hayden Christensen (II, III and the revised version of VI), James Earl Jones (voice) (III, IV, V and VI), David Prowse (IV, V, and VI), and Sebastian Shaw (VI)Jedi whose fall and redemption are portrayed in the Star Wars films.[116] See also: Darth VaderBen SkywalkerLuke Skywalker and Mara Jade Skywalker's son. Jedi Knight. Former student of Jacen Solo, his cousin. In Fate of the Jedi: Outcast, he voluntarily accompanies his father into exile. He proves himself as both a fighter and as an investigator.Cade SkywalkerDescendant of Luke and Mara Jade Skywalker and protagonist of the Star Wars: Legacy comic series.Luke Skywalker- portrayed by Mark HamillAnakin Skywalker and Padme Amidala's son and Leia Organa's twin.[117] Jedi whose coming of age and rise as a Jedi are portrayed in the original Star Wars trilogy and Star Wars Expanded Universe.[117]Luuke SkywalkerA clone of Luke Skywalker, created by Joruus C'baoth in the Thrawn TrilogyMara Jade Skywalker"Emperor's Hand" to Palpatine during his reign; Luke Skywalker's wife and mother to Ben. Aunt to Jaina, Jacen and Anakin.[52] Murdered by Darth Caedus.Shmi Skywalker - portrayed by Pernilla AugustAnakin Skywalker's mother who is always supportive of her son. She, too, is a slave. Qui-Gon attempts to bargain for her freedom but fails. Anakin finds it hard to leave Tattooine without her. She dies in his arms after being kidnapped and mistreated by Tusken Raiders.[118]Sy SnootlesLead vocalist of the Max Rebo Band in Return of the Jedi..[119]Anakin SoloYoungest son of Han and Leia Organa Solo.[120]Han Solo - portrayed by Harrison FordCaptain of the Millennium Falconwho joins the Rebellion and marries Leia Organa.[121]Jacen SoloThe oldest son of Han Solo and Leia Organa Solo, and Jaina Solo's twin brother. Becomes Darth Caedus.[122]Jaina SoloThe daughter of Han Solo and Leia Organa Solo, and Jacen Solo's twin sister.[123] Jedi Knight.Leia Organa SoloSee "Princess Leia Organa" under #O.Lama Su - voiced by Anthony PhelanPrime Minister of Kamino in Attack of the Clones.[124]Nomi SunriderA Jedi in several Dark Horse Comics Old Republic-era series.Gavyn Sykes - portrayed by Christian J SimpsonA Lieutenant in the Royal Naboo Security Force during the Invasion of Naboo. Partnered with R2-C4 to knock out the Droid Control Ship's Shield Generator in The Phantom Menace, allowing young Anakin Skywalker to destroy the ship from within.[125] TGeneral Cassio Tagge - portrayed by Don HendersonImperial officer aboard the Death Star in A New Hope.[126]Grand Moff Wilhuff Tarkin - portrayed by Peter Cushing and Wayne PygramThe commanding officer of the Death Star in A New Hope.[127]Captain Roos Tarpals - portrayed by Steven SpiersGungan soldier in The Phantom Menace.[128]TC-14 - portrayed by John Fensom and voiced by Lindsay DuncanA protocol droid who appears in the beginning of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace.T3-M4A utility droid who appears as a playable character in the Knights of the Old Republic series as an Expert Droid which is able to undertake a variety of task including ship repair.[129]Booster TerrikSmuggler who becomes Corran Horn's father-in-law in the X-Wing series and helps protect Jedi children in the New Jedi Order series.Mirax TerrikSmuggler who becomes Corran Horn's wife in the X-Wing series.Mod TerrikImperial stormtrooper captain who was shot in the back by subordinate fellow stormtrooper Davin Felth while attempting to kill or capture Han Solo and his human and droid cargo.Tessek - portrayed by Gerald HomeAlso known as "Squid Head", Jabba the Hutt's accountant in Return of the Jedi.[130]Bria TharenWoman whom Han Solo rescues from a cult in The Han Solo Trilogy. Later joins the Rebel Alliance and helps the Rebels secure the plans to the first Death Star. After being captured by the Empire, Tharen commits suicide rather than risk betraying the Rebellion during interrogation.Grand Moff ThistlebornHe was a loyal member of the Central Committee of Grand Moffs. He was first featured in the novel The Glove of Darth Vader.Raynar ThulJedi whose personality is altered by joining with the Kiliks in the Dark Nest Crisis series.Grand Admiral ThrawnThe antagonist in Timothy Zahn's Thrawn Trilogy.[131]Shaak Ti - portrayed by Orli ShoshanMember of The Jedi Council who escaped The Great Jedi Purge. In a deleted scene from Star Wars Episode 3: Revenge of the Sith, she is killed by General Grievous, though this is officially regarded as non-canon.[132] She later appears in Star Wars: The Force Unleashed, and is apparently killed by Starkiller/Galen Marek.TiborA Barabel bounty hunter who assists Zorba the Hutt. First appears in Zorba the Hutt's Revenge.Saesee Tiin - portrayed by Khan Bonfils, Jesse Jensen, and Kenji OatesJedi in the prequel trilogy and Clone Wars TV series.Major Grodin TierceIn Timothy Zahn's Hand of Thrawn series, Tierce is the clone of a stormtrooper of the same name. Thrawn, who created the clone as part of an experiment, added some of his own military genius to the clone's mind.TriclopsCreated from extracting the DNA from Palpatine and inserted into a woman named Niobi. He was born mutated with a third eye in the back of his head. Thought to be more powerful than his father, he was sent to exile. Later found by Luke Skywalker and joined the Alliance. First appears in Mission from Mount Yoda.TrioculusThe self-proclaimed son of Palpatine and the ruler of half of the Empire. First appears in The Glove of Darth Vader.Darth Tyranus - portrayed by Christopher LeeSee "Count Dooku" under #D.Captain Gregar Typho - portrayed by Jay Laga'aiaAmidala's bodyguard in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith.