History of israel timeline chart

Manuel Belgrano

Argentine military leader, politician, and journalist (1770–1820)

In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Belgrano and the second or maternal family name is González.

Manuel José Joaquín del Corazón de Jesús Belgrano (3 June 1770 – 20 June 1820), usually referred to as Manuel Belgrano (Spanish pronunciation:[maˈnwelβelˈɣɾano]), was an Argentine public servant, economist, lawyer, politician, journalist, and military leader. He took part in the Argentine Wars of Independence and designed what became the flag of Argentina. Argentines regard him as one of the main Founding Fathers of the country.

Belgrano was born in Buenos Aires, the fourth child of Italian businessman Domingo Belgrano y Peri and of María Josefa González Casero. He came into contact with the ideas of the Age of Enlightenment while at university in Spain around the time of the 1789 French Revolution. In 1794 he returned to the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, where he became a notable member of the criollo population of Buenos Aires; he tried to promot

The Quito Manuscript: An Inca History Preserved by Fernando de Montesinos

The Quito Manuscript: An Inca History Preserved by Fernando de Montesinos. By Sabine Hyland (New Haven, CT: Peabody Museum, Yale University Publications in Anthropology, 2007). Reviewed by Thomas Whigham, Professor of History, University of Georgia. In Ethnohistory, 56:2, Spring 2009; pp. 349 – 351. The term “conquest”, as applied to the early Spanish experience in the New World, suggests a precipitous event in which native empires yielded to European interlopers after a sharp, decisive struggle. In fact, the elaboration of a new colonial regime in the Americas took many years to accomplish, and because it was erected upon the ruins of complex Indian civilizations – with their own histories and traditions – it necessarily proved incomplete and artificial. Many elements of the old order regularly percolated through from the bottom rungs of society. These filled the conquered peoples with a sense of identity that, if it was not loudly proclaimed, nonetheless always asserted itself. The colonial masters, for t

The Old Testament - A Brief Overview

Abraham, The First Hebrew

"Now the LORD had said to Abram: "Get out of your country, from your family and from your father's house, to a land that I will show you. I will make you a great nation; I will bless you and make your name great; and you shall be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who curses you; and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed."- Genesis 12 Abraham

We now move on to another very important subject. That is the subject of Abraham, who became the first Hebrew, and whose family God chose to weave His scarlet thread through the linen of humanity. It was through Abraham's descendants that the Jewish nation would arise, a people who would receive the covenant of the Lord, and that One of those descendants would be the Savior, not only for the Jews but for the whole world.

Abraham lived in the city of Ur (capital of the ancient kingdom of Sumer). Sometime around 2,000 BC. God called Abraham to leave his home and go to a new land that God would show Him. The Bi

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