Welcome to my userpage. This might be my last chance at succedding. Although I haven't been at Wikipedia for a long time I have already noticed how different it is then most people imagine. Most people don't use Wikipedia because they think anybody can edit it. That is true but that's why there is a whole bunch of admins and bots and other stuff to revert vandalism. Don't get mad about what I think on a certain subject and there won't be any pain. :) As you can probably already tell I like to have fun and some of my edits might show it too. So try not to take everything I type to seriously. My userpage is mostly like the main page so that I don't have to check out the main page which might be vandalised.
... that the Bermuda onion(pictured) was so closely associated with Bermuda that the island's inhabitants became known as "onions"?
... that a U.S. Navy plane piloted by Michael Wettlaufer clipped the tower of a Florida TV station while on a training mission, forcing it off the air for nearly five years?
... that military officer Chris Tanasale was selected as the mayor of
Ambon, Indonesia, to prevent the alienation of local Christians?
... that
YouTube co-founder
Jawed Karim has updated the description of his video "Me at the zoo" on multiple occasions to criticize the website's business decisions?
The Battle of Inab, also called the Battle of Ard al-Hâtim or Fons Muratus, was fought on 29 June 1149 during the
Second Crusade. The
Zengid army of
Nur al-Din Zengi destroyed the combined army of
Raymond of Poitiers and the
Assassins of Ali ibn-Wafa. The
Principality of Antioch was subsequently pillaged and reduced in size as its eastern border was pushed west, and both Raymond and his ally ibn-Wafa were killed. This illustration by
Jean Colombe was taken from the 14th-century manuscript Passages d'outremer and depicts the Battle of Inab in the main image above, with the recovery of Raymond's body depicted below. It is part of a volume of 66 such full-page miniatures.Illustration credit:
Jean Colombe
Welcome to my userpage. This might be my last chance at succedding. Although I haven't been at Wikipedia for a long time I have already noticed how different it is then most people imagine. Most people don't use Wikipedia because they think anybody can edit it. That is true but that's why there is a whole bunch of admins and bots and other stuff to revert vandalism. Don't get mad about what I think on a certain subject and there won't be any pain. :) As you can probably already tell I like to have fun and some of my edits might show it too. So try not to take everything I type to seriously. My userpage is mostly like the main page so that I don't have to check out the main page which might be vandalised.
... that the Bermuda onion(pictured) was so closely associated with Bermuda that the island's inhabitants became known as "onions"?
... that a U.S. Navy plane piloted by Michael Wettlaufer clipped the tower of a Florida TV station while on a training mission, forcing it off the air for nearly five years?
... that military officer Chris Tanasale was selected as the mayor of
Ambon, Indonesia, to prevent the alienation of local Christians?
... that
YouTube co-founder
Jawed Karim has updated the description of his video "Me at the zoo" on multiple occasions to criticize the website's business decisions?
The Battle of Inab, also called the Battle of Ard al-Hâtim or Fons Muratus, was fought on 29 June 1149 during the
Second Crusade. The
Zengid army of
Nur al-Din Zengi destroyed the combined army of
Raymond of Poitiers and the
Assassins of Ali ibn-Wafa. The
Principality of Antioch was subsequently pillaged and reduced in size as its eastern border was pushed west, and both Raymond and his ally ibn-Wafa were killed. This illustration by
Jean Colombe was taken from the 14th-century manuscript Passages d'outremer and depicts the Battle of Inab in the main image above, with the recovery of Raymond's body depicted below. It is part of a volume of 66 such full-page miniatures.Illustration credit:
Jean Colombe