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Cadiz and Spain
Sardinia has Aegean sites, for example, at Abini near Teti ; and Spain has yielded objects recognized as Aegean from tombs near Cadiz and from Saragossa.
Their most famous colonies were Cadiz in today ’ s Spain and Carthage in today ’ s Tunisia.
* May 11 – Christopher Columbus leaves Cadiz, Spain for his fourth and final trip to the ' New World '.
France and Spain were allied, so the Spanish fleet based in Cadiz and Ferrol was also available.
Instead, he worried that the British were observing his manoeuvres, so on 11 August he sailed southward towards Cadiz on the southwestern coast of Spain.
* 1110 BC: Cadiz ( Gadir ) founded by Phoenicians in southwestern Spain.
* 1104 BC — Foundation of Cadiz, Spain.
He was initiated in 1803 in the Masonic Lodge Lautaro which operated in Cadiz, Spain.
The French troops marched to Madrid and then to Cadiz, ousting the Liberals with little fighting ( April to September 1823 ), and would remain in Spain for five years.
Sardinia has Aegean sites ( e. g. at Abini near Teti ) and Spain has yielded objects recognized as Aegean from tombs near Cadiz and from Saragossa.
The 1812 Cadiz Constitution, that was reinstated in Spain in 1820 after the successful Riego Revolt, established a constitutional monarchy, which greatly limited Ferdinand VII's powers.
At that time Cadiz was one of the most important Spanish sea ports, and Spain was preparing an armada there to invade England.
Field Marshal Don Henry Joseph O ' Donnell y Mareschal ( es: Don Enrique José O ' Donnell, I conde de la Bisbal ) ( 1769 in Cadiz, Spain – 1834 in Montpellier, France ), was a Spanish soldier who fought in the Peninsular War.
He is credited with the establishment of the first museum of natural history, the first metallurgical laboratory in Spain, and the observatory of Cadiz.
The history of the delegations traces back to 1812 with the enactment of the Constitution of Cadiz, the first democratic Constitution in Spain, having had different roles over the centuries, such as tight control from central government during the Franco dictatorship.
* 24px Cadiz, Spain
However, recent research suggests that the Lodge was founded in Cadiz, Spain, and that Miranda was not amongst its founders, as he himself was living in Paris at the time, from where he returned to London in January 1798.
Statue of Balbus in Cadiz, Spain
Moore commanded the squadron of four Royal Navy frigates-Indefatigable ( 44 ), Medusa ( 32 ), Lively ( 38 ) and Amphion ( 32 )-that captured a Spanish treasure fleet of four frigates-Medea ( 40 ), Clara ( 34 ), Fama ( 34 ) and Mercedes ( 36 )-carrying bullion from the Caribbean back to Spain off Cadiz in the Action of 5 October 1804.
During the earthquake of Lisbon, 1755, which was distinctly felt at Cadiz, he took observations and did much to allay the apprehensions of the public, for which he was ennobled by the king of Spain.
The Place de Trocadéro owes its name to the fortified position in Puerto Real, on the Bay of Cadiz in the south of Spain, which was captured in the Battle of Trocadero by French troops led by Louis-Antoine, Duke of Angoulême, Charles X's son in 1823.
He was also the designer, in partnership with Álvaro de Bazán, of the great galleons that were employed to carry the trade between Cadiz in Spain and Vera Cruz in Mexico.
The title Duke of Cadiz was a title used by the Royal House of Spain and had formerly been held by Alfonso's great-great-grandfather the Infante Francisco de Asís.
Prince Junio Valerio Scipione Borghese ( Artena, Province of Rome, 6 June 1906 – Cadiz, Spain, 26 August 1974 ), nicknamed The Black Prince, was an Italian Navy commander during the regime of Benito Mussolini's National Fascist Party and was a prominent hard-line fascist politician in post-war Italy.

Cadiz and ),
However, many of his works have been transcribed by Miguel Llobet and others for guitar, and many of his pieces such as Asturias ( Leyenda ), Granada, Sevilla, Cadiz, Cordoba, Cataluña, and the Tango in D are amongst the most important pieces for classical guitar.
:" Japhet, the son of Noah, had seven sons: they inhabited so, that, beginning at the mountains Taurus and Amanus, they proceeded along Asia, as far as the river Tanais ( Don ), and along Europe to Cadiz ; and settling themselves on the lands which they light upon, which none had inhabited before, they called the nations by their own names.
In Hispania, on the Atlantic coast at Gades ( the modern Cadiz ), Posidonius could observe tides much higher than in his native Mediterranean.
Anales de la Universidad de Cadiz, IX-X ( 1992-93 ), 39-51
* Burrington Goldsworthy ( c. 1705-1774 ), 18th century English Consul at Leghorn and later Cadiz
* Cadiz ( Albéniz ), a composition by Isaac Albéniz
The Barrington Atlas of the ancient world equates this site with modern Medina Sidonia-lying within the ancient Roman province of Turdetania some inland from the Southern Spanish coast, this site lay upon a hill c to the east of Gades ( modern Cadiz ), and to the west of the Besilus river.
He was probably born in Gades ( modern Cadiz ), possibly of Roman parents.
The crater was named after Louis Godin ( 28 February 1704 Paris-11 September 1760 Cadiz ), who was a French astronomer and member of the French Academy of Sciences.
* The second Cadiz ( D79 ), launched in 1944, was a Battle-class destroyer.
* PNS Khaibar ( 1944 ), Former British Battle Class destroyer HMS Cadiz ( D79 ); acquired by Pakistan Navy in 1956 ; sunk in Indo-Pakistan War of 1971
Cadiz was the commercial hub for export of French printed fabrics to India ), the Americas and the Antilles ( coffee, sugar, tobacco, American cotton ), and Africa ( the slave trade ), centered in Nantes.
* Europe-Aquileia, Athens, Augusta Treverorum ( Trier ), Gades ( Cadiz ), Ostia.
The stylish connotations of the name " Trocadero " derive from the Battle of Trocadero in the Bay of Cadiz, ( southern Spain ), the Battle of Trocadero was particularly bloody.

Cadiz and river
Scholars of the 19th century tended to interpret these titles as the names of distinct works covering separate voyages ; for example, Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology hypothesizes a voyage to Britain and Thule written about in " Ocean " and another from Cadiz to the Don river, written about in " Sail Around.
The river broadens out along its course, reaching its widest point at the Golfo de Cadiz.
For example, in 1587, Sir Francis Drake briefly approached the river after his successful raid at Cadiz.
The river empties into the Gulf of Cadiz between Ayamonte and Vila Real de Santo António, the two highly touristed regions of the Algarve and the sea-side of Andalusia There it forms a saltmarsh estuary and swamp.
: Japhet, the son of Noah, had seven sons: they inhabited so, that, beginning at the mountains Taurus and Amanus, they proceeded along Asia, as far as the river Tanais ( Don ), and along Europe to Cadiz ; and settling themselves on the lands which they light upon, which none had inhabited before, they called the nations by their own names.

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