Mercenaries

Mercenaries, originally hired soldiers as distinguished from feudal levies, now bodies of foreign troops in the service of the State; the Scots Guards in France from the 15th to 18th centuries were famous, and Swiss auxiliaries once belonged to most European armies; William III. had Dutch mercenaries in England; under the Georges, German were hired and were used in the American War, the Irish rebellion, and the Napoleonic struggle; in the Crimean War German, Swiss, and Italian were enrolled.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Mercator * Mercia
[wait for the fun]
Menschikoff, Alexander Danilovitch
Menschikoff, Alexander Sergeievitch
Menteith, Lake of
Menthol
Mentone
Mentor
Menzel, Adolf
Menzel, Wolfgang
Mephistopheles
Mercator
Mercenaries
Mercia
Mercury
Mercury
Mer-de-glace
Meredith, George
Meredith, Owen
Mergui
Meridian
Mèrimèe, Prosper
Merio`neth