When you study official history, you get the impression that the history of some countries has been written thoroughly, and the writing of history for entire continents has simply been forgotten or forgotten, one of them is Africa.
Officially, the whole world began to colonize since 1492, when the Spanish conquistadors colonized the first islands of the Caribbean.
At the same time, under the nose of Europe there is a huge rich continent, on which the natives officially live, armed at best with bows and arrows, and which for some reason have not been touched for 386 years and will begin to pull on the colonies only after 1884.
The colonization of South and Central America began officially over 500 years ago. It is described in detail how the conquistadors chopped the local natives into cabbage. As laws were written obliging the natives to bring a certain amount of gold, and if he did not bring, then the unfortunate hands were cut off and released into the village, where he and his family died of hunger, since the breadwinner of the family could not work.
The peculiar exploits of the Spaniards are described in great detail, the names of local leaders are known, the names of the Spanish "heroes" are known.
Let's find out about one remarkable story that happened, according to official historians, a little less than 500 years ago:
In 1532, the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro, who had previously landed on the coast in Peru, captured the Inca ruler Atahualpa. Pizarro remembered how another famous conquistador from Spain, Cortes, managed to conquer all of Mexico with a small army and destroy the Aztec statehood.
Therefore, Pizarro himself dreamed of conquering new territories. Knowing that it would be easier to defeat the people without their leader, the conquistador, through her envoy, persuaded Atahualpa to come to the location of the Spaniards. When the ruler, surrounded by seven thousand unarmed tribesmen, entered Cajamarca, Pizarro attacked them. As a result, the ruler was taken prisoner, and the Spaniards killed almost all of his escorts.
Atahualpa was kept in a detached house in chains. Hoping for his release, the Inca ruler promised Pizarro to fill the entire room he was in with gold. The ruler also promised to fill the neighboring building, slightly smaller in size, twice with silver.
For three months, the Incas collected and brought to Cajamarca all the gold and silver they had. Among the products were jewelry, dishes and bowls, as well as other luxury items that were created over several centuries by various peoples and civilizations of South America. Subsequently, all these products were melted down into ingots - it took 34 days to do this. The total ransom for Atahualpa was almost 6,000 kilograms of gold, which, say, at the rate of 2000, was 6 billion 839 million dollars.
However, Francisco Pizarro did not keep his word - he was afraid that the released leader of the Incas would raise the people to the liberation struggle against the Spaniards. Therefore, Atahualpa was accused of 12 crimes and sentenced to death by strangulation with a garrote in Cajamarca Square in 1533.
The Spanish empire left a significant financial footprint - silver Mexican dollars were the international currency in the 19th century, and in some countries - China, Japan were used until the 1930s.
The English ships that participated in the siege of Sevastopol in 1853 look exactly the same as the ships on which Spain colonized South America, and there are more than 350 years between these events.
I told you all this for the following purpose: do you think we have the right to doubt the official dating of events?
Are these events of 500 years ago not described in too much detail and in detail? And why do Spanish dollars circulate all over the world, if the Spanish empire itself, as it were, has already collapsed a long time ago? Or was it all recent?
Looking ahead a bit (maybe I’ll make a video about this), you probably heard that the colonialists, in addition to the conquests, were also engaged in the Christianization of the occupied territories?
For example, in Brazil there is a huge statue, what do you think it's called? I always thought that somehow "Jesus Chirst", but in fact it is called Redeemer, which is very consonant with RadoMir.
It is not difficult to verify this, switch the language on Wikipedia, and see for yourself, but for some reason, Redentor is written in the Russian translation.
Let's return to colonization: The events in South America were officially very long ago and far from Europe, but what happened under the very nose of Europe only 200 years ago?
Why was far South America colonized, and Africa, which is no less rich, and maybe richer, populated by seemingly natives, began to be colonized only at the end of the 19th century?
Негізгі бет Africa - continent without history a
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