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Hernando De Soto: Wealthy Conquistador - Fast Facts | History
Hernando De Soto began his career in exploration at age 14 when he traveled to the West Indies. Find out how he became known as the first European to discover the Mississippi River in this video.
Check out exclusive HISTORY content:
Website - http://www.history.com?cmpid=Social_YouTube_HistHome
Twitter - https://twitter.com/history
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/History
Bio Shorts
Season 1
Episode 1
Biography features in-depth profiles of the exceptional people whose lives and times stir our imagination. An Emmy award-winning documentary series, Biography thrives on rich details, fascinating portraits and historical accuracy, seasoned with insider insights and observations.
HISTORY®, now reaching more than 98 million homes, is the leading destination for award-winning original se...
published: 02 Feb 2016
-
Hernando de Soto - Explorer | Mini Bio | BIO
Watch a short biography video of Hernando de Soto, the Spanish conquistador who discovered the Mississippi River. #Biography
Subscribe for more Biography: http://aetv.us/2AsWMPH
Delve deeper into Biography on our site:
http://www.biography.com
Follow Biography for more surprising stories from fascinating lives:
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Biography
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/biography
Twitter - https://twitter.com/biography
Biography.com captures the most gripping, surprising, and fascinating stories about famous people: The biggest break. The defining opportunity. The most shattering failure. The unexpected connection. The decision that changed everything. With over 7,000 biographies and daily features that highlight newsworthy and compelling points-of-view, we ar...
published: 08 Jul 2013
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Hernando De Soto: Dark Legacy Of The Medieval Explorer | Death March Of De Soto | Chronicle
Romantic visions of the explorer Hernando de Soto continue to celebrate the conquistador's arrival in North America 500 years ago as one of the most important events in the history of mankind. But archaeology tells a darker story.
As they chart the conquistador's trail of death and human destruction from Florida's Gulf Coast to the mouth of the Mississippi, archeologists are not only discovering lost Native American cultures, but their excavations are also confirming the frightening truth of just how these people perished.
Welcome to Chronicle; your home for all things medieval history! With documentaries covering everything from the collapse of the Roman Empire to the beginnings of the Renaissance, from Hastings to Charlemagne, we'll be exploring everything the Middle Ages have to offer...
published: 22 Jan 2022
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De Soto's Expedition into the American Southeast, Part 1
Nearly seven decades before the settlement at Jamestown was founded, Hernando de Soto led an expedition through the American southeast, visiting locations that comprise of almost every modern American southeast state. De Soto's expedition was told best by an unnamed Portuguese sailor who wrote about the expedition. The treatment of the natives by de Soto was consistent, but the conditions and culture of each village he visited varied greatly. What, if anything, did de Soto leave behind as a legacy?
Image of Hernando de Soto courtesy of: John Sartain
Read Expedition by an unnamed Portuguese man attending the expedition: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/2066
Read Relation of the Conquest of Florida Presented to the King of Spain in 1544: https://content.wisco...
published: 25 Jan 2021
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Hernando de Soto Knows How To Make the Third World Richer than the First
The Peruvian economist says blockchain technologies and social media will transform the planet by securing property rights.
Subscribe to our YouTube channel: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Reason.Magazine/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/reason
Subscribe to our podcast at iTunes: https://goo.gl/az3a7a
Reason is the planet's leading source of news, politics, and culture from a libertarian perspective. Go to reason.com for a point of view you won't get from legacy media and old left-right opinion magazines.
----------------
In the spring of 1989, Chinese students occupied Tiananmen Square, erected a replica of the Statue of Liberty, and called for democracy and individual rights. By the fall, people living in East Germany took hammers ...
published: 13 Jul 2018
-
Hernando De Soto in America
This is the park film shown at De Soto National Memorial, Bradenton FL.
published: 27 Jun 2018
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What Really Happened at the Hernando de Soto Bridge?
