It would be the most truthful and accurate first hand account. It’s kind of why holocaust survivors are/were some of the most important and valuable people to listen to and learn from because they were actually there. It’s not history to then, it’s their life. It’s their childhood. It’s the way they grew up and to learn first hand from those who lived through horrific past events is vital in protecting our future.
Answer:
One ironic outcome of the immense wealth Spain acquired - and ultimately squandered - with the colonization of the New World was to make rich others. Great wealth allowed the Spanish kings to fight wars in Europe: against France, in the Netherlands, in Italy and against the Turks in the Mediterranean. But on the other hand, large amounts of those riches - gold, silver - ended in the pockets of the European bankers who had given credits to the Spanish kingdom. Because it lost some wars, Spain had to pay indemnizations and reparations to victors, too. At the same time, much of the treasuries belonging to Spain were stolen by British pirates who attacked and robbed the huge fleets of <em>galeones</em> transporting gold to the Spanish ports. As a Latin American historian once wrote, "Spain had the cow, but others drank the milk."
Explanation:
Manx
because the Manx language is used on a little island off of Britain (so it's not mainland)
Exaggeration.
Eye-Catching Headlines.
Sensational Language.
Anything that sells basically.