[¯\_(☯෴☯)_/¯]*********,=,e \_ヾ(ᐖ◞ ) ID: efdd6c Feb. 11, 2019, 12:57 p.m. No.5125802   🗄️.is 🔗kun

ONLY DILDOZER CAN VIOLATE ALL OF TRUMPS RIGHTS AT ONCE

 

THESE JEWS LEAKING OUT OF THE WALL IS TOO MUCH

[¯\_(☯෴☯)_/¯]*********,=,e \_ヾ(ᐖ◞ ) ID: efdd6c Feb. 11, 2019, 12:59 p.m. No.5125834   🗄️.is 🔗kun

TRUMP WENT PAST THE 13 STEPS OF CIA MEMO HOMO AND NEEDS RAHABILITAION LIKE NOT SURE

[¯\_(☯෴☯)_/¯]*********,=,e \_ヾ(ᐖ◞ ) ID: efdd6c Feb. 11, 2019, 1:14 p.m. No.5126051   🗄️.is 🔗kun

whoreing in a dystopian discordian muhtwinkie satanism has gotta be gaytiot

[¯\_(☯෴☯)_/¯]*********,=,e \_ヾ(ᐖ◞ ) ID: efdd6c when ya couldn;t tell the cow it was lunchmeat @BOjoshfaggot Feb. 11, 2019, 1:25 p.m. No.5126216   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6247

>>5126174

>>5126151

>>5126146

>>5126140

>>5126128

>>5126123

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>>5126100

Milo of Croton (/ˈmaɪloʊ/; Greek: Μίλων, Mílōn; gen.: Μίλωνος, Mílōnos) was a 6th-century BC wrestler from the Magna Graecian city of Croton, who enjoyed a brilliant wrestling career and won many victories in the most important athletic festivals of ancient Greece.[1][2][3] In addition to his athletic victories, Milo is credited by the ancient commentator Diodorus Siculus with leading his fellow citizens to military triumph over neighboring Sybaris in 510 BC.

 

Milo was also said to have carried a bull on his shoulders, and to have burst a band about his brow by simply inflating the veins of his temples.

 

The date of Milo's death is unknown, but he reportedly was attempting to tear a tree apart when his hands became trapped in a crevice in its trunk, and a pack of wolves surprised and devoured him. Milo has been depicted in works of art by Pierre Puget, Étienne-Maurice Falconet and others. In literature, he has been referenced by Rabelais in Gargantua and Pantagruel, by Shakespeare in Troilus and Cressida, and also by Alexandre Dumas in The Man in the Iron Mask.

[¯\_(☯෴☯)_/¯]*********,=,e \_ヾ(ᐖ◞ ) ID: efdd6c Feb. 11, 2019, 1:27 p.m. No.5126247   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5126216

milo went on to make nazi croutons at olive garden

 

Athletic career

 

Milo was a six-time Olympic victor. He won the boys' wrestling (probably in 540 BC),[4] and thereafter five men's wrestling titles between 536 and 520 BCE.[1][2][3] He also won seven crowns at the Pythian Games at Delphi (one as a boy), ten at the Isthmian Games, and nine at the Nemean Games.[2] Milo was a five-time Periodonikēs, a "grand slam" sort of title bestowed on the winner of all four festivals in the same cycle.[3] Milo's career at the highest level of competition must have spanned 24 years.[2]

 

Milo was defeated (or tied) in his attempt at a seventh Olympic title in 516 BCE by a young wrestler from Croton who practiced the technique of akrocheirismos—literally, 'highhandedness' or wrestling at arm's length—and by doing so, avoided Milo's crushing embrace. Simple fatigue took its toll on Milo.[1][2][3]

 

Milo's hometown had a reputation for producing excellent athletes. In the Olympiad of 576 BC, for example, the first seven finishers in the stade—a 200 yards (180 m) sprint—were all men of Croton. After Milo's career, Croton apparently produced no other athletes of renown.[3]

Military experience

Heracles wearing a hero's wreath, a lion-skin, and carrying a club. Milo appeared in similar dress at the battle between Croton and Sybaris in 510 BC. Detail of Herakles from Side A of the vase, "Herakles and the gathering of the Argonauts (aka "Herakles in Marathon"), Attic red-figure calyx-krater, 460–50 BCE, Louvre.

 

About 510 BC, hostilities arose between Croton and nearby Sybaris when Telys, a Sybarite tyrant, banished the 500 wealthiest citizens of Sybaris after seizing their property. When the displaced Sybarites sought refuge at Croton and Telys demanded their return, an opportunity for the Crotoniates to destroy a powerful neighbor presented itself.[5] In an account that appeared five hundred years after the event, Diodorus Siculus wrote that the philosopher Pythagoras, who spent much of his life at Croton, urged the Croton assembly to protect the banished citizens of Sybaris. When the decision to do so was made, the dispute between the two cities was aggravated, each took up arms, and Milo led the charge against Sybaris.[3][6]

 

According to Diodorus (XII, 9):

 

"One hundred thousand men of Croton were stationed with three hundred thousand Sybarite troops ranged against them. Milo the athlete led them and through his tremendous physical strength first turned the troops lined up against him."

 

Diodorus indicates Milo led the charge against the Sybarites wearing his Olympic crowns, draped in a lionskin and brandishing a club in a manner similar to the mythic hero Heracles (see adjacent image).[1][2][3]