Currently searching for posts. Please click any of the tabs below to change your search type.

Results matching your search

  • What was Mansa Musa holding in the Catalan Atlas?
    The Catalan Atlas, created in 1375 C.E. by Spanish cartographers, shows West Africa dominated by a depiction of Mansa Musa sitting on a throne, holding a nugget of gold in one hand and a golden staff in the other.Oct 19, 2023
    What was Mansa Musa holding in the Catalan Atlas? The Catalan Atlas, created in 1375 C.E. by Spanish cartographers, shows West Africa dominated by a depiction of Mansa Musa sitting on a throne, holding a nugget of gold in one hand and a golden staff in the other.Oct 19, 2023
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 550 Views 0 previzualizare
  • “The Spanish Jew is always DARK COMPLEXIONED…”
    https://youtu.be/G9b8LAxcYW4?si=IOxBb0K4nNNEClIq
    “The Spanish Jew is always DARK COMPLEXIONED…” https://youtu.be/G9b8LAxcYW4?si=IOxBb0K4nNNEClIq
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 836 Views 0 previzualizare
  • Nashville saw its first case of the “Spanish flu” in late September 1918. By November, 1,300 had died — 1 percent of the city’s population.

    The influenza would kill almost 700,000 in the United States and 50 million globally. It was the worst pandemic in modern history. Amid the dramatic lifestyle changes brought by the worldwide coronavirus outbreak, the experience of Christians more than a century ago is worth revisiting.

    As the flu spread across the U.S. in the late fall and early winter of 1918, theaters, schools, businesses and churches closed their doors for weeks. The Tennessee Health Department advised churches to suspend their Sunday meetings for Oct. 20 and 27. No one protested, and 92 churches complied.