In May of 2021, inspectors on the I-40 Mississippi River Bridge near Memphis, Tennessee discovered a major crack in a structural member. They immediately contacted emergency managers to shut down this key crossing to vehicle traffic above and maritime traffic below. This video provides a summary of the event, including a discussion on arch bridges, fatigue in steel members, and national bridge inspection standards.
Errata:
(1) 8:38 "at minimum, an arm's length away" should be "at maximum, an arm's length away"
(2) 1:14 New Madrid is usually pronounced MA-drid, not ma-DRID.
(3) 4:55 ”It’s hard to understate the severity” should be “overstate”
Watch this video and the entire Practical Engineering catalog ad-free on Nebula: https://go.nebula.tv/practical-engineering
Practical Engineering i...
published: 15 Jun 2021
-
Hernando de Soto
The Daily Dose provides microlearning history documentaries like this one delivered to your inbox daily: https://dailydosedocumentary.com
We strive for accuracy and unbiased fairness, but if you spot something that doesn’t look right please submit a correction suggestion here: https://forms.gle/UtRUTvgMK3HZsyDJA
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#documentary #history #biography
Today's Daily Dose short biography film covers the ...
published: 22 May 2023
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Following Hernando de Soto through La Florida | Georgia Stories
On this episode of Georgia Stories; Hernando de Soto and his men, already rich from fighting with the Incas in South America, arrived in La Florida searching for gold. Jerald Milanich, an archaeologist at the University of Florida, explains the conquistadors’ success.
Original Air Date: 01/08/1994
For standards, timelines, and supplemental materials, visit our website at http://www.gpb.org/georgiastories
published: 01 Nov 2019
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Expedition Florida: Hernando de Soto’s Florida Trail
In 1539, Hernando de Soto and his expedition sailed from Europe to Florida. De Soto traveled from the East Coast through Alachua Country on a journey to North Florida in search of land to establish a home base for his excursions. Produced in 2002 as part of the “Expedition Florida: Wild Alachua” documentary, the video features Florida Museum of Natural History Distinguished Curator Emeritus in Archaeology Jerald Milanich, who describes de Soto’s journey and explains his interactions with the Potano Indians.
published: 05 May 2015
3:24
Hernando De Soto: Wealthy Conquistador - Fast Facts | History
Hernando De Soto began his career in exploration at age 14 when he traveled to the West Indies. Find out how he became known as the first European to discover t...
Hernando De Soto began his career in exploration at age 14 when he traveled to the West Indies. Find out how he became known as the first European to discover the Mississippi River in this video.
Check out exclusive HISTORY content:
Website - http://www.history.com?cmpid=Social_YouTube_HistHome
Twitter - https://twitter.com/history
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/History
Bio Shorts
Season 1
Episode 1
Biography features in-depth profiles of the exceptional people whose lives and times stir our imagination. An Emmy award-winning documentary series, Biography thrives on rich details, fascinating portraits and historical accuracy, seasoned with insider insights and observations.
HISTORY®, now reaching more than 98 million homes, is the leading destination for award-winning original series and specials that connect viewers with history in an informative, immersive, and entertaining manner across all platforms. The network’s all-original programming slate features a roster of hit series, epic miniseries, and scripted event programming. Visit us at HISTORY.com for more info.
https://wn.com/Hernando_De_Soto_Wealthy_Conquistador_Fast_Facts_|_History
Hernando De Soto began his career in exploration at age 14 when he traveled to the West Indies. Find out how he became known as the first European to discover the Mississippi River in this video.
Check out exclusive HISTORY content:
Website - http://www.history.com?cmpid=Social_YouTube_HistHome
Twitter - https://twitter.com/history
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/History
Bio Shorts
Season 1
Episode 1
Biography features in-depth profiles of the exceptional people whose lives and times stir our imagination. An Emmy award-winning documentary series, Biography thrives on rich details, fascinating portraits and historical accuracy, seasoned with insider insights and observations.
HISTORY®, now reaching more than 98 million homes, is the leading destination for award-winning original series and specials that connect viewers with history in an informative, immersive, and entertaining manner across all platforms. The network’s all-original programming slate features a roster of hit series, epic miniseries, and scripted event programming. Visit us at HISTORY.com for more info.
