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vianca lopez

Hernán Cortés - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Hernán Cortés de Monroy y Pizarro, 1st Marqués del Valle de Oax
    • melanie pineda
       
      he was one of those people that when they were scared they would be calm
    • melanie pineda
       
      he was a spanish leader, there is a monument in mexico city known as "monumento al mestizaje"
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      he was a leader oof the spanish. when everyone was scared he would be calm like nothing was happing.
  • aca (Spanish
  • Hernán Cortés
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  • Contemporary painting of Hernán Cortés.
    • Lucas Petricorena
       
      a Contemporary painting of Hernan Cortes
  • Map depicting Cortés' invasion route
    • Lucas Petricorena
       
      Map depicting Cortes invasion route
  • Emperor Charles V with Hound (1532), a painting by the 16th century artist Jakob Seisenegger.
    • Lucas Petricorena
       
      Emperor Charles V with a Hound (1532) a painting by the 16th century artist Jakob Seisenegger
  • Monument in Mexico City known as "Monumento al Mestizaje.
    • Lucas Petricorena
       
      Monument in Mexico City known as "Monumento al Mestizaje".
  • When the Governor of Cuba sent emissaries to arrest Cortés, he fought them and won, using the extra troops as reinforcements.
    • anibal hernandez
       
      Heran Cortez wasn't trusted by the Cuban govenor. They didn't trusred him and arrest him but he allready left.
    • Emmanuel Payano
       
      yea they want cortez arrested because the governer wanted to go to the island and get the gold that cortez told the governer that he would find alott
    • Janelly Rodriguez
       
      he was the spanish leader.
    • giovanni belletti
       
      If it werent for him Mexico would probably never existed..
  • Born in Medellín, Extremadura, Spain, to a family of lesser nobility, Cortés chose to pursue a livelihood in the New World.
    • Emmanuel Payano
       
      this is where he was born.
    • Emmanuel Payano
       
      this guy was a spanish leader and he was a great one. he knew how to get out of the heat with his bright ideas
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    Hernan Cortez
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    Hernan Cortez
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    Hernan Cortez
Keila Rivera

Girolamo Savonarola - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    After Charles VIII of France invaded Florence in 1494, the ruling Medici were overthrown and Savonarola emerged as the new leader of the city, combining in himself the role of secular leader and priest. He set up a republic in Florence. Characterizing it as a "Christian and religious Republic," one of its first acts was to make sodomy, previously punishable by fine, into a capital offence. Homosexuality had previously been tolerated in the city, and many homosexuals from the elite now chose to leave Florence.
3ddi3 3d :1 Yea!!! S0n

Christopher Columbus - 0 views

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    Famous Leaders for Young Readers, Christopher Columbus
joel abreu

Ignatius of Loyola - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    In 1509, Íñigo took up arms for Antonio Manrique de Lara, Duke of Nájera and Viceroy of Navarre. According to Thomas Rochford, S.J., his diplomacy and leadership qualities made him a gentilhombre[9] very useful to the Duke.
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    During the time he was recovering, Ignatius read a number of religious texts on the life of Jesus called the Vita Christi by Ludolph of Saxony [12][13]and the saints and became fired with an ambition to lead a life of self-denying labor and emulate the heroic deeds of Francis of Assisi and other great monastic leaders.
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    Ignatius of Loyola was the main creator and initial Superior General of the Society of Jesus, a religious organization of the Catholic Church whose members, known as Jesuits, served the Pope as missionaries. He is remembered as a talented spiritual director.
anonymous

Ferdinand Magellan: the first to go around the world? : Explorers & leaders : Sea & shi... - 0 views

shared by anonymous on 19 Jun 09 - Cached
  • Ferdinand Magellan Columbus landed in the 'new world' of the Americas in 1492. Explorers coming after him in the 16th century brought the news to Europe that the Pacific Ocean lay beyond the western coast of America. Suddenly people began to understand that they could reach the East by sailing westwards from Europe.
Steven Pierna

