De Vaca had understood that to survive in the land he needed to assimilate.
Explanation:
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca was one of the first Spanish explores on the shores of Americas and one of the only our survivors from the Narváez expedition of 1527.
He was able to survive because he learnt to assimilate with the American natives.
He became a faith healer and earned the trust of the people of the lands and was able too hold out until he was able to get back to the Spanish in Mexico in 1536.
He was one of two southern senators who refused to sign the document.<span>
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Answer:
Yes, Alberto Fujimori, the former president of Peru.
Explanation:
He ruled from July 28, 1990 until he was impeached in November 22, 2000 after he was accused of embezzlement of government funds, war crimes against the insurgents, and general corruption. After he accusations began to become widespread, he fled Peru and took refuge in Japan. Japan and Peru did not have any extradition treaty. On top of this, he is a Japanese citizen, and it would go against Japanese law to extradict citizens.
Fujimori then resigned over fax, but the Peruvian government didn't accept it, and impeached him. He was extradited back to Peru from Chile in 2007, and convicted. He was pardoned in 2017, but then it got overturned in 2018 and he was ordered to return to prison.
Answer:
Ziggurat
Explanation:
Its purpose is to get the temple closer to the heavens, and provide access from the ground to it via steps. The Mesopotamians believed that these pyramid temples connected heaven and earth.
It was the Confederate cities of Atlanta and Savannah that were nearly burned to the ground late in the Civil War, since by this time the Union was implementing their harshest tactics in the hopes of forcing the South into submission.