- published: 02 Feb 2016
- views: 143881
3:13
Hernando de Soto - Explorer | Mini Bio | BIO
Watch a short biography video of Hernando de Soto, the Spanish conquistador who discovered the Mississippi River. #Biography
Subscribe for more Biography: http:...
Watch a short biography video of Hernando de Soto, the Spanish conquistador who discovered the Mississippi River. #Biography
Subscribe for more Biography: http://aetv.us/2AsWMPH
Delve deeper into Biography on our site:
http://www.biography.com
Follow Biography for more surprising stories from fascinating lives:
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Biography
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/biography
Twitter - https://twitter.com/biography
Biography.com captures the most gripping, surprising, and fascinating stories about famous people: The biggest break. The defining opportunity. The most shattering failure. The unexpected connection. The decision that changed everything. With over 7,000 biographies and daily features that highlight newsworthy and compelling points-of-view, we are the digital source for true stories about people that matter.
Hernando de Soto - Explorer | Mini Bio | BIO
https://www.youtube.com/user/BiographyChannel
https://wn.com/Hernando_De_Soto_Explorer_|_Mini_Bio_|_Bio
Watch a short biography video of Hernando de Soto, the Spanish conquistador who discovered the Mississippi River. #Biography
Subscribe for more Biography: http://aetv.us/2AsWMPH
Delve deeper into Biography on our site:
http://www.biography.com
Follow Biography for more surprising stories from fascinating lives:
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Biography
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/biography
Twitter - https://twitter.com/biography
Biography.com captures the most gripping, surprising, and fascinating stories about famous people: The biggest break. The defining opportunity. The most shattering failure. The unexpected connection. The decision that changed everything. With over 7,000 biographies and daily features that highlight newsworthy and compelling points-of-view, we are the digital source for true stories about people that matter.
Hernando de Soto - Explorer | Mini Bio | BIO
https://www.youtube.com/user/BiographyChannel
- published: 08 Jul 2013
- views: 120064
21:29
Hernando De Soto: Dark Legacy Of The Medieval Explorer | Death March Of De Soto | Chronicle
Romantic visions of the explorer Hernando de Soto continue to celebrate the conquistador's arrival in North America 500 years ago as one of the most important e...
Romantic visions of the explorer Hernando de Soto continue to celebrate the conquistador's arrival in North America 500 years ago as one of the most important events in the history of mankind. But archaeology tells a darker story.
As they chart the conquistador's trail of death and human destruction from Florida's Gulf Coast to the mouth of the Mississippi, archeologists are not only discovering lost Native American cultures, but their excavations are also confirming the frightening truth of just how these people perished.
Welcome to Chronicle; your home for all things medieval history! With documentaries covering everything from the collapse of the Roman Empire to the beginnings of the Renaissance, from Hastings to Charlemagne, we'll be exploring everything the Middle Ages have to offer.
Subscribe now so you don't miss out!
Chronicle is part of the History Hit Network. To get in touch please email owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com.
It's like Netflix for history... 📺 Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service and get 50% off using the code 'CHRONICLE' 👉 https://bit.ly/3iVCZNl
https://wn.com/Hernando_De_Soto_Dark_Legacy_Of_The_Medieval_Explorer_|_Death_March_Of_De_Soto_|_Chronicle
Romantic visions of the explorer Hernando de Soto continue to celebrate the conquistador's arrival in North America 500 years ago as one of the most important events in the history of mankind. But archaeology tells a darker story.
As they chart the conquistador's trail of death and human destruction from Florida's Gulf Coast to the mouth of the Mississippi, archeologists are not only discovering lost Native American cultures, but their excavations are also confirming the frightening truth of just how these people perished.
Welcome to Chronicle; your home for all things medieval history! With documentaries covering everything from the collapse of the Roman Empire to the beginnings of the Renaissance, from Hastings to Charlemagne, we'll be exploring everything the Middle Ages have to offer.
Subscribe now so you don't miss out!
Chronicle is part of the History Hit Network. To get in touch please email owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com.
