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Pricing
13,000 BC
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First known human beings live in the Caribbean
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_1nafta.jpg
800 B.C.
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The people who call themselves Taíno, or “men of good,” arrive in the region. With great care for the earth, the Taínos are able to feed millions of people. No one in a community goes hungry. They play sports and recite poetry. They are great inventors and travel from island to island. One Spanish priest reported that he never saw two Taínos fighting.There are frequent skirmishes between Taínos and Caribs on nearby islands, but these threaten neither civilization.
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_tainos-03.jpg
Sept. 1, 1493 AD - October 31, 1493 AD
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The men left behind at La Navidad brutally mistreat the Taínos. They steal, take slaves and abused women. In response, the Taíno cacique, Caonabó, kills all the Spaniards on the island.
http://domoregooddeeds.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/spanish-torture-of-american-indians-engaving-by-theodor-de-bry-16th-century-library-of-congress-kraus-collection-of-sir-francis-drake.jpg?w=547&h=433
1542
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Bartolomé de las Casas writes that a mere 200 Taínos still live in Española. One scholar recently estimated that perhaps more than 3 million Taínos lived there when Columbus first arrived.
http://www.kislakfoundation.org/millennium-exhibit/pics/gannon/0178.jpg
1451 AD
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Columbus is born probably in the Italian port city, Genoa. At the time of his birth, there may be as many as 70 to 100 million people living in what will one day be called the Americas. They are of many nationalities, speaking perhaps 2,000 different languages.
http://italiandelightstours.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/riviera-pic2-e1323855565535.gif
1471 AD
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About this time, Columbus first goes to sea on a Genoese ship.
http://www.rmg.co.uk/explore/sea-and-ships/facts/explorers-and-leaders/upload/img_200/D2194.jpg
1484 AD
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Columbus first presents his idea to the king of Portugal for reaching the Indies by sailing west. The plan is rejected, not because the king’s advisors don’t believe the world is round, but because they think Columbus’s estimate of the distance is way too small.
http://www.biografiasyvidas.com/monografia/colon/fotos/colon_2.jpg
1486 AD
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Columbus first proposes a western voyage to Queen Isabella, whose advisors postpone any recommendation
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_monumento_a_colpctc3pctb3n_madrid_02b.jpg
1488 AD
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Columbus appeals again to the Portuguese king. At the same time, Bartolomé Dias claims Africa can be rounded by sea to get to the Indies. This eliminates Portugal’s interest in looking for a westward route.
http://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/bio_pics/dias-b.jpg
1490 AD
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Queen Isabella’s advisors urge the queen to reject Columbus’s proposal. But Isabella keeps Columbus on the royal payroll, offering him hope his proposal will eventually be granted.
http://www.josephsmithacademy.org/projects/images/1486-christopher-columbus-king-queen-01-226x350.jpg
April 1, 1492 AD
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Ferdinand and Isabella agree to Columbus’s westward voyage to the Indies. They also agree to his demands: 10% of all the wealth returned to Spain, the title of Admiral of the Ocean Sea, governor and viceroy of all the territory he discovers. All these titles are to be inherited by his heirs.
http://jamaicanechoes.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/columbus-explaning-plans-to-spanish-sovereigns.jpg
Aug. 3, 1492 AD
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Columbus departs from Palos in-stead of the port of Cadiz, which is filled with ships taking some 8,000 Jews into exile.
http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/assets/120519052507-garcia-columbus-voyage-story-top.jpg
Oct. 12, 1492 AD
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Juan Rodriguez Bermejo, a sailor on the Pinta, shouts, “Land, Land!” Columbus later claims he first spotted land and thus will collect the lifetime pension promised. The ships arrive at the island, Guanahaní, which Columbus claims for Ferdinand and Isabella. Columbus receives presents from the people he encounters and gives them some red caps, glass beads, and “many other things of little value.”The first thing he tries to ask the people is “if they had gold.”
http://cdn.superstock.com/1047/Preview/1047-325.jpg
Oct. 14, 1492 AD
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Columbus’s thoughts turn to slavery: “... When Your Highnesses so command, they [the Indians] can be carried off to Castile or held captive in the island itself, since with 50 men they would be all kept in subjection and forced to do whatever may be wished.”
http://thumbs.media.smithsonianmag.com//filer/Christopher-Columbus-631.jpg__800x600_q85_crop.jpg
Nov. 1, 1492 AD - Dec. 31, 1492 AD
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Columbus’s every move is determined by where he believes he can find gold. On December 23 he writes in his journal: “Our Lord in His Goodness guide me that I may find this gold, I mean their mine, for I have many here who say they know it.” Still, by mid-December Columbus has found very little gold.
https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRqOMb22vfcNibVX5OGNduapN57tyczTE_JLfuelLqIQXa2A1p5iQ
Nov. 12, 1492 AD
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Columbus kidnaps 10 Taínos: My men “brought seven head of women, small and large, and three children.”
http://cdn2.all-art.org/Visual_History/early_modern_period/6/columbus/21.jpg
Nov 17, 1492 AD
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Two of his captives escape.
