El último viaje del Galeón de Manila

 

 

 

El último viaje del Galeón de Manila

  • La Fundación Ramón Areces imparte el 30 de septiembre una ponencia en torno a la última ruta que realizó la nave en 1815

La ruta que recorría el Galeón de Manila-Acapulco en el siglo XVI

LA AVENTURA DE LA HISTORIA

Actualizado: 24/09/2014 13:40 horas

 El Mundo

También conocido como la Nao de Acapulco o la Nao de China, el Galeón de Manila designaba la ruta recorrida durante más de dos siglos por muchos galeones entre España y las Indias orientales

El catedrático de Historia Moderna de la UNED, Carlos Martinez Shaw afirma que el Galeón de Manila era una línea regular de intercambios (comerciales sin duda, pero también culturales y espirituales) que unió México con Filipinas desde el último tercio del siglo XVIhasta

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Turkish President Claims Muslims Discovered America First

 

 

 

 
 

 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan claimed over the weekend that Muslims discovered the New World before Christopher Columbus. He made the bold announcement at a televised speech in Istanbul to a group of Muslim leaders from the Americas. His claims are based on a paper by an academic affiliated with the As-Sunnah Foundation of America called Youssef Mroueh. Erdogan’s comments are already sparking much controversy throughout the world.

Mroueh wrote a paper in 1996 stating that in 1492 Columbus had reported seeing a mosque on top of a mountain while he was sailing near the north-east coast of Cuba. Most researchers believe that the mosque was actually a metaphor, to describe a

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Iceland home to Viking great

 

 

 

By Mike Keenan, The Standard

Friday, November 7, 2014 7:46:55 EST PM

In Reykjavik, Iceland, it’s an odd juxtaposition — a statue of Viking warrior Leif Ericson (donated by the U.S)., in front of Hallgrímskirkja, the impressive Lutheran Church, lofty at 73 metres, the largest church in Iceland.

Strange because in the first recorded attack in England, Lindisfarne’s Christian monks were hacked to death or drowned by Leif’s pagan raiders.

Savage fighters with seafaring skills and speedy ships, the Vikings wreaked havoc from 790 until the Norman conquest in 1066. Under Leif Ericson, heir to Erik the Red, they reached North America 500 years before Columbus, settling in L’Anse aux Meadows, N.L., awarded UNESCO World Heritage site status in 1978.

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Salt cod: it’s why we’re here

 

Paul Smith
 
Published on November 08, 2014

 

 

When you take a splitting knife in your hand, steel it to a razor’s edge and lift the sound bone of a cod with its curved blade, you are continuing a centuries-old tradition steeped into the history of seafaring peoples around the world. For hundreds of years Newfoundland and Labrador was at the epicentre of the cod-salting universe.