It's like Netflix for history... 📺 Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service and get 50% off using the code 'CHRONICLE' 👉 https://bit.ly/3iVCZNl
- published: 22 Jan 2022
- views: 17233
21:45
De Soto's Expedition into the American Southeast, Part 1
Nearly seven decades before the settlement at Jamestown was founded, Hernando de Soto led an expedition through the American southeast, visiting locations that ...
Nearly seven decades before the settlement at Jamestown was founded, Hernando de Soto led an expedition through the American southeast, visiting locations that comprise of almost every modern American southeast state. De Soto's expedition was told best by an unnamed Portuguese sailor who wrote about the expedition. The treatment of the natives by de Soto was consistent, but the conditions and culture of each village he visited varied greatly. What, if anything, did de Soto leave behind as a legacy?
Image of Hernando de Soto courtesy of: John Sartain
Read Expedition by an unnamed Portuguese man attending the expedition: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/2066
Read Relation of the Conquest of Florida Presented to the King of Spain in 1544: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/2066
Read A Narrative of the Expedition by De Soto’s personal secretary: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/3044
Read A Letter Written by De Soto to the Justice and Board of Magistrates in Santiago, Cuba: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/2162
Fife and Drum by Kevin MacLeod
Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3748-fife-and-drum
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
https://wn.com/De_Soto's_Expedition_Into_The_American_Southeast,_Part_1
Nearly seven decades before the settlement at Jamestown was founded, Hernando de Soto led an expedition through the American southeast, visiting locations that comprise of almost every modern American southeast state. De Soto's expedition was told best by an unnamed Portuguese sailor who wrote about the expedition. The treatment of the natives by de Soto was consistent, but the conditions and culture of each village he visited varied greatly. What, if anything, did de Soto leave behind as a legacy?
Image of Hernando de Soto courtesy of: John Sartain
Read Expedition by an unnamed Portuguese man attending the expedition: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/2066
Read Relation of the Conquest of Florida Presented to the King of Spain in 1544: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/2066
Read A Narrative of the Expedition by De Soto’s personal secretary: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/3044
Read A Letter Written by De Soto to the Justice and Board of Magistrates in Santiago, Cuba: https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/aj/id/2162
Fife and Drum by Kevin MacLeod
Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3748-fife-and-drum
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- published: 25 Jan 2021
- views: 19226
20:52
Hernando de Soto Knows How To Make the Third World Richer than the First
The Peruvian economist says blockchain technologies and social media will transform the planet by securing property rights.
Subscribe to our YouTube channel: h...
The Peruvian economist says blockchain technologies and social media will transform the planet by securing property rights.
Subscribe to our YouTube channel: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Reason.Magazine/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/reason
Subscribe to our podcast at iTunes: https://goo.gl/az3a7a
Reason is the planet's leading source of news, politics, and culture from a libertarian perspective. Go to reason.com for a point of view you won't get from legacy media and old left-right opinion magazines.
----------------
In the spring of 1989, Chinese students occupied Tiananmen Square, erected a replica of the Statue of Liberty, and called for democracy and individual rights. By the fall, people living in East Germany took hammers and chisels to the Berlin Wall, unleashing a wave of revolutions that ultimately led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. It was an auspicious year for human freedom.
Nineteen eighty-nine was also the year that Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto published The Other Path: The Invisible Revolution in The Third World, which radically challenged conventional wisdom about the underlying cause of persistent poverty in the post-colonial landscape. Drawing on his extensive field work with the Peruvian-based think tank the Institute for Liberty and Democracy, de Soto argued that people were pushed into the black market and wider informal economy because governments refused to recognize, document, and promote legal ownership of land and other assets.
Without clear title and the right to transfer property, common farmers understandably refused to invest much in the land they tilled, and they couldn't use it as collateral. This created what de Soto later called "citadels of dead capital" with value that could never be fully accessed.
