The correct answer would be not as serious. The main reason why the conflicts in Central Asia are not as serious as those in Caucasus is that for a long time the religion was subdued by the rule of the Soviet Union. After the fall of the Soviet Union there has been an increase in the religious activity but nothing really major as it happened in the Caucasus.
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<span>You are probably looking for Juan Ponce de Leon 1474 – 1521. He was not actually a conquistador, but a gentleman volunteer on Columbus second voyage, later a governor in Hispaniola and later still an explorer. He explored Florida in 1513.
Cortes did not reach the mainland until 1519.
Hernando de Soto came to the new world in 1514.
Pizarro accompanied Balboa in his crossing of the Isthmus of Panama in 1513. But that is more Central America.
Cortes, de Soto and Pizarro were actual conquistadors.</span>
The vaquero (Spanish pronunciation: vaqueiro [vaˈkejɾu]) is a horse-mounted livestock herder of a tradition that originated on the Iberian Peninsula. Today the vaquero is still a part of the <span>doma vaquera,</span> the Spanish tradition of working riding. The vaquero traditions developed in Mexico from methodology brought to Mesoamerica from Spain also became the foundation for the North American cowboy.The vaqueros of the Americas were the horsemen and cattle herders of Spanish Mexico, who first came to California with the Jesuit priest Eusebio Kino in 1687, and later with expeditions in 1769 and the Juan Bautista de Anza expedition in 1774.[1] They were the first cowboys in the region.[2]
In the modern United States and Canada, remnants of two major and distinct vaquero traditions remain, known today as the "Texas" tradition and the "Spanish", "Vaquero", or "California" tradition. The popular "horse whisperer" style of natural horsemanship was originally developed by practitioners who were predominantly from California and the Northwestern states, clearly combining the attitudes and philosophy of the California vaquero with the equipment and outward look of the Texas cowboy. The natural horsemanship movement openly acknowledges much influence of the vaquero tradition.
The cowboys of the Great Basin still use the term "buckaroo", which may be a corruption of vaquero, to describe themselves and their tradition
Not sure where the applied answers are but I have this it would be both
<span>His accusers’ rhetoric is clumsy and awkward.
His rhetoric is more deliberate and well thought out.</span>
Operation jubilee or the dieppe raid