Inca Civilization - Crystalinks - 0 views

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    As ancient civilizations sprang up across the planet thousands of years ago, so too the Inca civilization evolved. As with all ancient civilizations, its exact origins are unknown. Their historic record, as with all other tribes evolving on the planet at that time, would be recorded through oral tradition, stone, pottery, gold and silver jewelry, and woven in the tapestry of the people.
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    The Inca Empire was quite short-lived. It lasted just shy of 100 years, from ca.1438 AD, when the Inca ruler Pachacuti and his army began conquering lands surrounding the Inca heartland of Cuzco, until the coming of the Spaniards in 1532.
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    In 1438 the Inca set out from their base in Cuzco on a career of conquest that, during the next 50 years, brought under their control the area of present-day Peru, Bolivia, northern Argentina, Chile, and Ecuador. Within this area, the Inca established a totalitarian state that enabled the tribal ruler and a small minority of nobles to dominate the population.
vianca lopez

Inca civilization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

shared by vianca lopez on 21 Jun 09 - Cached
  • The Inca civilization began as a tribe in the Cuzco area,
    • vianca lopez
       
      this was not in the video i think wow such a large civilization started as a small tribe
  • Pizarro met with the Inca, who had brought only a small retinue. Through interpreters, Pizarro requested the new Inca ruler convert to Christianity. A disputed legend claims that Atahualpa was handed a Bible and threw it on the floor. The Spanish supposedly interpreted this action as reason for war. Though some chroniclers suggest that Atahualpa simply did not understand the notion of a book, others portray Atahualpa as being genuinely curious and inquisitive in the situation. Regardless, the Spanish attacked the Inca's retinue, capturing Atahualpa.
    • vianca lopez
       
      u see what the spanish did was wrong they wanted to convert him into a christian but to him this religion was rediculous in every way they believed in the sun as their god when he threw the book they thought of this as war which was wrong all of this was in the movie we saw
  • The Inca Empire was separated into four sections together known as 'Ttahuantin-suyu' or "land of the four sections" each ruled by a governor or viceroy called 'Apu-cuna' under the leadership on the central 'Sapa Inca'. Cuzco was the central capital of the Inca Empire from which where the Sapa Inca ruled from. According to the oral traditions of the Inca the empire was ruled by 14 kings in succession. The earliest kings are likely either local leaders of ayllus around Cuzco or possibly mythical figures.
    • vianca lopez
       
      i didnt kno this because it wasnt in the movie
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  • While the Inca often tolerated or incorporated the religions of their conquered ayllus they also imposed a state religion upon them. The Inca empire was a theocracy in which the Inca king, Sapa Inca, was the descendant of Inti, the sun god. The Inca required tribute, especially before and after battle, to certain gods. Regular and general festivals punctuated the labors of the empire's subjects with food drink and entertainments. Inti Raymi, the festival of the sun god, lasted nine nights, during which Sapa Inca would provide Aqhachicha, a maize beer, to first Inti, then himself, then the nobles, and finally to all people who attended.
anthony anthony

EchodHaiti.com:History/Istwa: Haiti, Pre-Columbus - 0 views

  • Lifestyle of the Arawak/Taino Housing and Dress Food and Agriculture Transportation Defense Religion and Myth The genocidal end of the Arawak/Taino Specific Indian leaders at the time of Columbus(The five caciques of the time)
    • anthony anthony
       
      hey what about medican and sicknesses
  • They also ate snakes, various rodents, bats, worms, birds, in general any living things they could find with the exception of humans
    • anthony anthony
       
      i wonder how they got the posin out of the snakes
  • They not only had cotton, but they raised tobacco and enjoyed smoking very much. It was not only a part of their social life, but was used in religious ceremonies too.
    • anthony anthony
       
      so they smoke tobacco for religs reasons. i wish we could do that
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  • There are many stone religious artifacts which have been found in Haiti. The zemi take on strange forms like toads, turtles, snakes, alligators and various distorted and hideous human faces.
    • anthony anthony
       
      the are the oppisit from eygpt human bodie animal face taino animal bodies human faces,
alexy velasco

Carib - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

shared by alexy velasco on 03 Jun 09 - Cached
  • Carib
    • Jacalyn Russ
       
      The Caribs were cannibals. But were they just a small group or were they huge in numbers?
    • alexy velasco
       
      the carribs were cannibals but they didnt eat all of the flesh only the person who killed the leader of the enemy would eat a piece of flesh cuz they believed that buy eating this piece thay would get the perons strength and soul
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