No one, he argued, would plan for the future if everything they accumulated could just be taken away. As much an activist as an intellectual, De Soto has been called "the world's most important living economist" by former President Bill Clinton. He is credited with changing policy in Peru and elsewhere by pushing governments to create property regimes that are public, transferable, and secure. His latest endeavor is a partnership with Overstock.com founder Patrick Byrne and others to use blockchain technology and social media to create totally public and perfectly transparent records of ownership.
Reason's Nick Gillespie caught up with de Soto in Washington, D.C. in June, where he received the Competitive Enterprise Institute's Julian L. Simon Memorial Award, named for the late free-market economist who believed that "mankind is the ultimate resource."
'Subdivision of the Masses' by Philipp Weigl is licensed under CC BY 4.0
'By Grace' by Podington Bear is licensed under CC BY NC 3.0
'Garden of Untamed Roses (Act II)' by Lloyd Rogers is licensed under PD
Interview edited by Ian Keyser. Open edited by Todd Krainin.
Clips from The Power of the Poor with Hernando de Soto courtesy of Free to Choose Media.
https://wn.com/Hernando_De_Soto_Knows_How_To_Make_The_Third_World_Richer_Than_The_First
The Peruvian economist says blockchain technologies and social media will transform the planet by securing property rights.
Subscribe to our YouTube channel: http://youtube.com/reasontv
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Reason.Magazine/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/reason
Subscribe to our podcast at iTunes: https://goo.gl/az3a7a
Reason is the planet's leading source of news, politics, and culture from a libertarian perspective. Go to reason.com for a point of view you won't get from legacy media and old left-right opinion magazines.
----------------
In the spring of 1989, Chinese students occupied Tiananmen Square, erected a replica of the Statue of Liberty, and called for democracy and individual rights. By the fall, people living in East Germany took hammers and chisels to the Berlin Wall, unleashing a wave of revolutions that ultimately led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. It was an auspicious year for human freedom.
Nineteen eighty-nine was also the year that Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto published The Other Path: The Invisible Revolution in The Third World, which radically challenged conventional wisdom about the underlying cause of persistent poverty in the post-colonial landscape. Drawing on his extensive field work with the Peruvian-based think tank the Institute for Liberty and Democracy, de Soto argued that people were pushed into the black market and wider informal economy because governments refused to recognize, document, and promote legal ownership of land and other assets.
Without clear title and the right to transfer property, common farmers understandably refused to invest much in the land they tilled, and they couldn't use it as collateral. This created what de Soto later called "citadels of dead capital" with value that could never be fully accessed.
No one, he argued, would plan for the future if everything they accumulated could just be taken away. As much an activist as an intellectual, De Soto has been called "the world's most important living economist" by former President Bill Clinton. He is credited with changing policy in Peru and elsewhere by pushing governments to create property regimes that are public, transferable, and secure. His latest endeavor is a partnership with Overstock.com founder Patrick Byrne and others to use blockchain technology and social media to create totally public and perfectly transparent records of ownership.
Reason's Nick Gillespie caught up with de Soto in Washington, D.C. in June, where he received the Competitive Enterprise Institute's Julian L. Simon Memorial Award, named for the late free-market economist who believed that "mankind is the ultimate resource."
'Subdivision of the Masses' by Philipp Weigl is licensed under CC BY 4.0
'By Grace' by Podington Bear is licensed under CC BY NC 3.0
'Garden of Untamed Roses (Act II)' by Lloyd Rogers is licensed under PD
Interview edited by Ian Keyser. Open edited by Todd Krainin.
Clips from The Power of the Poor with Hernando de Soto courtesy of Free to Choose Media.
- published: 13 Jul 2018
- views: 38098
21:06
Hernando De Soto in America
This is the park film shown at De Soto National Memorial, Bradenton FL.
This is the park film shown at De Soto National Memorial, Bradenton FL.
https://wn.com/Hernando_De_Soto_In_America
This is the park film shown at De Soto National Memorial, Bradenton FL.
- published: 27 Jun 2018
- views: 24945
12:55
What Really Happened at the Hernando de Soto Bridge?
In May of 2021, inspectors on the I-40 Mississippi River Bridge near Memphis, Tennessee discovered a major crack in a structural member. They immediately contac...
