"To carry out the conquest of so many countries, to cross so many seas and rivers, valleys, forests and mountains, and to take on the Aztecs and the Mayans in their own territory, some great idea was needed as well as human will." (Americo Castro)When, in 1492, Christopher Columbus finally stood ready to set sail across the 'Ocean Sea' for what he thought was India (christening the Indies and the Indians), he crossed himself and devoted his expedition to the Holy Trinity and to the King and Queen of Spain. With the gold and spices (and slaves) he would find, Columbus planned to fund a new Crusade to win back Jerusalem. As he set out, the Muslims were being besieged at Granada. The Catholic monarchs would soon inhabit the Alhambra, and the Inquisition would persuade them to command all Jews to convert or be expelled from Spain penniless. At the time Columbus's voyage was insignificant, but it became one of the most important events in history. The colonisation he started was followed by the Dutch, French and British. Pioneers like Columbus, Amerigo Vespucci (who gave his name to America) and the hundreds of Spaniards they inspired looked for riches, glory and to serve God in the New World. While they didn't believe the earth was flat, they thought an Earthly Paradise existed on the far side of the Indies, and that the rivers flowed with gold. Later the Conquistadores brought slavery, their irresistable weapons and European diseases to the ancient civilisations, and made Spain the richest nation in the world.
In this pioneering study of slavery in colonial Ecuador and southern Colombia--Spain's Kingdom of Quito--Sherwin Bryant argues that the most fundamental dimension of slavery was governance and the extension of imperial power.
PETERSON. www.traciepeterson.com A Slender Thread • I Can't Do It All!** What She Leftfor Me • Where My Heart Belongs ALASKAN QUEST Summer of the Midnight Sun Under the Northern Lights • Whispers of Winter THE BROADMOOR LEGACY* A ...
Having once crossed this moral threshold , these desperadoes pursued the relentless and gruesome logic of their cannibalism until just one man , Pierce , was left alive . He managed to reach the Derwent and join up with a band of ...
In addition to providing a badly needed narrative of this critical period of Byzantine history, Streams of Gold, Rivers of Blood offers new interpretations of key topics relevant to the medieval era.
Rivers of Gold: The Rise of the Spanish Empire
In 1940 the Museum sponsored excavations at the necropolis of Sitio Conte on the Pacific coastal plain 100 miles southwest of Panama City.
the Wild Days of the Palmer River Gold Rush "What with cannibal blacks, pig-tailed Chinamen in thousands, lynch-law hangings, gambling dens, shanty towns, murders, grog-shops and Italian opera singers, the Palmer River Goldfields - properly ...
Rivers of Gold
"This is the 'redeemed' version of Redeeming Love, published by Bantam Books in 1991. The original edition is no longer available."--Title page verso.
the time were brethren—such as Mercator, the inventor of mapping,' and Thomas a Kempis, who was close to the order with his Imitation of Christ. Adrian had, however, found himself able to accept worldly appointments.