Glory wrote:oh that too...but if you do lok at your history ....most of the bloodiest wars was triggered by religion....
BULLSHIT! world war one and two had nothing to do with religon, nam, cambodia.. those were the bloodiest wars
Get a clue son
here are the list ....
1 france 1562 - 1598 The religious wars began with overt hostilities in 1562 and lasted until the Edict of Nantes in 1598. It was warfare that devastated a generation, although conducted in rather desultory, inconclusive way.
"One faith" was viewed as essential to civil order -- how else would society hold together? And without the right faith, pleasing to God who upholds the natural order, there was sure to be disaster.
(where this time span 1562 to 1598 the blood shed on that alone would be more than a match even if you combine the body count of the punywars that you had just mentioned)
http://www.lepg.org/wars.htm
Spain The year 1556 saw the accession of perhaps the most important monarch of the sixteenth century: Philip II of Spain
(ruled 1556-1598). Of all the monarchs of Europe, Philip was the most zealous defender of his religious faith and his energies in pursuit of this defense greatly changed the face of Europe.
The Thirty Years War, 1618-1648 With the exception of the English civil war, the last major war of religion was the Thirty Years War. It is fair to say, however, that this war was as much about politics as it was about religion. Germany, which was called the Holy Roman Empire and extended from the North Sea to the Mediterranean, was not a unified state, but rather a loose collection of a huge number of autonomous city-states or province-states—three hundred and sixty autonomous states to be exact. Each was a more or less sovereign state that levied taxes and tariffs, had its own armies, made its own money, and even enforced its own borders. Religious differences fueled the fires of the political and economic rivalries between these separate states. About half the states were predominantly Protestant while the other half were predominately Catholic.
http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/REFORM/WARS.HTM
Not to mentioned the Crusades : as follows
V. The crusade against Constantinople (1204);
VI. The thirteenth-century crusades (1217-52);
VII. Final loss of the Christian colonies of the East (1254-91);
VIII. The fourteenth-century crusade and the Ottoman invasion;
IX. The crusade in the fifteenth century;
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04543c.htm
im sorry to make it so long but ... did you say ... that the wars that you had mentioned was the bloodiest???? ........
get a clue ???? sometimes sounding smart needs the knowledge to back it up...
i rest my case ......