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From talk show host Vicky Middleton

Posted on | October 9, 2009 | 1 Comment

Dr. Orly, this is a great historical story of special divine help for the outnumbered Catholics against the Ottoman Empire….Emailing: Battle of Lepanto (1571) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.htm

Thursday, October 8, 2009 8:17 PM From: “Vicki Middleton” <View contact detailsTo: “‘Orly Taitz'” <dr_taitz@yahoo.com>

Battle of Lepanto (1571)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Battle of Lepanto

Part of the Fifth Ottoman-Venetian War and the Ottoman-Habsburg wars


The Battle of Lepanto Yogesh Brahmbhatt, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich/London

Date

7 October 1571

Location

Gulf of Patras, Ionian Sea

Result

Decisive Holy League victory

Belligerents

Holy League:Spain
 Republic of Venice
Papal States
Republic of Genoa
Duchy of Savoy
Knights of Malta
Ottoman Empire

Commanders

Don John of Austria
Sebastiano Venier
Colonna
Ali Pasha

Strength

202 galleys,
6 galleasses
76 other sail ships
1,815 guns total (est.)
208 galleys,
46 galliots
23 fuste
750 guns total (est.)[1]

Casualties and losses

7,500 dead
17 ships lost[2]
20,000 dead[2], wounded or captured,[3]
137 ships captured
50 ships sunk
10,000 Christian galley slaves freed

 

v • d • e

Ottoman-Habsburg wars 

   
Hungary  (1527–28) – Balkans  (1529) – 1st Vienna – Little War (1530-52) – Kőszeg (1532) – Coron (1533) – Tunis (1535) – Osijek – Preveza (1538) – Algiers (1541) – Nice (1543) – Hungary 1543 – Tripoli (1551) – Eger (1552) – Djerba (1560) – Malta (1565) – Szigetvár – Lepanto (1571) – Tunis (1574) – Thirteen Years’ War – Keresztes (1596) – Saint Gotthard (1664) – 2nd Vienna (1683) – 2nd Mohács (1687) – Slankamen – Zenta – Peterwardein – Grocka (1739)
See also:
Ottoman–Hungarian Wars
Ottoman–Venetian War

The Battle of Lepanto (Greek: Ναύπακτος, Naupaktos, pron. Náfpaktos; colloquial Greek: Έπαχτος, Épahtos; Turkish: İnebahtı) took place on 7 October 1571 when a galley fleet of the Holy League, a coalition of Spain (including its territories of Naples, Sicilyand Sardinia), the Republic of Venice, the Papacy (under St. Pope Pius V), the Republic of Genoa, the Duchy of Savoy, the Knights Hospitaller and others, decisively defeated the main fleet of Ottoman war galleys.

The five-hour battle was fought at the northern edge of the Gulf of Patras, off western Greece, where the Ottoman forces sailing westwards from their naval station in Lepanto met the Holy League forces, which had come from Messina.[4] Victory gave the Holy League temporary control over the Mediterranean, protected Rome from invasion, and prevented the Ottomans from advancing further into Europe. This last major naval battle fought largely between rowing vessels has been assigned great symbolic importance since then.

Contents

Answer

Vicky,

these are interesting coincidences. Our first amended complaint was written on July 14th, the Bastile day and my oldest son’s birthday. Order for the trial dates to be final came on October the 7th, the day of Battle of Lepanto and my middle son’s birthday.

Orly

Comments

One Response to “From talk show host Vicky Middleton”

  1. Regina
    October 9th, 2009 @ 9:53 am

    Vicky, good article and the comparison with the dates on your children’s birthday’s are ironic, too.

    Surprisinly, I thought about a previous posted article which had to do with the relevancy of Dr. Orly’s trial dates such as October 13th and January 26th. This is an omen plus fate, which is a good thing. Our oldest son’s birthday is on October 13th and our youngest son’s birthday is on January 26th (the day of the trial—what a birthday present!).

    NEWS FLASH—BHO gets the Nobel Peace Prize.

    What a joke! Fox News says that the Noble Peace Prize committee did this to snub Bush (don’t remember their exact words). When we oust BHO, the obots will say, “How dare you oust a wonderful peace-loving man who received the Nobel Peace Prize!” Now, you can get the peace prize by apologizing for America and kissing the hand of an enemy of America.