yes, he was killed by the Inca ruler's son
Pizarro was assassinated by his business partners.
Pizarro first entered because he was seeking/trying to find gold.
treasure,
In Lima, Peru, on June 26, 1541, "a group of twenty heavily armed supporters of young Almagro stormed Pizarro's palace, assassinated him, and then forced the terrified city council to appoint young Almagro as the new governor of Peru," according to Burkholder and Johnson.
Pizarro first entered because he was seeking/trying to find gold.
He used spies disguised as soldiers for his trips. This gave him an edge to see what the people were like in the countries he was trying to conquer.
He wasn't trying to explore, he wanted to conquer the Incan empire
treasure,
Augustus Cearsar was trying to conquer Egypt then.
(He didn't have a 3rd voyage. He died in 1541 and his second voyage was only in 1526-1528. So he would have been about 53 voyaging around the world). that is not true. Francisco Pizarro went to Spain to apply for sovereign because he was told he couldn't make a third expedition. When Pizzaro explained to the king what he was trying to do, his third expedition was allowed.
Phoenicia was not an empire. It was a collection of independent city-states in today's Lebanon and Syria. As i dependent mini-states, they met the challenge of an expanding population by turning to trade rather than trying to conquer more land.
cause they're trying to conquer the world
nothing