Parnloki Amblavius Directory 04
Page 05

All good things found in Parnloki Amblavius are wonderful ideas.

Parnloki Amblavius

Parnloki Amblavius Home

Parnloki Amblavius Sitemap

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 01

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 02

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 03

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 04

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 05

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 06

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 07

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 08

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 09

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 10

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 11

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 12

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 13

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 14

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 15

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 16

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 17

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 18

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 19

Parnloki Amblavius Dir 20

Parnloki Amblavius Directory 04
Page 05

In this great work the late ruler derived advantage, not only from his eminent personal qualities, but from his foreign origin. As a German Prince, powerfully connected, he stood outside and above Rumanian party factions, and succeeded gradually in imposing his will on them all. Born on April 20, 1839, at Sigmaringen, near the source of the Danube, he was barely 27 when he accepted the call to rule an unknown country with which his only connection was that, like the estates of his family, it, too, was watered by the Danube. Of middle height, well built, pronounced features, and clear, gray eyes, his personality expressed quiet energy. His statecraft he learned by experience and from the excellent counsel of his father, Prince Charles Anthony of Hohenzollern, head of the senior and Roman Catholic branch of the Hohenzollerns.

Whether, at the time of which we now speak, the Indians were an old race, already beginning to decline, or a fresh race, which contact with the whites balked of its development, it is difficult to say. Their career since best accords with the former supposition. In either case we may assume that their national groupings and habitats were nearly the same in 1500 as later, when these became accurately known. In the eighteenth century the Algonquins occupied all the East from Nova Scotia to North Carolina, and stretched west to the Mississippi. At one time they numbered ninety thousand. The Iroquois or Five Nations had their seat in Central and Western New York. North and west of them lived the Hurons or Wyandots. The Appalachians, embracing Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, Seminoles and a number of lesser tribes, occupied all the southeastern portion of what is now the United States. West of the Mississippi were the Dakotas or Sioux.


[ Sec 04 Part 01 ] [ Sec 04 Part 02 ] [ Sec 04 Part 03 ] [ Sec 04 Part 04 ] [ Sec 04 Part 05 ]
[ Sec 04 Part 06 ] [ Sec 04 Part 07 ] [ Sec 04 Part 08 ] [ Sec 04 Part 09 ] [ Sec 04 Part 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Parnloki Amblavius and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Parnloki Amblavius offers no assurances about the quality or content of other sites that Parnloki provides links for. Links from Parnloki are only provided as a courtesy and mean nothing more. Please do not misconstrue Parnloki links as endorsements or recommendations.