@imrozzh13: Cakepp!✨#rakmukenaminimalis #rakmukenakayu #rakserbaguna

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Friday 06 June 2025 16:08:58 GMT
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_raturebah
Toko IbuNna :
🔥🔥🔥
2025-06-07 03:04:03
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choyyii0
CHOY. :
Cat ga gampang nglupas kak?
2025-06-07 15:18:02
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The Battle of Nieuwpoort — 1600  On July 2nd, 1600, the flat shores near Nieuwpoort in Flanders became the stage for one of the bloodiest battles of the Eighty Years’ War. The Dutch Republic, under Prince Maurice of Nassau, had launched an ambitious campaign. The goal: capture Dunkirk, a pirate stronghold from which Spanish privateers terrorized Dutch trade routes. But to get there, Maurice and his army of 12,000 foot soldiers and 1,500 cavalry had to march deep into enemy territory. ⚡ Spain responded swiftly. Archduke Albert of Austria, with a seasoned force of 10,000 infantry and 1,800 cavalry, moved to cut them off near Nieuwpoort. The Dutch found themselves trapped between the sea and the Spanish army. What followed was brutal. 💥 Cannon fire thundered across the dunes. Musketeers clashed at close range. Cavalry charges smashed into infantry lines. Soldiers fought knee-deep in sand and water, under a burning July sun. For hours, the battle raged back and forth. At one point, the Spanish nearly broke the Dutch lines — but Maurice’s discipline and use of modern tactics turned the tide. By evening, the Spanish army retreated, leaving thousands dead on the field. The Dutch had won a costly victory. ⚔️ The road to Dunkirk lay open, yet the campaign stalled. The victory at Nieuwpoort was celebrated, but strategically it achieved little. Still, it proved one thing beyond doubt: the Dutch army, once a rebel militia, could now stand toe-to-toe with Europe’s strongest. 🔥 Nieuwpoort became a symbol of courage, discipline, and the hard-fought struggle for independence.
The Battle of Nieuwpoort — 1600 On July 2nd, 1600, the flat shores near Nieuwpoort in Flanders became the stage for one of the bloodiest battles of the Eighty Years’ War. The Dutch Republic, under Prince Maurice of Nassau, had launched an ambitious campaign. The goal: capture Dunkirk, a pirate stronghold from which Spanish privateers terrorized Dutch trade routes. But to get there, Maurice and his army of 12,000 foot soldiers and 1,500 cavalry had to march deep into enemy territory. ⚡ Spain responded swiftly. Archduke Albert of Austria, with a seasoned force of 10,000 infantry and 1,800 cavalry, moved to cut them off near Nieuwpoort. The Dutch found themselves trapped between the sea and the Spanish army. What followed was brutal. 💥 Cannon fire thundered across the dunes. Musketeers clashed at close range. Cavalry charges smashed into infantry lines. Soldiers fought knee-deep in sand and water, under a burning July sun. For hours, the battle raged back and forth. At one point, the Spanish nearly broke the Dutch lines — but Maurice’s discipline and use of modern tactics turned the tide. By evening, the Spanish army retreated, leaving thousands dead on the field. The Dutch had won a costly victory. ⚔️ The road to Dunkirk lay open, yet the campaign stalled. The victory at Nieuwpoort was celebrated, but strategically it achieved little. Still, it proved one thing beyond doubt: the Dutch army, once a rebel militia, could now stand toe-to-toe with Europe’s strongest. 🔥 Nieuwpoort became a symbol of courage, discipline, and the hard-fought struggle for independence.

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