We'll be watching Amistad in my history class. Just how accurate is the film?
Not bad, I don't think. Of course no film will be 100% accurate. But the overall events did happen.
We'll be watching Amistad in my history class. Just how accurate is the film?
I'm thinking of revisiting an article I was working on, on the use of Poison Gas in British Literature prior to, during and immediately after WWI. Anyone got some sources they might recommend?
Why did portugal develop as an independent entity and eventually empire from spain with a distinctive culture, language, and identity.
It seems to me that portugal should of been culturally and linguistically similar to spain and thus absorbed into spanish territory sometime during the middle ages due to a lack of geographical barriar and relevent military strengths.
To sum it up why did portugal persist as being an independent strip of land in iberia and not absorbed by spain during the last 1000 years.
On the plus side, you'll never be out of toilet paper.That sounds like the kind of thing the Sun* would suggest, it likes those kind of "common sense" solutions to the nation's problems.
*A British newspaper whose highlights include "GOTCHA!" when the Belgrano was sunk, supporting the Poll Tax, making stories up, being hypocritical and showing topless photos of women on Page 3.
Between them, The Mirror declaring football war on Germany's Euro 96 squad with calls of "Achtung Surrender", the Express' obsession with Diana conspiracy theories and the Mail's obsession with house prices, Nazis and the disintegration of British society its hard to find a decent paper here...
It seems to me that portugal should of been culturally and linguistically similar to spain and thus absorbed into spanish territory sometime during the middle ages due to a lack of geographical barriar and relevent military strengths.
To sum it up why did portugal persist as being an independent strip of land in iberia and not absorbed by spain during the last 1000 years.
I don't think the alliance with England was a factor. It was scarcely in a position to do all that much.
The formation of the Kingdom of Italy was essentially compromise between between the Kingdom of Piedmont–Sardinia and Garibaldi's Italian nationalists. The latter had strong republican tendencies, and, although Garibaldi shared them, he realised that the successful unification of Italy depended upon Piedmontese support, while Victor Emmanuel II and Cavour realised that their royalist regime lacked the popularity needed to retain the former Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. As such, they chose to compromise on a liberal monarchy, the combination of the Italian tricolour and the Savoyard emblem serving to placate the supporters of both factions.Why did the Kingdom of Italy(1861) adopt the tricolor of the Transpadane Republic/Cisalpine Republic (albeit defaced with the Savoy coat of arms) as its own flag?
The formation of the Kingdom of Italy was s compromise between between the Kingdom of PiedmontSardinia and Garibaldi's Italian nationalists. The latter had strong republican tendencies, and, although Garibaldi shared them, he realised that the successful unification of Italy depended upon Piedmontese support, while Victor Emmanuel II and Cavour realised that their royalist regime lacked the popularity needed to retain the former Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. As such, they chose to compromise on a liberal monarchy, the combination of the Italian tricolour and the Savoyard emblem serving to placate the supporters of both factions.
Actually, I just realised, I'm getting my time-scale all muddled there. The Sardinians first adopted the defaced flag during the 1848 Revolutions and the First Italian War of Independence, as an attempt to win nationalist support- the Venetian, Roman and Sicilian Republics had similarly derived flags- and kept it around in an attempt to present themselves as a the standard bearers of Italian unification. The Grand Duchy of Tuscany and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies actually attempted the same thing, using the Habsburg-Lorraine and Bourbon arms, respectively, but ultimately lost out to Garibaldi and his Sardinian allies, leaving the Savoyard-defaced flag as the emblem of a united Italy. (And, in the Tuscan case, the effect was altogether ruined by the presence of the flag of Austria, a staunch opponent of Italian unification, in the Hapsburg-Lorraine arms.)What flag did the monarchy really want? Does anybody know?
Actually, I just realised, I'm getting my time-scale all muddled there. The Sardinians first adopted the defaced flag during the 1848 Revolutions and the First Italian War of Independence, as an attempt to win nationalist support- the Venetian, Roman and Sicilian Republics had similarly derived flags- and kept it around in an attempt to present themselves as a the standard bearers of Italian unification. The Grand Duchy of Tuscany and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies actually attempted the same thing, using the Habsburg-Lorraine and Bourbon arms, respectively, but ultimately lost out to Garibaldi and his Sardinian allies, leaving the Savoyard-defaced flag as the emblem of a united Italy. (And, in the Tuscan case, the effect was altogether ruined by the presence of the flag of Austria, a staunch opponent of Italian unification, in the Hapsburg-Lorraine arms.)
But, if they hadn't adopted the tricolour flag, I'd assume that the Savoyard monarchy would simply have maintained the pre-1848 flag.
(Ugh, I really shouldn't expect my memory to work properly at this time of night.)