"Deus Vult!", many had yelled as the 100,000 strong force pushed into Anatolia. "Deus Vult" was a common saying thrown around in the times of a crusade for a holy city. The definition of "Deus Vult" translates from latin into english as god wills it. The sound of jets passing above had became increasingly normal as the men carried on. Infantry divisions had and continued to make the hard push through the mountains of anatolia to clear a way for the Armored divisions. Tanks, Self-Propelled-Artillery, and Aircraft made a way for the infantry once they hit flat areas, defeating many warparties of disgruntled anatolian hunter groups. Whilst on the land and in the sky there was action, but in the navy, nothing happened. The navy made there way to the bosphorus strait that separated hellas and anatolia, to which they would take back the holy city of Constantinople from what they considered heretics. The forces soon arrived 3 kilometers away from the gates of istanbul, rallying there forces for an all out siege.
The Men in the Armored and Motorized divisions were considered lucky by many of the troops, seeing as the average mobile infantryman had set camp near coast line, where gusts of wind frequently made them cold. Inside of this specific army was 20,000 men of various infantry divisions, 30 trucks which made a whole motorized division, 15 Tanks which made up one division, and 50 Self-Propelled-Artillery pieces. In the morning the bombardment began, starting with the fortified gates of the city, then the exposed town center which held a large garrison. The garrison was swiftly collapsed, letting the men rush into the city to slaughter any resistance that could no longer benefit from reinforcements.
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March Of The Templars
Ficção HistóricaA new age of Christianity has begun. The holy land has been recaptured, but now they march to gather all the holy cities of Christendom.