Dec. 9, 1492 AD
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Columbus sails into the harbor of the island the Taíno people call Hayti. Its plains are “the loveliest in the world” and remind Columbus of Spain. He calls the island Española.
https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTwxgOJmkeseFs_tzc-6Cxf46P-Bj1uIMUwppSZ16pizAMwwXfz
Dec. 25, 1492 AD
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Columbus’s ship, the Santa Maria, hits rocks off Española. He is forced to abandon it. The Taíno cacique (leader), Guacanagarí, weeps when he hears of the shipwreck. Taínos help unload the ship “without the loss of a shoe string.” “They are,” Columbus writes, “a people so full of love and without greed... I believe there is no better race or better land in the world.”
http://www.pri.org/sites/default/files/8-SantaMaria-Alamy.jpg
Dec. 26, 1492 AD
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Realizing he will have to leave men behind, Columbus orders a fort and tower built. He writes that it is necessary to make the Indians realize that they must serve Spain’s king and queen “with love and fear.”
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a1/Construction_of_Navidad_fort_in_Hispaniola_(1493).jpg/200px-Construction_of_Navidad_fort_in_Hispaniola_(1493).jpg
Jan. 2, 1493 AD
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Columbus prepares to leave Hayti. He leaves behind 39 men and orders them “to dis-cover the mine of gold.”
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/05/13/article-2626656-1DC977AB00000578-673_634x414.jpg
Jan. 13, 1493 AD
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First reported skirmish between Spaniards and Indians: After landing on an island to trade for bows, Columbus writes that many Indians prepared “to assault the Christians and capture them.” The Spaniards “fell upon” them, “they gave an Indian a great slash on the buttocks and they wounded another in the breast with an arrow.” Columbus believes that these people were “Carib and that they eat men [though he offers no evidence].” He regrets he didn’t capture some to take back to Spain.
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_columbus-lan_12909_lg.gif
Feb. 15, 1493 AD
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Columbus returns with relatively little of value. In a letter written aboard ship, Columbus lies, saying that on Española, “there are many spices and great mines of gold and of other metals.”
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_columbus-indians-new-world.jpg
April 15, 1493 AD
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Columbus welcomed by Ferdinand and Isabella. They begin planning his second voyage. Of the six Indians brought to Spain, one would stay and die in two years. The others would leave with Columbus for Española and three would die enroute.
http://photos3.meetupstatic.com/photos/event/6/8/9/4/600_339386772.jpeg
May 28, 1493 AD
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The king and queen confirm that Columbus, his sons and his heirs will be Admiral and Viceroy and Governor of the islands and mainland discovered “now and forever.”
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_christopher_columbus_by_carl_von_piloty.png
Sept. 25, 1493 AD
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Columbus’s second voyage begins. His fleet includes 17 ships and between 1200 and 1500 men (no women). Pressure is high for Columbus to make good on his promises. At least some of the money to finance the voyage comes from wealth taken away from Spanish Jews.
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_christopher-columbus-voyage.jpg
Nov. 3, 1493 AD
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Columbus lands on Dominica. On Guadeloupe, his men go ashore “looting and destroying all they found,” according to Columbus’s son, Fernando. They capture 12 “very beautiful and plump” teenage Taíno girls.
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_1rsz_1landing_of_columbus_2.jpg
Nov. 15, 1493 AD
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Columbus’s crew trap a small group of Caribs in a harbor at what is now St. Croix. In defense, the Indians shoot arrows at the Spaniards, killing one and wounding one. The Indians are caught, and one is horribly mutilated, then killed, by the Spaniards.
http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/american_latino_heritage/photos/Columbus_Landing_Site_wmedia.jpg
Nov. 28, 1493 AD
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Columbus finds the fort at La Navidad burned.
http://www.history.org/Foundation/journal/Holiday07/images/Haiti34_r1.jpg
Feb. 1, 1494 AD
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Columbus sends 12 of the 17 ships back to Spain for supplies. Several dozen Indian slaves are taken aboard — “men and women and boys and girls,” he writes. He justifies this by writing that they are cannibals and thus slavery will more readily “secure the welfare of their souls.”Columbus recommends to the king and queen that supplies needed in the Indies could be paid for in slaves, “well made and of very good intel-ligence,” and that slave shipments could be taxed to raise money for Spain. Spanish priest Bartolomé de las Casas later writes that claims of cannibalism are used to “excuse the violence, cruelty, plunder and slaughter committed against the Indians every day.”
http://www.popularresistance.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Indians-and-Spanish-e1381709840631.jpg
Feb. 1, 1494 AD - March 31, 1494 AD
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In Isabella, Spaniards are dying of disease, and there is less food everyday. Columbus uses violence against Spaniards who dis-obey his orders to work. Any Spaniard found hiding gold is “well whipped.” Colonist Michele de Cuneo writes: “Some had their ears slit and some the nose, very pitiful to see.” Many blame Columbus, governor of the island, for their problems. Demoralized, many want to leave.
