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PEOPLE OF THE ANCIENT WORLD: Dido (Queen of Tyre/Founder of Carthage)Â
QUEEN Dido (aka Elissa, from Elisha, or Alashiya, her Phoenician name) was a legendary Queen of Tyre in Phoenicia who was forced to flee the city with a loyal band of followers.Â
Sailing west across the Mediterranean she founded the city of Carthage c. 813 BCE and later fell in love with the Trojan hero and founder of the Roman people Aeneas. The tale of Dido is most famously recounted in Virgil’s Aeneid but she appeared in the works of many other ancient writers both before and after.
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Article by Mark Cartwright on AHE
ANTONIO LOPEZ DE SANTA ANA NO ESTUVO A LA ALTURA DE UN VERDADERO PRESIDENTE, AUNQUE EN AQUELLOS TIEMPOS NUESTRO PAIS ESTABA VIVIENDO APENAS SU NACIMIENTO COMO NACION INDEPENDIENTE.
Renuncia del Gral. Antonio López de Santa Anna  a la presidencia de México (12/agosto/1855) http://tlamatqui.blogspot.mx/2012/08/proclam-de-antonio-lopez-de-santa-anna.html
Jajaja!!! Voooyyyy!!! :D
BELLISIMA FOTO. SALUDOS.
@frikiskrew
¡Felicidades a los papás memexicanÃsimos!
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PLACES IN THE ANCIENT WORLD: Cuicuilco (Mexico)Â
CUICUILCO is an ancient settlement site in central Mexico, now located in southern Mexico City. Prominent in the late pre-Classic period, around 500 BCE, it is noted for its large circular temple mound, one of the earliest monumental structures in ancient Mesoamerica and influential on many later pyramid monuments built by the Maya and Aztecs amongst others. Buried in several metres of lava and abandoned Cuicuilco remains one of the most enigmatic early urban centres in the Americas.
Cuicuilco was inhabited just at the period when Mesoamerican villages were transforming into larger population centres which would in turn become the great cities of the region in later centuries. At its height the town may have had a population of up to 20,000 people, its prosperity based on the fertile land in the surrounding lagoon basin of the Mexico Valley.
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Article by Mark Cartwright on AHE