= Francisco Vasquez de Coronado = http://www.epcc.edu/nwlibrary/borderlands/17_coronado_searched.htm
Francisco Pizarro was motivated to explore due to the allure of wealth and power, as he heard tales of the Inca Empire's riches from previous Spanish explorers. Additionally, the desire to spread Christianity and expand the Spanish empire played a role in his motivation to explore South America.
He was a journalist and explorer. He found Dr. David living stone when he had not been heard from in a very long time. Stanley's eight-month search brought him to Ujiji, where he finally found Livingstone. The two traveled together for the next year or so, and when Livingstone died in 1873, Stanley continued the exploration they had done together. "Dr. Livingstone I presume" which he actually did not say but a reporter put in to juicy up his article.
The Spanish were horrified by the Aztec's "Blood Religion." Long be for they reached the Aztec's capital, the Spanish had heard from other Central American tribes that the Aztec practiced Human sacrifice.This among along with the Spanish own prejudices, were the root causes the brutal treatment of the Aztecs.Source(s):Introduction of Latin American History class and book "Born in Blood & Fire; A concise history of Latin American."
Etienne Brule heard of Samuel Champlain (he was a famous explorer, after all) and begged Samuel to help him travel with the Hurons. He agreed. After that, they became good friends. Samuel knew that Etienne would help him travel and map the land, and that's why he agreed. I wouldn't use this for a report, though, seeing as it IS from a random student halfway across the world.
Lapu-lapu isn't real... If you want to argue with me, so be it. Lapu-lapu means: "Sugod Sugod!" or attack!, attack... So they might have used the word then somebody heard it and wrote a story...
Coronado
Samuel de Champlain
The reason why Francisco Vasquez de Coronado led him to explore is because he heard or stories of fortune and treasure found in the Western Part of the United States of America.
An explorer, he was a friar (priest's) who looked for the seven cities of cibola. he sent estevanico and heard that they were large, but when he arrived there was no city of cibola and the native American tribe Zuni had killed estevanico
When she heard a noise in Spanish is: Cuando ella escuchó un ruido.
The Spanish were after gold. They heard there were these cities of gold in what is now the US. So they conquered to get rich. They made the natives take them on searches for these cities but they were never found. Strategy wise, the natives thought the Spanish were gods. So they let them right in to there cities. Also, the Spanish had guns and weapons that the natives had never seen before. They tricked the Mexicans into thinking they were friends, and then captured them.
I emailed the service mgr at the dealership and he called me back same day with the code no charge. I had heard all kinds of horror stories about extra charges for it. In my case not an issue
I heard you alex I heard you alex
it comes from the elderly Indians who told the stories, when they heard it from their ancestors.
Everyone heard it. This is something that actually came from Asia and changed/filtered into the seven cities of gold. This was the "urban" legend of it's time.
Francisco Pizarro was a Spanish explorer whose purpose was to discover and conquer the thriving Inca Empire about which he had heard so many rumors. He founded the city of Lima, also, naming it as the capital of Peru.
No its impossible but ive heard stories to get it from honey trees