They were similar because they were both seeking mythilogical places . Ponce de Leon (fountain of youth) and Coronado ( The Seven Cities of Gold)
bye descovering Florida
they both went around texas and coroado searched for gold and de vaca did ot
Many refer to Juan Ponce Sumuroy as the leader of the Palapag rebellion during the Spanish times but there is no person with such name in the Palapag rebellion. There was however Don Juan Ponce and another person they only called Sumuroy, both were leaders of the same rebellion. See here: http://kahimyang.info/kauswagan/Eastern-Visayas-News-Blogs.xhtml?b=736 and here http://kahimyang.info/kauswagan/Eastern-Visayas-News-Blogs.xhtml?b=738
His positive impact was that he claimed land for Spain.The negative impact was that he killed many Native Americans during his conquering of what is now Puerto Rico.
False.
Europeans
They were similar because they were both seeking mythilogical places . Ponce de Leon (fountain of youth) and Coronado ( The Seven Cities of Gold)
No, Vasco da Gama and Ponce de León were not friends. They were both explorers from different countries - da Gama was Portuguese and Ponce de León was Spanish - who explored different parts of the world during the Age of Discovery.
yes it wins.. WOOT!!!
Panfilo and yacht are Italian equivalents of the English word "yacht."Specifically, both words are masculine nouns in their singular forms. But panfilo may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") whereas the English loan-word yacht may follow lo ("the"). The respective pronunciations will be "PAN-fee-lo" and "yat" in Italian.
bye descovering Florida
El Dorado
his negative impact was that he killed many Native Americans
The object of the preposition "among" is "the stacks and on the shelves." The preposition "among" shows the relationship between the subject "she" and the location where she searched, which includes both the stacks and the shelves.
because they both sought out gold
Both Pánfilo de Narváez and Francisco Coronado were Spanish explorers who led expeditions to North America during the Age of Exploration. They both sought to find wealth and glory in the New World, but ultimately failed to achieve their goals.