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Foreign Exchanges
World roundup: October 18 2023
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World Roundups

World roundup: October 18 2023

Stories from Sudan, Russia, Bolivia, and elsewhere

Derek Davison
Oct 19, 2023
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Foreign Exchanges
World roundup: October 18 2023
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TODAY IN HISTORY

October 18, 1009: Fatimid Caliph al-Hakim destroys the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.

October 18, 1081: A Norman army under Robert Guiscard defeats the Byzantines, under Emperor Alexios I Komnenos, outside the Balkan city of Dyrrhachium (the modern Albanian city of Durrës). Guiscard decided to invade the Byzantine Empire following the 1078 deposition of Emperor Michael VII Doukas, whose son had been intended to marry the Norman leader’s daughter. After some initial success, the undisciplined Byzantine army fell apart and the Normans routed it. Dyrrhachium fell in February 1082, but Alexios established alliances with the Holy Roman Empire and Venice and used them first to redirect Norman attention to Italy and then to regain lost Balkan territory including Dyrrhachium by the mid 1080s. These moves helped stabilize a Byzantine Empire that was still reeling from the 1071 Battle of Manzikert in what is now known as the “Komnenian restoration.”

October 18, 1912: The Italo-Turkish War ends with a decisive Italian victory. The war not only brought Libya under Italian control—though that control initially didn’t extend very far inland—it also demonstrated the Ottoman Empire’s weakness and encouraged Bulgaria, Greece, Montenegro, and Serbia to form an alliance (the Balkan League) and go to war with the empire. The First Balkan War led to a Second Balkan War when the league broke up, and that led (in part) into World War I.

MIDDLE EAST

ISRAEL-PALESTINE

The fallout over the explosion on Tuesday evening at Gaza’s al-Ahli al-Arabi hospital has continued through Wednesday, unfortunately without providing much clarity as to what actually happened after a day in which it was almost impossible to keep track of new developments and new claims because everything happened so quickly. I want to be very careful about discussing this because my aim in writing this newsletter is not ever to mislead anyone intentionally and it becomes considerably harder to hold to that when there’s so much noise circulating. Some of that noise might be accurate information. Much of it is probably misinformation. Some actual information looks as though it’s being censored by our benevolent internet overlords. So with that in mind, let’s try to unpack things as they stand now.

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