Category
page 1People killed in action
José Martí
Cuban poet, philosopher and nationalist (1853-1895)
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Blackbeard
Edward Teach (or Thatch; – 22 November 1718), better known as Blackbeard, was an English pirate who operated around the West Indies and the eastern coast of Britain's North American colonies. Little is known about his early life, but he may have been a sailor on privateering ships during Queen Anne's War before he settled on the Bahamian island of New Providence, a base for Captain Benjamin Hornigold, whose crew Teach joined around 1716. Hornigold placed him in command of a sloop that he had captured, and the two engaged in numerous acts of piracy. Their numbers were boosted by the addition to
Camilo Torres Restrepo
Colombian theologian (1929-1966)
Grifo
8th-century European ruler
Duarte Barbosa
Portuguese explorer and writer (1480–1521)
Tisamenus
mythical son of Orestes
Edeko
Edeko, with various spellings including Edekon, Aediko, Idikon and Edica, was a prominent military leader in the fifth-century multiethnic empire of Attila the Hun, before he died in 453 AD. "Edekon" was sent by Attila on a diplomatic mission to Constantinople in 448/9, which was reported in detail by the Roman diplomat and historian Priscus of Panium, who returned with Edeko to the headquarters of Attila.
Toghrul III
the last Seljuk Sultan (1192–1193)
Mus'ab ibn al-Zubayr
Zubayrid governor from 686 to 691
Daher el-Omar
Ottoman Pasha (1689/90–1775)
Ziri ibn Manad
Founder of the Zirid dynasty (died 971)
Yahya ibn Zayd
son of Zayd ibn Ali
Juan María Santamaría Rodríguez
national hero of Costa Rica (1831-1856)
Mirza Hindal
16th-century Mughal prince in India
Sulayman ibn Surad
Islamic leader from Kufa (died 685)
Yahya ibn Umar al-Lamtuni
Amazigh chieftain
Tzazo
Tzazo (also known as Tzazon or Zano) was the brother to King Gelimer (530–534), the last Vandal ruler of North Africa. Tzazo died on 15 December 533 during the Battle of Tricamarum, which finally brought to an end the Vandal Kingdom in North Africa.
Martino Zaccaria
Lord of Chios
Giorgio I Ghisi
Greek noble
Nafi ibn al-Azraq
Kharijite Leader
Bidar Bakht
Eldest son of Muhammad Azam Shah and Jahanzeb Begum
Abd Allah ibn Hanzala
Medina Ansar faction leader (625/26–683)
Al-Husayn ibn Ali al-Abid
Descendant of Hasan ibn Ali
Ibn Masal
military commander of Fatimid Caliphate
Sefu bin Hamid
slave trader
Abu Isa
Self-proclaimed prophet
Turismod
Turismod (Latin: Turismodus) was a son of the king of the Gepids Thurisind. He was killed in 551 or 552 on the battlefield by Alboin, son of the king of the Lombards Audoin.
Charles of Taranto
Italian-Anjou Nobleman
Al-'Abbas ibn Abi l-Futuh
Vizier of the Fatimid Caliphate in 1153–54
Stephen du Perche
French nobleman and crusader

Hurqus ibn Zuhayr as-Sa'di
Companion of Muhammad and Kharijite
Talib al-Haqq
Ibadi Kharijite rebel leader of the late Umayyad era
Eulalia Ramos
Venezuelan heroine
Sa'ad bin Abdul-Rahman
Saudi noble
Laudaricus
thumb|Battle of the Catalaunian Plains from a 13th-century miniature
Laudaricus (died 451) was a prominent Hunnic chieftain and general active in the first half of the 5th century.

Dhu'l-Kala Samayfa
Muslim military commander (died 657)
Yazid ibn al-Sa'iq
poet
Ibn al-Dahhak
kurdish Chieftain
Álvaro Vaz de Almada, 1st Count of Avranches
1st Count of Avranches

René de Brosse
French noble
Abu-Hamza
Matthew de Clermont
marshal of the Knights Hospitaller
Thomas III d'Autremencourt
Lord of Salona
Nur Ad-Din Shahanshah
Brother of Salah Ad-Din Al-Ayyubi
Yusuf ibn Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Marwazi
governor of Adharbayjan and Arminiyah for the Abbasid Caliphate
Boleslaus, son of Děpolt
José Gálvez Egúsquiza
Peruvian politician and war hero (1819-1866)
Abu Bilal Mirdas
Quietist Kharijite leader
Thomas I d'Autremencourt
French crusader
Werner von Steußlingen
German archbishop
Konstantinos Garefis
Greek soldier