    However, the Russell Street Church of Christ in Nashville did not close its doors. The church approached the Red Cross with an offer of help. Their building became a temporary hospital because the city hospitals were turning away people. The Russell Street members, along with the Eleventh Street and Chapel Avenue congregations, poured their monetary and human resources into feeding and nursing the poor. The influenza epidemic, as A. B. Lipscomb wrote in the Gospel Advocate, had “opened up a way for the enlargement of the sympathies of Christian people.”
    Nashville saw its first case of the “Spanish flu” in late September 1918. By November, 1,300 had died — 1 percent of the city’s population. The influenza would kill almost 700,000 in the United States and 50 million globally. It was the worst pandemic in modern history. Amid the dramatic lifestyle changes brought by the worldwide coronavirus outbreak, the experience of Christians more than a century ago is worth revisiting. As the flu spread across the U.S. in the late fall and early winter of 1918, theaters, schools, businesses and churches closed their doors for weeks. The Tennessee Health Department advised churches to suspend their Sunday meetings for Oct. 20 and 27. No one protested, and 92 churches complied. However, the Russell Street Church of Christ in Nashville did not close its doors. The church approached the Red Cross with an offer of help. Their building became a temporary hospital because the city hospitals were turning away people. The Russell Street members, along with the Eleventh Street and Chapel Avenue congregations, poured their monetary and human resources into feeding and nursing the poor. The influenza epidemic, as A. B. Lipscomb wrote in the Gospel Advocate, had “opened up a way for the enlargement of the sympathies of Christian people.”
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 2K Views 0 previzualizare
  • 2 Maccabees 6:18-21- SPANISH INQUISITION
    2 Maccabees 6:18-21- SPANISH INQUISITION
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 1K Views 0 previzualizare
  • The young Prince Taharqa of Kush, fated to become king of an empire that spreads from his homeland in Sudanese Nubia all the way down to the Nile Delta, leads an invasion of southern Spain circa 700 BC. This is of course another alternate history scenario, but the inspiration came from a handful of apocryphal accounts from historians such as Strabo and Ahmed ibn Mohammed al-Makhari that report that he ventured to the “pillars of Heracles” (the Gibraltar Strait between Spain and Morocco) and led an expedition into Spain. Archaeological evidence of such Kushite forays remains undiscovered, but considering that the Phoenicians from Lebanon had already established trading posts on the Spanish coast as far afield as modern Cadiz by that time, an army from the Nile Valley making it there is not totally impossible. Who knows, maybe Taharqa and his soldiers here are defending one of the Phoenician settlements from hostile local tribes?
    The young Prince Taharqa of Kush, fated to become king of an empire that spreads from his homeland in Sudanese Nubia all the way down to the Nile Delta, leads an invasion of southern Spain circa 700 BC. This is of course another alternate history scenario, but the inspiration came from a handful of apocryphal accounts from historians such as Strabo and Ahmed ibn Mohammed al-Makhari that report that he ventured to the “pillars of Heracles” (the Gibraltar Strait between Spain and Morocco) and led an expedition into Spain. Archaeological evidence of such Kushite forays remains undiscovered, but considering that the Phoenicians from Lebanon had already established trading posts on the Spanish coast as far afield as modern Cadiz by that time, an army from the Nile Valley making it there is not totally impossible. Who knows, maybe Taharqa and his soldiers here are defending one of the Phoenician settlements from hostile local tribes?
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 4K Views 0 previzualizare
  • https://www.history.com/news/american-slavery-before-jamestown-1619#:~:text=The%20arrival%20of%20the%20first,as%20early%20as%20the%201500s.)The first African slaves to be brought to the continental United States were **brought by the Spanish in 1526** as part of the first attempt at European …
    What’s your Surname, not your ‘Government name’?
    How do you know you’re not Honduran, from Solomon Islands? The human traffickers didn’t care and didn’t keep track.
    They pay you LESS ACROSS THE BOARD even with a Masters degree.
    The U.S charges BLKPOC more to live in the U.S so BLKPOC can keep carrying the WEAK:
    BLKPOC are charged more for homes, cars, rent, Credit card interest, under appraisal of homes, sub-standard health, steal your historical homes via REGENTRIFICATION, Set-up by ‘authorities’ placing drugs at the scene to charge you more in court fees, classes, probation, Ruins what credit you did have & you pay more for everything when you’re released, etc., leaving BLKPOC in jail WITHOUT TRIAL more than 2 years or more, etc., which is illegal, but not if you don’t SUE. ALL THIS AMOUNTS TO CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY.
    https://www.history.com/news/american-slavery-before-jamestown-1619#:~:text=The%20arrival%20of%20the%20first,as%20early%20as%20the%201500s.)The first African slaves to be brought to the continental United States were **brought by the Spanish in 1526** as part of the first attempt at European … What’s your Surname, not your ‘Government name’? How do you know you’re not Honduran, from Solomon Islands? The human traffickers didn’t care and didn’t keep track. They pay you LESS ACROSS THE BOARD even with a Masters degree. The U.S charges BLKPOC more to live in the U.S so BLKPOC can keep carrying the WEAK: BLKPOC are charged more for homes, cars, rent, Credit card interest, under appraisal of homes, sub-standard health, steal your historical homes via REGENTRIFICATION, Set-up by ‘authorities’ placing drugs at the scene to charge you more in court fees, classes, probation, Ruins what credit you did have & you pay more for everything when you’re released, etc., leaving BLKPOC in jail WITHOUT TRIAL more than 2 years or more, etc., which is illegal, but not if you don’t SUE. ALL THIS AMOUNTS TO CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY.
    WWW.HISTORY.COM
    America's History of Slavery Began Long Before Jamestown | HISTORY
    The arrival of the first captives to the Jamestown Colony, in 1619, is often seen as the beginning of slavery in America—but enslaved Africans arrived in North America as early as the 1500s.
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 2K Views 0 previzualizare
  • Ping/Putin said…They got to give it back: Was Argentina Colonized by Italy?
    Argentina may have been colonized by the Spanish originally, but it is fair to say that the Italians had an equal, if not even greater influence, over many areas of Argentine life, such as politics, food, fashion and language.
    https://wander-argentina.com › tano...
    Italians in Argentina: La Dolce Vita in South America
    Ping/Putin said…They got to give it back: Was Argentina Colonized by Italy? Argentina may have been colonized by the Spanish originally, but it is fair to say that the Italians had an equal, if not even greater influence, over many areas of Argentine life, such as politics, food, fashion and language. https://wander-argentina.com › tano... Italians in Argentina: La Dolce Vita in South America
    Like
    1
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 2K Views 0 previzualizare
  • Get ready to SURVIVE! Notice? The gov is allowing attacks on UNIONS, Look up how bad it was prior to UNIONIZATION. This is another power snatching move which leaves u no recourse for justice.
    “ Pale dust rose around them as they worked. Many went without masks. Some had water spurting from their machines, but others had nothing to tamp down the powder rising in the air.
    "Nobody uses water," one man in a Dodgers cap said in Spanish when Maria Cabrera approached, holding flyers about silicosis, an incurable and suffocating disease that has devastated dozens of workers across the state and killed men who have barely reached middle age.”
    Get ready to SURVIVE! Notice? The gov is allowing attacks on UNIONS, Look up how bad it was prior to UNIONIZATION. This is another power snatching move which leaves u no recourse for justice. “ Pale dust rose around them as they worked. Many went without masks. Some had water spurting from their machines, but others had nothing to tamp down the powder rising in the air. "Nobody uses water," one man in a Dodgers cap said in Spanish when Maria Cabrera approached, holding flyers about silicosis, an incurable and suffocating disease that has devastated dozens of workers across the state and killed men who have barely reached middle age.”
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 1K Views 0 previzualizare