Answer:
The signifiance/importance is that the Ottoman Empire failed to take the Suez Canal from the British which failed and tried to take Gallipoli which failed too. The Ottoman Empire blamed this on the Armenians causing 1 million Armenians to be killed.
Explanation:
Muslims - B
Vikings - A
Magyars - C
The Muslims invaded from the Middle East and Africa, and constantly were in wars, attempting to invade Europe.
The Vikings rose up in Scandinavia, and invaded Eastern, Central, and Western Europe, as well as the British Isles.
The Magyars were a power that arose in the Balkans, and moved into Western Europe and the Italian Peninsula.
Sennacherib, the son of Sargon II, crusaded broadly and cruelly
in which he surmount Israel, Judah and some provinces in Greece in Anatolia.
His military triumphs improved the prosperity of the realm beyond what Sargon
II had consummate, even though his supremacy was blemished by persistent military
movements contrary to Babylon and the Elamites. He enthused the capital from
Sargon’s City to Nineveh and constructed structure which is recognized as “the
Palace without Rival”. Despite all of these, Babylon has been obstinate throughout
his reign and gradually grew weary of it. He learned to disregard the teachings
from the past and was not satisfied by his means and the indulgence of the
city, he flock his army against Babylon, dismissed it and robbed the temples.
The robbing and devastation of the temples was understood as the stature of irreverence
by the individuals of the area.
The U.S. warship, "Old Ironsides", sunk a British ship off the coast of Nova Scotia in late 1812. American privateers captured numerous British merchant ships.
After World War II, a new threat and direct competitor emerged, the USSR, inspired the U.S. develop new strategies to remain the global leader in military and technology.
In the late 1970's, the Offset Strategy was Developed with the leadership of then-Under Secretary of Defense Bill Perry, consisting in two main parts:
1 - Investment in basic and robust in research and development (R&D), with a focus in information based technology, like networks to deliver and receive information (Internet precursors). These would improve the country's technologies and enable Technological superiority.
2 - Control and application of the technologies through export and trade route control, like the Arms Export Control Act and the Missile Technology Control Regime, allowing the U.S to provide or deny access to particular technologies on command, once these were totally funded, built and controlled by the country.
The strategy was and enormous success, leading the country into an era of scientific-technological dominance by the U.S, resulting not only in the upper hand during the Cold War, but also birthing early-generation microelectronics, nuclear power and a lot of technologies present in the world today.