Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Potonchán> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 83 of
83
with 100 triples per page.
- Potonchán abstract "...There exists a great city extending along the Tabasco river; so great and celebrated, as one cannot measure, however, says the pilot Alaminos and others with him, that is extends flanking the coast, about five hundred thousand steps and has twenty-five thousand houses, dispersed among gardens, that are made splendidly with stones and lime in whose construction projects the admirable industry and are of the architects...Potonchán, was a Chontal Maya city, capital of the minor kingdom known as Tavasco or Tabasco. It occupied the left bank of the Tabasco River, which the Spanish renamed the Grijalva River, in the current Mexican state of Tabasco.Juan de Grijalva arrived to this town on June 8, 1518, and christened the river with his name and met with the Maya chief Tabscoob to whom, it is said, he gave his green velvet doublet.Later, on March 12, 1519, the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés arrived. Cortés, unlike Grijalva, was received by the natives in a warlike fashion, leading to the Battle of Centla. After the native defeat, Cortés founded the first Spanish settlement in New Spain, the town of Santa María de la Victoria, on top of Potonchán.".
- Potonchán thumbnail Monumento_a_Tabscoob.jpg?width=300.
- Potonchán wikiPageID "42958567".
- Potonchán wikiPageLength "20450".
- Potonchán wikiPageOutDegree "48".
- Potonchán wikiPageRevisionID "707794714".
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Acalán.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Adobe.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Bernal_Díaz_del_Castillo.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Cacicazgo.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Campeche.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Can_Pech.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Captaincy.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Category:1518_in_Mexico.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Category:1519_in_Mexico.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Category:Colonial_Mexico.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Tabasco.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Category:Maya_sites_in_Tabasco.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Ceiba.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Chakán_Putum.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Charles_V,_Holy_Roman_Emperor.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Chontal_Maya_people.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Coccothrinax.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Conquistador.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Frontera,_Tabasco.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Grijalva_River.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Guatemala.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Guazacualco.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Hernán_Cortés.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Historia_verdadera_de_la_conquista_de_la_Nueva_España.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Honduras.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Itinerary_of_Grijalva.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Itzamkanac.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Juan_de_Grijalva.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink La_Malinche.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Lady_Day.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Laguna_de_Términos.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Mexica.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Nahuatl.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink New_Spain.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Nito.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Ochre.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Martyr_dAnghiera.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink San_Juan_de_Ulúa.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink San_Pedro_Sula.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Tabasco.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Xicalango.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink Yucatán_Peninsula.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink File:Batalla_de_Centla.jpg.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink File:Grijalva_y_Tabscoob.jpg.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink File:Hernan1.jpg.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink File:Monumento_a_Tabscoob.jpg.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink File:Tabasco.Primera_misa_en_México.JPG.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLink File:The_entrance_of_Hernan_Cortés_into_the_city_of_Tabasco.jpg.
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLinkText "Battle of Centla".
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLinkText "Potonchán".
- Potonchán wikiPageWikiLinkText "battle".
- Potonchán sign Peter_Martyr_dAnghiera.
- Potonchán sign "Juan Díaz".
- Potonchán source "De Insulis, p. 349".
- Potonchán source "Itinerary of Grijalva".
- Potonchán text ""We started eight days in June 1518 and going armed to the coast, about six miles away from land, we saw a very large stream of water coming out of a major river, the fresh water was spewing approximately six miles out to sea. And with that current we could not enter by said river, which we named the Grijalva River. We were being followed by more than two thousand Indians and they were making signs of war This river flows from very high mountains, and this land seems to be the best upon which the sun shines; if it were to be more settled, it would serve well as a capital: it is called the Potonchán province."".
- Potonchán text "...There exists a great city extending along the Tabasco river; so great and celebrated, as one cannot measure, however, says the pilot Alaminos and others with him, that is extends flanking the coast, about five hundred thousand steps and has twenty-five thousand houses, dispersed among gardens, that are made splendidly with stones and lime in whose construction projects the admirable industry and are of the architects...".
- Potonchán wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation.
- Potonchán wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote.
- Potonchán wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Potonchán wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Rp.
- Potonchán wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Sfn.
- Potonchán subject Category:1518_in_Mexico.
- Potonchán subject Category:1519_in_Mexico.
- Potonchán subject Category:Colonial_Mexico.
- Potonchán subject Category:History_of_Tabasco.
- Potonchán subject Category:Maya_sites_in_Tabasco.
- Potonchán type City.
- Potonchán comment "...There exists a great city extending along the Tabasco river; so great and celebrated, as one cannot measure, however, says the pilot Alaminos and others with him, that is extends flanking the coast, about five hundred thousand steps and has twenty-five thousand houses, dispersed among gardens, that are made splendidly with stones and lime in whose construction projects the admirable industry and are of the architects...Potonchán, was a Chontal Maya city, capital of the minor kingdom known as Tavasco or Tabasco. ".
- Potonchán label "Potonchán".
- Potonchán sameAs Q6083612.
- Potonchán sameAs Potonchán.
- Potonchán sameAs m.010rk5v3.
- Potonchán sameAs Q6083612.
- Potonchán wasDerivedFrom Potonchán?oldid=707794714.
- Potonchán depiction Monumento_a_Tabscoob.jpg.
- Potonchán isPrimaryTopicOf Potonchán.