Britain:
Black prince Edward was a famous British soldier in the Hundred Years' War. He commanded long archers and won many battles. Because his armor is black, he is called black prince Edward.
Lionheart Charlie, the king of England in the Third Crusade, was named Lionheart Charlie because of his feat of fighting and defeating lions.
Nelson, the British naval general in Napoleon's time, commanded the British navy to defeat the French navy in the Battle of Trafalgar, which completely shattered Napoleon's chips to break through the British domestic policy. He is the most famous naval general in British history.
Cromwell, lord protector during the British capitalist revolution, commanded the bourgeois army to fight against the royalists. There is no doubt about his military talent, but he is still a controversial star in life.
Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington, one of the military leaders of the anti-French alliance, defeated Napoleon twice in Leipzig and Waterloo and won a brilliant life.
France:
Joan of Arc, a little girl under 18 years old, changed the direction of the whole Hundred Years War. Because of Joan of Arc, France turned from defending to attacking and from defeat to victory. Although Joan of Arc was finally betrayed by traitors and captured and killed, she is still a great female military general who is rare in human history.
Napoléon Bonaparte, an invincible military genius, was the emperor of the First Empire of France. Napoleon's greatness lies not only in his textbook-like classic victory, but also in his new exploration and reform of war concept. However, heroes have to die. Although Leipzig lost to the Hundred Days Anti-French Alliance, it was defeated by the Anti-French Alliance again in Waterloo. The greatest strategist in human history left the stage.
Great Germany:
Frederick I (Red Beard), the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire during the Third Crusade, maintained a huge empire by himself and fought against the Vatican militarists. He died in an accident on the way to the third Crusade.
During the Thirty Years' War, wallenstein, one of the general commanders of the Holy Roman Empire, fought a classic battle to determine the fate of Europe with his arch-enemy King Gustav II of Sweden in Luzon Island. Although Wallenstein lost the war, Gustav Adolphus lost his life.
King Friedrich the Great of Prussia expanded the territory of Prussia through the Austrian War of Succession to the throne and the Seven-Year War, which laid a solid foundation for Prussia to unify the German region in the future. He is also a famous military theorist, and the tactics he invented became one of the popular tactics in the European battlefield in the future.
Blucher, the military general of Prussia in Napoleon's time, blucher's most important contribution was to help the Prussian army regain its morale, sweep away the gloom of Jena's fiasco, and beat Napoleon twice in Waterloo and Leipzig. Napoleon himself said that his most feared opponent in the anti-French alliance was blucher.
Helmut Mao Qi, Marshal of Prussia and Commander-in-Chief of the Army, gave Prussia the most solid military support when Bismarck was determined to use iron and blood as a German. Mao Qi's wisdom shone everywhere in the Puo War and the Franco-Prussian War. The most commendable thing is that Mao Qi laid the foundation of the famous German General Staff during the two world wars and cultivated the rigorous and loyal style of German soldiers.
Ehrlich von Manstein was a German marshal and commander-in-chief of the Don Army in World War II. The famous "Yellow Plan" to invade France was put forward by manstein. On the Soviet battlefield, after the German defeat in Stalingrad, it was manstein who wiped out two Soviet troops in Kharkov's counterattack and saved the southern battlefield on the verge of collapse. It can be said that Manstein was the best military commander in World War II.
Italy:
Caesar, you don't need to introduce yourself. ..
Macedonia:
Alexander, ditto ..
Byzantine Empire:
The military general of Justinian I period, Belisarius, defeated Persians, Berbers and Goths three times, and made great contributions to the glory of the Byzantine Empire. He also made outstanding achievements in military theory, and his original cavalry tactics made the Byzantine army dominate the world in the Mediterranean world. Unfortunately, the evening scene was bleak, my eyes were blinded by Justinian I's poison, and I even went begging on the streets.
Sweden:
Gustav Adolphus, known as the lion of northern Europe, Gustav Adolphus stabilized the crumbling kingdom of Sweden after he succeeded to the throne, and made every effort to make Sweden a European power again. He sent troops to Poland and Denmark to expand his influence, and intervened in religious disputes in Germany, involved in the Thirty Years' War. He fought his old enemy wallenstein in Luzon. Although Gustav Adolphus defeated Wallenstein, he was unfortunately killed on the battlefield.
The ambitious King Carl XII of Sweden went to war with Russia to expand Sweden's influence in northern Europe, but was defeated by the scorched-earth war in Russia and was finally forced to retreat hastily.
China:
If it is too famous, it will not be introduced. Name a few less popular ones.
Chen Qingzhi, the general of the Southern Dynasty in the Southern and Northern Dynasties, led 3,000 white cavalry to cross the river and make a great progress in the Northern Expedition, and captured Luoyang. Although he was eventually forced to retreat because of lack of support, the 3,000 troops were returned intact when he returned to the south bank of the Yangtze River. It can be said that he is a little-known peerless star.