[133]Ahsoka Tano - voiced by Ashley EcksteinAnakin Skywalker's Togruta Jedi padawan.Darth Vader - portrayed by David Prowse (IV-VI), Sebastian Shaw (unmasked original, VI), Hayden Christensen (III and VI DVD), and James Earl Jones (voice, III-VI)The alter-ego of Anakin Skywalker after his fall to the dark side.[116]Supreme Chancellor Finis Valorum - portrayed by Terence StampChancellor ousted from office in The Phantom Menace, allowing Palpatine to rise to power.[134]Shado VaoPadawan of Jedi Council member Kol Skywalker at the time of the Sith's massacre of the Jedi on Ossus in the Star Wars: Legacy comics.Nahdar Vebb - voiced by Tom KennyA male Mon Calamari who served as the Padawan of Jedi Master Kit Fisto during the Clone Wars. Vebb was killed by the infamous General Grievous.General Maximilian Veers - portrayed by Julian GloverOfficer who led the Empire's attack on Hoth in The Empire Strikes Back.[135] He is also the creator of the AT-AT walker.Tahiri VeilaAnakin Solo's best friend and briefly Darth Caedus' apprentice. Brought back to the light by Ben Skywalker.Asajj Ventress - voiced by Grey DeLisle and Nika FuttermanAntagonist in the Clone Wars and The Clone Wars series.[136]VergereJedi who lives among the Yuuzhan Vong and offers Jacen Solo insight into their culture and connection to the Force.[137]Vima-Da-BodaFallen Old Republic Jedi introduced in Dark Empire. Regains her connection to the Force after aiding Leia Organa Solo in Dark Empire II and Empire's End.Quinlan VosJedi who began his training at an older age than most initiates.[138] Featured in the Star Wars: Republiccomic series. The character's design was based on a background character in the Mos Espa podrace scene in The Phantom Menace.[138]Vuffi RaaLando Calrissian's droid companion in The Adventures of Lando Calrissian. WWicket Wystri Warrick - portrayed by Warwick DavisEwok who helps Princess Leia and the other Rebels in Return of the Jedi, and who also appears in the Star Wars: Ewoksanimated series and the Caravan of Courage TV movie.[139]Watto - voiced by Andy SecombeJunk store owner and slaveholder of Anakin and Shmi Skywalker in The Phantom Menace.Taun We - voiced by Rena OwenKaminoan administrator who guides Obi-Wan Kenobi during his visit to the cloning facility in Attack of the Clones.[140] During filming, Owen wore on set a maquette of the alien's head atop a hardhat, providing her co-stars with the proper eye-line for talking with the character.[140]Zam Wesell - portrayed by Leeanna WalsmanShape-shifting bounty hunter who fails in her mission to kill Padmé Amidala and was killed by Jango Fett.[141]Beru Whitesun - portrayed by Bonnie Maree Piesse and Shelagh FraserSee "Beru Lars" under #LMace Windu - portrayed by Samuel L. JacksonA master who sits on the Jedi Council and the main character in Shatterpoint.[142]WinterA Rebel agent known as "Targeter" who goes on to be an aide to Leia Organa Solo and Admiral Ackbar. In the expanded universe she marries Tycho Celchu. She cares for Admiral Ackbar as he gets old and is with him when he passes on. She also, in the Legacy of the Force Series, aids Jaina Solo and the Darkmeld in their missions.Wuher - portrayed by Ted BurnettBartender at the Mos Eisley Cantina in A New Hope.[143]XanatosIn Jude Watson's Jedi Apprenticeseries, Xanatos is the former padawan of Qui-Gon Jinn who turned to the dark side of the Force.Prince XizorA character in Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire. Little is known about his past. He is head of the Black Sun criminal syndicate, depicted "like the Godfather with a reptilian overlay." He puts a hit on Luke Skywalker, so that Darth Vader will suffer the emperors wrath and he will become his apprentice and his grip on the galaxy will be supreme.[144] According to Forces of Corruption, Xizor is apparently killed after the game's protagonist frames him. The character's name was inspired by a Portuguese name, Xico.[144] YYaddle - portrayed by Phil EasonFemale member of Yoda's species, Yaddle is a member of the Jedi Council in The Phantom Menace.[145] Iain McCaig's concept art was originally a depiction of a young Yoda, conveying youth, pain, and wisdom inspired.[145] This work was used to create Yaddle.[145]Yané - portrayed by Candice Orwell in The Phantom Menace. She is one of Padme Amidala's handmaidens.Yoda - portrayed by Frank Oz, Tom Kane (voice only, mainly the tv series and video games)Jedi master who trained Count Dooku and Luke Skywalker. His species is unknown.[146]Joh YowzaA Yuzzum only seen in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi. He is a member of the Max Rebo Band. ZZax the HuttA Hutt found on Taris in the video game Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic. Players go to him to obtain bounties.ZekkJedi friend of Jacen and Jaina Solo, appearing in The New Jedi Order and Legacy of the Force series.Ziro the Hutt - voiced by Corey BurtonJabba the Hutt's uncle who appears in the Clone Wars series.Zorba the HuttJabba the Hutt's father[147] and barron of Cloud City after Lando Calrissian. First appears in Zorba the Hutt's Revenge.Zuckuss - portrayed by Cathy MunroGand Bounty hunter appearing in The Empire Strikes Back.Commodore ZuggsAn officer in the Imperial Starfleet and also later serves under Trioculus. First featured in The Lost City of the Jedi and later returns in Star Wars: Rebellion.

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