Richard Gott
Born
The United Kingdom
Genre
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Cuba: A New History
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published
2004
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4 editions
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Hugo Chavez: The Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela
by
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published
2005
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10 editions
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Britain's Empire: Resistance, Repression and Revolt
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published
2011
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13 editions
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In the Shadow of the Liberator: The Impact of Hugo Chávez on Venezuela and Latin America
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published
2000
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5 editions
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Hugo Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution
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published
2011
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Guerrilla Movements in Latin America
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published
1970
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7 editions
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Land Without Evil: Utopian Journeys Across the South American Watershed
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published
1993
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2 editions
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Latin-Amerika'da Gerilla Hareketleri II [Kolombiya/Peru/Bolivya]
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published
1970
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Understanding and Using Scientific Evidence: How to Critically Evaluate Data
by
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published
2003
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10 editions
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Rural guerillas in Latin America
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“Although a handful of progressive individuals favoured independence from Spain, Cuba's economic elite was conservative, fearful of the economic and social consequences of a break with the colonial motherland. Without Spanish support, the planters would not be able to sustain the slave system on which their economic power was based, nor would they be strong enough to crush slave revolts”
― Cuba: A New History
― Cuba: A New History
“The 'buccaneers' came ashore in search of bacon. The Cuban Indians had learnt (from the natives of Haiti) a process of preserving meat by drying it and then smoking it over a fire of green leaves and branches. The Indians called the rack on which the meat was laid out a boucan or buccan [bacon], while those who prepared and sold the meet were referred to as boucaniers or buccaneers.
Pigs had been brought to Cuba from Europe by the first Spanish settlers. The early litters had been allowed to roan freely over the islands, becoming a vital source of food, not just for the settlers but also for the pirate who arrived in forgotten coves to replenish their water and their stores. They learnt to appreciate the pig meat dried on the boucan, and the world became associated with the pirates themselves,the men who brought home the bacon.”
― Cuba: A New History
Pigs had been brought to Cuba from Europe by the first Spanish settlers. The early litters had been allowed to roan freely over the islands, becoming a vital source of food, not just for the settlers but also for the pirate who arrived in forgotten coves to replenish their water and their stores. They learnt to appreciate the pig meat dried on the boucan, and the world became associated with the pirates themselves,the men who brought home the bacon.”
― Cuba: A New History
“He often reflected on his reluctance to extend the struggle to the Caribbean, and wrote in one of his many letters that it was 'more important to have peace than to liberate these islands. An independent Cuba would take a great deal of work.' Even Bolívar was not immune to the belief that a liberated Cuba might become another 'Republic of Haiti.”
― Cuba: A New History
― Cuba: A New History
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