Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Alexander hamilton and Allen Burr duel.

Alexander hamilton and Allen Burr duel.

In his later years, alexander hamilton returned to the Christianity he believed in when he was young, but on his deathbed, he asked Hamilton and Burr to duel at 1804.

When Trinity Church in new york held a Eucharist for him, he was once rejected because he could never give up "duel", which was against Christianity. His death was due to a duel with his political opponent, Jefferson's vice president Aaron Burr. At that time, Hamilton agreed to duel, but out of Christian belief, he deliberately missed the bullet. Hamilton's eloquence finally persuaded the church to hold a ceremony for him. He said that he had sincerely repented and was willing to make peace with everyone, including Burr. According to the duel rules, Hamilton shoots first. Strangely, the bullet he fired was far from Bohr's. Burl was adamant and shot Hamilton in the right chest. When sorting out Hamilton's legacy, people found his diary written the night before the duel. Hamilton said in his diary that he would not do it tomorrow. Why did Hamilton have this plan? He fired a shot the next day to no avail and caused his own death. Iris kept an open ending and made no conclusion.