In May of 2021, inspectors on the I-40 Mississippi River Bridge near Memphis, Tennessee discovered a major crack in a structural member. They immediately contacted emergency managers to shut down this key crossing to vehicle traffic above and maritime traffic below. This video provides a summary of the event, including a discussion on arch bridges, fatigue in steel members, and national bridge inspection standards.
Errata:
(1) 8:38 "at minimum, an arm's length away" should be "at maximum, an arm's length away"
(2) 1:14 New Madrid is usually pronounced MA-drid, not ma-DRID.
(3) 4:55 ”It’s hard to understate the severity” should be “overstate”
Watch this video and the entire Practical Engineering catalog ad-free on Nebula: https://go.nebula.tv/practical-engineering
Practical Engineering is a YouTube channel about infrastructure and the human-made world around us. Hosted, written, and produced by Grady Hillhouse. We have new videos posted regularly, so please subscribe for updates. If you enjoyed the video, hit that ‘like’ button, give us a comment, or watch another of our videos!
CONNECT WITH ME
____________________________________
Website: http://practical.engineering
Twitter: https://twitter.com/HillhouseGrady
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/practicalengineering
Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/PracticalEngineering
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PracticalEngineerGrady
Patreon: http://patreon.com/PracticalEngineering
SPONSORSHIP INQUIRIES
____________________________________
Please email my agent at practicalengineering@standard.tv
DISCLAIMER
____________________________________
This is not engineering advice. Everything here is for informational and entertainment purposes only. Contact an engineer licensed to practice in your area if you need professional advice or services. All non-licensed clips are used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes.
SPECIAL THANKS
____________________________________
Stock video and imagery provided by Getty Images, Shutterstock, and Videoblocks.
Some imagery provided by ARDOT and TDOT via Twitter.
Tonic and Energy by Elexive is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6fBPdu8w9U
Producer/Host: Grady Hillhouse
Assistant Producer: Wesley Crump
https://wn.com/What_Really_Happened_At_The_Hernando_De_Soto_Bridge
In May of 2021, inspectors on the I-40 Mississippi River Bridge near Memphis, Tennessee discovered a major crack in a structural member. They immediately contacted emergency managers to shut down this key crossing to vehicle traffic above and maritime traffic below. This video provides a summary of the event, including a discussion on arch bridges, fatigue in steel members, and national bridge inspection standards.
Errata:
(1) 8:38 "at minimum, an arm's length away" should be "at maximum, an arm's length away"
(2) 1:14 New Madrid is usually pronounced MA-drid, not ma-DRID.
(3) 4:55 ”It’s hard to understate the severity” should be “overstate”
Watch this video and the entire Practical Engineering catalog ad-free on Nebula: https://go.nebula.tv/practical-engineering
Practical Engineering is a YouTube channel about infrastructure and the human-made world around us. Hosted, written, and produced by Grady Hillhouse. We have new videos posted regularly, so please subscribe for updates. If you enjoyed the video, hit that ‘like’ button, give us a comment, or watch another of our videos!
CONNECT WITH ME
____________________________________
Website: http://practical.engineering
Twitter: https://twitter.com/HillhouseGrady
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/practicalengineering
Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/PracticalEngineering
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PracticalEngineerGrady
Patreon: http://patreon.com/PracticalEngineering
SPONSORSHIP INQUIRIES
____________________________________
Please email my agent at practicalengineering@standard.tv
DISCLAIMER
____________________________________
This is not engineering advice. Everything here is for informational and entertainment purposes only. Contact an engineer licensed to practice in your area if you need professional advice or services. All non-licensed clips are used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes.
SPECIAL THANKS
____________________________________
Stock video and imagery provided by Getty Images, Shutterstock, and Videoblocks.
Some imagery provided by ARDOT and TDOT via Twitter.