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-i7bThBrdtVk/UlgSrb-dlcI/AAAAAAAAABM/B-7LHYJOPGU/s1600/Image+4-+Columbus+punishes+the+rebellious+Spaniards.png
March 25, 1494 AD - April 7, 1494 AD
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Colum-bus is told that Indians are leaving their villages and that the cacique, Caonabó, is preparing to attack the fort at Isabella. Las Casas writes that Columbus “ordered Alonso de Hojeda to lead a squadron by land to the fort of Santo Tomas and spread terror among the Indians in order to show them how strong and powerful the Christians were.”
https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcS6fFheX7-VbRszHsUwAHjRRLPr9W2OtEjVyFWJln7PyYNHdxKvLw
April 9, 1494 AD
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Hojeda takes 400 men inland, captures a cacique and some relatives, accuses one of theft and has his ears publicly cut off. When Hojeda returns to Isabella with these and other prisoners, Columbus orders a crier to announce their public decapitation. Las Casas comments, “What a pretty way to promote justice, friendship, and make the Faith appealing — to capture a King in his own ter-ritory and sentence him, his brother and his nephew to death, for no fault of their own!”
http://d1jrw5jterzxwu.cloudfront.net/sites/default/files/article_media/columbus-dog-hunts.jpg
April 24, 1494 AD
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Columbus leaves Isabella to seek the mainland of the Indies.
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_columbus_letter_basel_1493_illustration_2.jpg
April 25, 1494 AD
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Columbus explores the coast of Jamaica. Andres Bernaldez, accompanying Columbus, writes of the island’s “extreme beauty.” Columbus sets loose a vicious dog against the Indians. Bernaldez writes that it “did them great damage, for a dog is the equal of 10 men against the Indians.”
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_eclipse_chistophe_colomb.jpg
June 12, 1494 AD
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Columbus, off the coast of Cuba, believes he has reached the mainland. The next day he begins his return to Española.
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_crudemap.jpg
September 14, 1494 AD
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Columbus reaches the southern coast of Española. Instead of returning to Isabella, Columbus heads to Puerto Rico to raid for Carib slaves. However, he becomes ill and his officers return the ships to Isabella.
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_frontpiece.jpg
1495
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Columbus establishes the tribute system. Every Taíno, 14 or older, is required to fill a hawk’s bell full of gold every 3 months. Those who comply are given copper tokens to wear around their necks. Where Columbus decides there is little gold, 25 pounds of spun cotton is required. The Spaniards cut the hands off those who do not comply; they are left to bleed to death. As las Casas writes, the tribute is “impossible and intolerable.”Columbus will soon replace the tribute system with outright slavery, though the Queen will rule that Indians forced to work must be paid “wages.” It is called the encomienda system, in which colonists are simply granted land and numbers of Taínos.
https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRqgWH3dmLEvXAQqt28HGPrM2YJ6lWaRqW9oC0YP0xDq4nJLxUg
Feb. 1, 1495 AD
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Columbus must be desperate to prove that his “enterprise” can be profitable. He rounds up 1600 Taínos — the same people he had earlier de-scribed as “so full of love and without greed.” Some 550 of them — “among the best males and females,” writes colonist Michele de Cuneo — are chained and taken to ships to be sent to Spain as slaves. “Of the rest who were left,” writes Cuneo, “the announcement went around that whoever wanted them could take as many as he pleased; and this was done.”
http://americanstatehypocrisy.files.wordpress.com/2013/10/genocide2.jpg
March 24, 1495 AD
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Columbus, and his brothers Diego and Bartolomé, who had arrived earlier, send an armed force to the mountains to put down Taíno resistance to Spanish brutality. The force includes 200 soldiers in full armor, 20 vicious dogs and 20 mounted cavalry. The Spaniards confront a large number of Taínos in a valley 10 miles south of Isabella, attack them and, according to Columbus’s son, “with God’s aid soon gained a complete victory, killing many Indians and capturing others who were also killed.”
https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQg5AQe-Qy7moArcmdkWy6gESVpSl9Fy2Q2_L9vO5ElA5dTJom3Sg
Oct. 1, 1495 AD
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Responding to reports of Columbus’s misrule, the king and queen send an investigator to Española.
