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  1. Alfonso VII was the king of Leon and Castile from 1126 to 1157, son of Raymond of Burgundy and the grandson of Alfonso VI, whose imperial title he assumed. Though his reign saw the apogee of the imperial idea in medieval Spain and though he won notable victories against the Moors, he remains a.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Mar 26, 2015 · In his later years, he returned to town, moving to Hollywood and Hallandale Beach in the '50s and '60s before settling in a Collins Avenue condo, where he died in 1983 as an 80-year-old. These...

  3. The stones sat in a Brooklyn warehouse for 26 years until 1952, when Miami businessmen William Edgemon and Raymond Moss decided to buy them and turn them into a tourist attraction in North Miami Beach.

    • The Spanish Colonisation
    • The Battle For Florida
    • The Seminole Wars
    • The Foundation of Miami
    • Miami in The 20th Century
    • Cuban Emigration

    The first Westerners to arrive in Florida were Vicente Yánez Pinzón and Américo Vespuciowho, in 1498 made it to Chesapeake lake. Fifteen years later, on the 2nd April 1513, Juan Ponce de León arrived in Florida, which he named as such, arriving as he did on the day of "Pascua Florida" (literally Flowered Easter, referring to Easter Sunday). He had ...

    In 1562, a group of Huguenots fleeing France built "Fort Caroline" and claimed Florida for France. Their leader, Ribaut, was captured by Spanish forces and executed in his own fort. From the late 16th century onwards there were various battles between British and Spanish forces. Francis Drake plundered and burned St. Augustine in 1586, and the bord...

    Despite the constant fighting over Florida, where Miami stands today there were barely any westerners at the beginning of the 18th century, and the territory was occupied by the native Oconi, Mikasuki, Eufoula and Creec tribes, giving way to the Seminole people. The First Seminole War (1817-1819) was between the Seminoles and Spanish, precipitated ...

    With the end of the Seminole war, new colonies were set up in Miami, and were supplemented with soldiers attracted by the government's offer of free land. Some of the wealthier colonists, among the Julia Tuttle, had the idea to build a city and a hotel, and they convinced the magnate Henry Flagler to extend his rail network to Miami. The constructi...

    During the 20s, the permissive attitudes towards gambling and the lax application of prohibition meant that thousands moved to Miami from around the US, meaning that in just three yearsthe city doubled in size. Real estate and financial speculation mean that land prices quadrupled in five years, making the cost of living unsustainable, that is unti...

    In 1959, following the fall of the dictator Fulgencio Batista and the triumph of the Cuban Revolution, more than half a million Cubans arrived in Miami. The influx created what is known today as "Little Havana", and in 1980 there was a second wave, with 125,000 Cubans leaving the island, heading to Miami. Over the course of decades, the flow of Cub...

  4. www.miamibeachhistory.org › documents › BrochureHISTORY OF MIAMI BEACH

    In 1870 Henry Lum and son Charles arrived by sailboat on the large sandbar off the southeast Florida coast, and were so impressed by the island they landed on, that they bought from the federal government, for 25 cents an acre, most of the island and property further north.

  5. Dec 30, 2022 · By the early 1940's, Miami was on the way back. Many new hotels had been built, especially in Miami Beach, and the city was growing. World War II was responsible for accelerating the area's comeback. The history of Miami still resonates with the activities that took place here during the war.

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  7. miamibeachhistory.org › mbhistoryMiami Beach History

    Miami Beach History. In 1870 Henry Lum and son Charles arrived by sailboat on the large sandbar off the southeast Florida coast, and were so impressed by the island they landed on that they bought from the federal government, for $.25 an acre, most of the island and property further north.

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