Tonic and Energy by Elexive is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6fBPdu8w9U
Producer/Host: Grady Hillhouse
Assistant Producer: Wesley Crump
- published: 15 Jun 2021
- views: 2901977
3:38
Hernando de Soto
The Daily Dose provides microlearning history documentaries like this one delivered to your inbox daily: https://dailydosedocumentary.com
We strive for accurac...
The Daily Dose provides microlearning history documentaries like this one delivered to your inbox daily: https://dailydosedocumentary.com
We strive for accuracy and unbiased fairness, but if you spot something that doesn’t look right please submit a correction suggestion here: https://forms.gle/UtRUTvgMK3HZsyDJA
Learn more: https://dailydosedocumentary.com/hernando-de-soto/
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#documentary #history #biography
Today's Daily Dose short biography film covers the life and explorations of Hernando de Soto, who became one of the wealthiest conquistadors of his time. The filmmaker has included the original voice over script to further assist your understanding:
Today on The Daily Dose, Hernando de Soto.
Dreaming of making his fortune in the New World, at fourteen years of age, Hernando de Soto set sail for the West Indies in 1514 under the command of Pedro Arias Dávila, earning a small fortune during Davila’s later conquest of Panama and Nicaragua. Sixteen years after his departure from Seville Spain, de Soto had become one of the leading slave traders in Nicaragua, as well as one of the wealthiest men in present-day Central America. In 1531, de Soto teamed up with Francisco Pizarro on an expedition to northwestern Colombia, in pursuit of a rumored cache of gold in the region.
A year later de Soto signed on as Pizarro’s chief lieutenant during the explorer’s conquest of Peru, defeating the Inca people at Cajamarca in November of 1532, later capturing the last Incan emperor Atahualpa before executing him in 1533, despite a large ransom payment by the Inca people to spare the emperor’s life. Growing ever wealthier when the ransom gold was divided, de Soto was later named lieutenant governor of Cuzco, before assisting Pizarro in the founding of Lima in 1535. A year later, de Soto returned home to Spain as one of the wealthiest conquistadors of his time, marrying Dávila’s daughter before accepting a royal commission as governor of Cuba, at the same time accepting the challenge of settling La Florida, which had first been explored by Juan Ponce de Leon.
Sailing from Spain in April of 1538, with 10 ships and 700 men, after spending time in Cuba, de Soto landed at Tampa Bay in May of 1539, setting up his winter quarters near present-day Tallahassee. During the spring of 1540, de Soto and his men explored present-day Georgia, the Carolinas and Tennessee, and after no gold was discovered in the region, de Soto headed south to rendezvous with his ships near Mobile Bay, coming under attack by hostile Indians in October of that same year, which caused egregious casualties on both sides. Sighting the Mississippi River in mid-1541, the ever-ambitious de Soto traversed Arkansas and Louisiana by early 1542, before passing away on May 21st of 1542, after succumbing to a fever. His unfinished expedition would be led by his successor, Luis de Moscoso Alvarado, which finally reached Mexico in 1543, with nearly half of de Soto’s original body of men lost to disease, illness and hostile attacks by Native Americans, making the exploits of Hernando de Soto, some of the boldest expeditions during the Age of Exploration.
And there you have it, Hernando de Soto, today on The Daily Dose.
https://wn.com/Hernando_De_Soto
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#documentary #history #biography
Today's Daily Dose short biography film covers the life and explorations of Hernando de Soto, who became one of the wealthiest conquistadors of his time. The filmmaker has included the original voice over script to further assist your understanding:
Today on The Daily Dose, Hernando de Soto.
Dreaming of making his fortune in the New World, at fourteen years of age, Hernando de Soto set sail for the West Indies in 1514 under the command of Pedro Arias Dávila, earning a small fortune during Davila’s later conquest of Panama and Nicaragua. Sixteen years after his departure from Seville Spain, de Soto had become one of the leading slave traders in Nicaragua, as well as one of the wealthiest men in present-day Central America. In 1531, de Soto teamed up with Francisco Pizarro on an expedition to northwestern Colombia, in pursuit of a rumored cache of gold in the region.
