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  2. Benedict Arnold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedict_Arnold

    Dedication plaque on Groton Monument in Groton, Connecticut, to victims of Arnold's slaughter following the Battle of Groton Heights:. This monument was erected under the patronage of the State of Connecticut in the 55th year of the Independence of the U.S.A. in memory of the brave patriots massacred at Fort Griswold near this spot on the 6th of Sept. AD 1781, when the British, under the ...

  3. Nicholas Carew (courtier) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Carew_(courtier)

    According to a letter by John Butler, the last words of Carew as he was led to execution, amounted to exhorting all to study the evangelical books, as he had fallen by hatred to the Gospel. [ 16 ] His estate at Beddington , including Carew Manor , was granted after his execution to Walter Gorges, and then later after his death to Thomas Darcy ...

  4. List of Allied traitors during World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Allied_traitors...

    Roy Nicolas Courlander - a British-born New Zealand soldier with a history of petty crime, he was taken prisoner during the Greece campaign in April 1941. Attracted by his anti-communist views, the Germans recruited him for the Waffen-SS British Free Corps, where Courlander reached the rank of Unterscharführer. [1]

  5. List of stock characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stock_characters

    An almost obligatory character who is integral in Film Noir, she is an antagonist originally appearing as a beautiful and alluring woman who is also cunning, deceptive, and traitorous. She may originally appear as a damsel in distress , but the she draws men into a honey trap , and may be motivated by money, power, revenge, and/or status.

  6. Treason Act 1554 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treason_Act_1554

    The Act provided legal protection to King Philip, who had married Queen Mary I on 25 July 1554 and became co-monarch of England and Ireland. It became an offence to "compass or imagine to deprive the King's Majesty from the having with the Queen the style, honour and kingly name, or to destroy the King, or to levy war within this realm against the King or Queen," or to say that the King ought ...

  7. Ergo decedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergo_decedo

    Ergo decedo, Latin for "therefore I leave" or "then I go off", a truncation of argumentum ergo decedo, and colloquially denominated the traitorous critic fallacy, [1] denotes responding to the criticism of a critic by implying that the critic is motivated by undisclosed favorability or affiliation to an out-group, rather than responding to the criticism itself.

  8. Daniel Axtell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Axtell

    Colonel Axtell, with some twelve of his men, went up to the top of the mount, and demanded of the governor the surrender of it, who was very stubborn, speaking very big words, but at length was persuaded to go into the windmill at the top of the mount, and as many more of the chiefest of them as it could contain, where they were disarmed, and ...

  9. List of James Bond villains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_James_Bond_villains

    Beware of Butterflies (4 December 1973 – 11 May 1974) Attila: The Nevsky Nude (13 May 1974 – 21 September 1974) Sir Ulric Herne: The Phoenix Project (23 September 1974 – 18 February 1975) Kazim: The Black Ruby Caper(19 February 1975 – 15 July 1975) Herr Rubin: Till Death Do Us Apart (7 July 1975 – 14 October 1975) Stefan Radomir