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/29496/29496-h/images/illus016.jpg
March 1, 1496 AD
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Columbus departs for Spain. Two ships make the journey. Onto them, Columbus forces 30 Taíno prisoners, including the cacique, Caonabó, who led the first resistance to Spanish rule in Española. It takes 3 months to make the voyage. Caonabó dies enroute; no one knows how many others also die. Columbus arrives and awaits an answer from the king and queen to his request for a third voyage.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v51/MarieAlice/Scenery%20Pictures/christopher-columbus-4.jpg
July 1, 1496 AD
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Ferdinand and Isabella agree to see Colum-bus. He sets out for Burgos with his Taíno slaves. Co-lumbus promises to locate the mainland so that it will come under Spanish rather than Portuguese control. The king and queen will not agree to Columbus’s plans for almost two years.
https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQjJgEq9_lxVLx3Sf8NGuX9apn4KcGro7CBhjB-57X2PnNwze6v
May 30, 1498 AD
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Columbus’s third voyage begins. Three ships head directly for Española, another three, with Columbus, travel farther south.
http://8c4625.medialib.glogster.com/media/941f4efed73a47a1b23e6899a08ab4ea3c720c846331e8245726c654637e1272/nina-pinta-santamaria.jpg
July 31, 1498 AD
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Columbus sails past and names Trinidad. He saw what is today Venezuela, but didn’t realize that it was the mainland.
http://www.history.com/s3static/video-thumbnails/AETN-History_Prod/24/144/History_Columbus_Ships_SF_still_624x352.jpg
Aug. 15, 1498 AD
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Columbus lands in Española. The admiral finds Spanish colonists in rebellion against his brothers’ rule. He backs down and offers amnesty to anyone who will return to Spain or will accept free land.
http://dts4h52y4acn7.cloudfront.net/514475070626100598BA8BBE3F2BD0E2f.png
1500 AD
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By now the Spaniards have established at least seven forts in Española and at least 340 gallows.
http://cdn.obsidianportal.com/assets/236875/Santo_Domingo.jpg
Aug. 1, 1500 AD
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The king and queen, upset over the negative reports of Columbus’s bad government, though not his mistreatment of Taínos, send a com-missioner to take charge in Española. The commis-sioner arrives amid another uprising against the Columbus brothers. He arrests them and in October sends them to Spain for trial.
http://www.picresize.com/images/rsz_espanola.jpg
Oct. 30, 1500 AD
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Columbus arrives in Cadiz in chains. A few months later, he presents his case to the king and queen. He demands he be reinstated governor. He will make one more voyage but will never regain his power.
http://www.heritage-history.com/books/haaren/modern/zpage027.gif
May 20, 1506 AD
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Columbus dies in Valladolid, Spain.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3f/The_death_of_Columbus.jpg
Nov. 1, 1994 AD
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Returning to Spain, mutineers against Columbus complain to the king and queen. They say there is no gold and that the enterprise is a joke.
http://imgc.allpostersimages.com/images/P-473-488-90/80/8011/M3O6300Z/posters/andrew-melrose-mutiny-aboard-columbus-ship-the-santa-maria.jpg
1453 AD
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Constantinople (now Istanbul) falls to the Ottoman Turks who make it the capital of their empire. For European merchants, trade with Asia becomes more difficult.
http://gdb.rferl.org/059A92BD-D89A-42BD-BA30-45AE79479EFF_w640_r1_s.jpg
1455 AD
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Christian Castile [Spain] begins attacks on Granada in Andulasia, the last province under Arab/Islamic rule in Spain. The Arabs (called “Moors” by European Christians) had ruled the Iberian peninsula for eight centuries.
http://image.wikifoundry.com/image/1/_8mAso0sDcMMlx8o1OwXgA26967/GW365H219
1483 AD
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Under King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, the Inquisition intensifies in the Christian-reconquered areas of Spain. The Inquisition aims at rooting out Muslims and Jews who had converted to Christianity but whose conversion the Inquisition deems insincere. Before it is over, three centuries later, thousands will die, with an estimated three million people driven into exile.
http://users.humboldt.edu/ogayle/SpanishInquisition.png
Jan. 2, 1492 AD
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The Arab rulers and their court surrender in Granada. According to the surrender agreement, the inhabitants of Muslim Spain have until the beginning of 1495 to decide between living under Christian rule or exile. Those who choose to stay begin to feel the threat of the Inquisition immediately, and in 1498 official inquisitors come, and forced conversions to Christianity begin.
http://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/lookandlearn-preview/M/M002/M002880.jpg
March 30, 1492 AD
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Ferdinand and Isabella order all Jews to leave Spain.
http://www.sephardicstudies.org/images/decree.jpg
Aug. 2, 1492 AD
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Deadline for Jews to leave Spain. Between 120,000 and 150,000 are forced out, able to take only what they can carry. They must leave all their gold, silver, jewels and money for the King and Queen.
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/images/Turkey/welcome.jpg