Who are historys greatest traitors and why?

Who are history’s greatest traitors and why?

  1. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Brute
    Judas

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >Judas
      Iscariot, not Thaddeus, brother(cousin) of the Lord.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >Brute
      I never learned Latin, but isn't that his name in Vocative? Why would you write it like that?

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Its probably a spelling mistake anon

  2. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Hitler

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >every time, without fail
      Who did he betray?

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Majorian (died 7 August 461), was the Western Roman emperor from 457 to 461. A prominent commander in the Western military, Majorian deposed Avitus in 457 with the aid of his ally Ricimer. Possessing little more than Italy, Dalmatia, as well as some territory in Hispania and northern Gaul, Majorian campaigned rigorously for three years against the Empire's enemies. In 461, he was murdered at Dertona in a conspiracy, and his successors until the Fall of the Empire in 476 were puppets either of barbarian generals or the Eastern Roman court.

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        The white race

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          >The white race
          No such thing exists or existed.

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous
        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          It's interesting how throughout the 30s there was a conscious effort by Nazis and non-Nazis to give israeli veterans of WW1 more respect and protection over non-veteran israelites, only for them to renege on that c. 1942 and throw them all in the camps together
          A development of ideology maybe, idk

  3. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    there are no traitors, only apostates

  4. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Ricimer; gave info to the Vandals of the new fleet Majorian was preparing. After it was burned and the emperor was coming back to italy Ricimer arrested, tortured and killed him.

  5. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Bocchus of mauritinia

  6. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    I’m not Haitian and never been to Haiti, but I have special dislike for Dessalines.
    >betray the leader of your revolution
    >start a senseless murderfest of civilians now that the guy who considered it a bad idea is dead
    >through this, ruin any hope that your nation would be treated as a ”normal” state in foreign relations in a long, long time

    Granted, I still expect that Haiti would have gone bad eventually even if that didn’t happen, but talk about serious dickery and giving your nation a bad start.

  7. 4 weeks ago
    Chud Anon

    The United Toilets of America betraying the Asian American community

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Why does America need to cater to one billion Asians?

  8. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Caesar, the second he crossed the Rubicon. The Republic wasn't a utopia but he destroyed any chance of it ever recovering from decades of political breakdown by plunging it headlong into multiple internal power struggles which objectively weakened its position geopolitically.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      I think it's more the senate's fault for murdering him too soon. He was a dictator, sure, but most of what he was doing was in the interest of Rome. He literally stopped amidst all of the upheaval just to live up to his role as head calendar priest and made 99% of our modern calendar. He had the personality of a self-centered diva, but he understood that he could only be remembered fondly by making allies and admirers rather than enemies, and he could only do that by improving Roman society. Killing him is what caused the massive power vacuum and consequently why his far less 'noble' relatives were placed on the throne. It would have been far better to let him continue his antics, go out on his planned invasion after the public works were through, and then quietly have him assassinated. Then, he could be written as a martyr who died on campaign while the senate regained full control. It was their knee jerk reaction of being drama queens that ultimately sent Rome on its trajectory

  9. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    William Franklin

  10. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    [...]

    Kek.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Satan. He killed God.

      The white race

      Poles. Why? Because they poles obviously.

      Based

  11. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    catherine de medici

  12. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Constnatine.

  13. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Satan. He killed God.

  14. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Kadyrov

  15. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Alfred Redl
    > Redl has been called one of history's greatest traitors because purportedly his actions were responsible for the deaths of half a million of his countrymen.
    And he did all of it to not be outed as a fag.

  16. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    This chinese chudcel is a top contender.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Why did anyone trust this dude lmao.

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        This shit was standard during the Republican and Warlord eras of China. The first guy he betrayed, Feng Yuxiang, was a similar weasel who betrayed Wu Peifu after being bribed by the Japanese to do so, and subsequently allied himself with Chiang Kai-Shek whom ended up betraying during the Central Plains War. Similarily defections at the time were so common that soldiers would literally just rip off their armbands and join rival warlords who sometimes had entire stockpiles of spare armbands in their own colors for the eventuality of victory.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      The most trustworthy chinaman

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      He ended up being buried alive by a KMT guy who would subsequently defect to the communists, lol

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >In 1928, Shi’s troops set fire to the Shaolin Monastery, burning it for over 40 days, killing more than 200 monks and destroying 90 percent of the buildings including many manuscripts of the temple library.
      What the fuck was his problem?

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Monks were right overlords in their own way.
        They often controlled governments, in a way similar to Catholic Church authorities.

  17. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >Cardinal Portocarrero
    Valido (Prime Minister) of Carlos II, he conspired to sell the crown to France. Paid by french diplomats he fully embraced the black legend and miscounselled the Spanish king into naming a grandson of the king of France the next heir, promising him the empire won't be divided. After the death of the king he replaced Spanish bureaucrats with French ones, making Spain a de facto vassal of France. After the war of succession the empire was in fact divided by the enemies of Spain.

  18. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Betrays George, betrays Louis, betrays his own people (taxation).

  19. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Poles. Why? Because they poles obviously.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Imagine being so insufferable that both Nazis and Commies team up to gangrape you

  20. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Judas - betrayed Jesus
    Mir Jafar - betrayed the whole subcontinent
    Brutus - betrayed Caesar
    Mehmed Vahdeddin - betrayed the Turks in the War of Independence
    Wu Sangui - betrayed the Chinese and facilitated the Qing dynasty’s formation, then betrayed the Qing
    Benedict Arnold - betrayed America during the Revolution
    La Malinche - betrayed the Nahua and facilitated the Spanish conquest of Mexico
    Muawiyah I - betrayed Ali and Hassan; made the caliphate hereditary

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >La Malinche
      She was sold as a slave by her family and her owners sold her to Cortes, which she helped. How is she a traitor?
      Only mentally retarded spics who think Mexico existed before the Spanish conquest call her a traitor.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >Muawiyah I - betrayed Ali and Hassan; made the caliphate hereditary
      He was a cunt but he wasn't a traitor. He was an open enemy

  21. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Finns for assaulting their German comrades after the Continuation War.

  22. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    R*manians

  23. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    For me, Akechi Mitsuhide
    In a sense, this man's betrayal changed the course of world history.
    In a timeline without his betrayal, Japan would have been under the rule of Nobunaga, not engaging in national isolation.
    This would have led to a vastly different country in the 20th century.
    Additionally, in World War II, Japan might have played a different role, or perhaps, it might not have happened at all.

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