A year later de Soto signed on as Pizarro’s chief lieutenant during the explorer’s conquest of Peru, defeating the Inca people at Cajamarca in November of 1532, later capturing the last Incan emperor Atahualpa before executing him in 1533, despite a large ransom payment by the Inca people to spare the emperor’s life. Growing ever wealthier when the ransom gold was divided, de Soto was later named lieutenant governor of Cuzco, before assisting Pizarro in the founding of Lima in 1535. A year later, de Soto returned home to Spain as one of the wealthiest conquistadors of his time, marrying Dávila’s daughter before accepting a royal commission as governor of Cuba, at the same time accepting the challenge of settling La Florida, which had first been explored by Juan Ponce de Leon.
Sailing from Spain in April of 1538, with 10 ships and 700 men, after spending time in Cuba, de Soto landed at Tampa Bay in May of 1539, setting up his winter quarters near present-day Tallahassee. During the spring of 1540, de Soto and his men explored present-day Georgia, the Carolinas and Tennessee, and after no gold was discovered in the region, de Soto headed south to rendezvous with his ships near Mobile Bay, coming under attack by hostile Indians in October of that same year, which caused egregious casualties on both sides. Sighting the Mississippi River in mid-1541, the ever-ambitious de Soto traversed Arkansas and Louisiana by early 1542, before passing away on May 21st of 1542, after succumbing to a fever. His unfinished expedition would be led by his successor, Luis de Moscoso Alvarado, which finally reached Mexico in 1543, with nearly half of de Soto’s original body of men lost to disease, illness and hostile attacks by Native Americans, making the exploits of Hernando de Soto, some of the boldest expeditions during the Age of Exploration.
And there you have it, Hernando de Soto, today on The Daily Dose.
- published: 22 May 2023
- views: 2430
5:35
Following Hernando de Soto through La Florida | Georgia Stories
On this episode of Georgia Stories; Hernando de Soto and his men, already rich from fighting with the Incas in South America, arrived in La Florida searching fo...
On this episode of Georgia Stories; Hernando de Soto and his men, already rich from fighting with the Incas in South America, arrived in La Florida searching for gold. Jerald Milanich, an archaeologist at the University of Florida, explains the conquistadors’ success.
Original Air Date: 01/08/1994
For standards, timelines, and supplemental materials, visit our website at http://www.gpb.org/georgiastories
https://wn.com/Following_Hernando_De_Soto_Through_La_Florida_|_Georgia_Stories
On this episode of Georgia Stories; Hernando de Soto and his men, already rich from fighting with the Incas in South America, arrived in La Florida searching for gold. Jerald Milanich, an archaeologist at the University of Florida, explains the conquistadors’ success.
Original Air Date: 01/08/1994
For standards, timelines, and supplemental materials, visit our website at http://www.gpb.org/georgiastories
- published: 01 Nov 2019
- views: 18794
1:28
Expedition Florida: Hernando de Soto’s Florida Trail
In 1539, Hernando de Soto and his expedition sailed from Europe to Florida. De Soto traveled from the East Coast through Alachua Country on a journey to North F...
In 1539, Hernando de Soto and his expedition sailed from Europe to Florida. De Soto traveled from the East Coast through Alachua Country on a journey to North Florida in search of land to establish a home base for his excursions. Produced in 2002 as part of the “Expedition Florida: Wild Alachua” documentary, the video features Florida Museum of Natural History Distinguished Curator Emeritus in Archaeology Jerald Milanich, who describes de Soto’s journey and explains his interactions with the Potano Indians.
https://wn.com/Expedition_Florida_Hernando_De_Soto’S_Florida_Trail
In 1539, Hernando de Soto and his expedition sailed from Europe to Florida. De Soto traveled from the East Coast through Alachua Country on a journey to North Florida in search of land to establish a home base for his excursions. Produced in 2002 as part of the “Expedition Florida: Wild Alachua” documentary, the video features Florida Museum of Natural History Distinguished Curator Emeritus in Archaeology Jerald Milanich, who describes de Soto’s journey and explains his interactions with the Potano Indians.
- published: 05 May 2015
- views: 8169