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"La poesía sobre el tiempo; lo crea" dice la escritora chileno-boliviana María soledad Quiroga. Nacida en Chile pero asentada en Bolivia, después de haber vivido en países como México y Argentina es socióloga por la UNAM e historiadora de arte por la Academia de Bellas Artes de Bolivia y literatura por la Universidad Mayor de San Andrés. Tenemos una conversación sobre cómo creció con una vida signada por la violencia y la persecución por las ideas de izquierda de su padre, hasta que fue secuestrado por el gobierno de Perón y después encontrado. Su carrera como escritora va entre la poesía y el relato, siempre en la exploración por el "otro". Tiene una abundante obra que empieza en 1993 con el libro Ciudad Blanca y su último libro es Apuntes en el filo: poesía y tiempo en Tres citas impuntuales: tiempo, poesía y falta, en coedición con Fernando van de Wyngard y Mónica Velásquez. Hace una antologia de poetas bolivianas nacidas después de 1952.
1-Quisiera conocer el origen de “Los pollitos dicen…” La historia de la clásica canción infantil de Ismael Parraguez. 2-¿Se ha descubierto un tratamiento contra el dragón amarillo en los cítricos? 3-Quisiera conocer la historia de la Ciudad Blanca en Honduras, dedicada al dios mono. 4-¿Cómo se resuelve un ejercicio de estadística? 5-En casa de mi sobrina apareció la culebra que les muestro en la foto. ¿Me podrían decir qué nombre tiene y si es venenosa? Programa de radio "Oigamos la Respuesta" del Instituto Centroamericano de Extensión de la Cultura (ICECU). El programa se hace con las preguntas que envían nuestros oyente y las respuestas que se elaboran en el ICECU con un lenguaje claro y sencillo desde el año 1964.
"El silencio de la ciudad blanca" es un thriller psicológico del género novela negra, escrito por la autora española Eva García Sáenz de Urturi. Publicado en 2016, es el primer libro de la trilogía de la Ciudad Blanca. La historia se centra en Vitoria, España, y sigue a Unai López de Ayala, también conocido como Kraken, un experto inspector de policía especializado en perfiles criminales.La trama arranca cuando una serie de asesinatos empieza a sacudir la ciudad, con cuerpos que aparecen en poses ritualísticas y vinculados con la historia y la mitología local. Los asesinatos, que parecen imitar crímenes ocurridos dos décadas atrás, obligan a Kraken a enfrentarse no solo con un asesino metódico y meticuloso, sino también con los fantasmas de su propio pasado.Este libro combina elementos de misterio, intriga y drama, y explora temas como la familia, el amor y la redención, mientras mantiene al lector atrapado en un juego de inteligencia y obscuridad. La autora ofrece una descripción rica y detallada de la ciudad de Vitoria, sus tradiciones y su gente, que se convierte en un personaje más de la narrativa, todo envuelto en un ambiente gótico y melancólico.Sería de mucha ayuda si compartes este episodio y te suscribes a nuestro canal de pódcast.Adquiere el libro: En AmazonRecuerda que si gustas apoyarnos en nuestras lecturas y reseñas, lo puedes realizar mediante ☕️ Paypal o a través de nuestras redes sociales o correo electrónico.También te agradeceríamos
"No solamente se necesita un medio de comunicación que sea la voz de la gente, sino que integre realmente al país, que es lo que pretendemos ser", dijo el conductor de Exitosa, Nicolás Lúcar, en una transmisión especial EN VIVO desde Arequipa por el 18 aniversario de nuestra filial en la Ciudad Blanca.
Las millonarias demandas al Perú en cortes internacionales. No solo Rutas de Lima... hasta Panamericana TV pide 627 millones al Estado peruano. MIENTRAS TANTO: Día 4 sin agua en Arequipa. Desesperación en la Ciudad Blanca mientras Sedapar pide "empatía"... ¡con la empresa de agua! ADEMÁS: Ministro de Justicia también hace La Gran Otárola. Y... ¿Cómo prevenir un golpe de calor? ¿Qué hacer ante uno? ¿Quiénes están en riesgo? Apunta estos consejos.
La concejala de Turismo, Eventos y Marca Ciudad, Blanca Jiménez explica alguna de las actividades que acogerá Valladolid para la Gala de los Goya
La concejala de Turismo, Eventos y Marca Ciudad, Blanca Jiménez explica las actividades que acogerá Valladolid para la Gala de los Goya relacionadas con proyectos sociales y concursos
Un contacto exclusivo con Lucas Ozuna, Director Comercial de Europamundo para América. Hay muchas formas de organizar viajes en grupo y la empresa española Europamundo es experta en el tema, especialmente cuando se trata de circuitos que abarcan múltiples países en períodos de tiempo relativamente cortos. Además, Marcelo Amarillo se despide de Europa desde París. Los invitamos a descubrir los secretos mejor guardados de la “Ciudad de la Luz”. Para culminar, Amilcar Viñas y Walter Camacho ya han regresado luego de la salida grupal a Egipto y Jordania. A la luz del conflicto bélico regional, compartirán su experiencia sobre la conclusión del viaje en las costas del Mar Muerto y en la capital del reino Hachemita de Jordania: Amán, la Ciudad Blanca.
Ferias Mundiales, demostraciones de nuevos inventos y dibujos animados en blanco y negro… todo esto y mucho más nos ha traído 1893 (1893, claro, en el original), el tercer episodio de la segunda temporada de Loki, que analizamos una semana más en Universo Marvel de Fuera de Series. PATROCINADOR:
Charlamos con el consultor y balcanista Miguel Roán sobre su nuevo libro, " Belgrado Brut, crónica íntima de la ciudad blanca". Escuchar audio
La escritora Eva García Sáenz de Urturi nos presenta "El ángel de la ciudad", la novela que continua "El Libro Negro de las Horas" y que tiene como protagonista a Kraken, el personaje principal de la trilogía de la Ciudad Blanca. Entrevista: Ismael ArranzRealización: Gustavo Luna See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ninguna otra ciudad de Israel tiene para ofrecer tantos contrastes como la moderna y cosmopolita ciudad de Tel Aviv. Con tan solo 51.4 kilómetros de superficie, ha logrado constituirse como la ciudad centro del desarrollo económico de Israel. Es sede de grandes corporaciones tecnológicas, y pionera en la creación de nuevas tecnologías, las cuales le permiten a sus habitantes disfrutar de una buena calidad de vida. Estar en la costa oriental del mar mediterráneo y contar con 13 kilómetros de hermosas playas, le ayudan a mantener una alta ocupación de turistas de todo el mundo durante casi todo el año. Es una ciudad donde se disfruta de cafés al aire libre, de reconocidos restaurantes y de lujosas tiendas comerciales. Su arquitectura, mezcla modernos edificios e históricas construcciones de corte medieval. Tel Aviv fue creciendo desde su establecimiento en 1906, y para el año 1950 ya se había fusionado con la vecina población de Jaffa, el antiguo puerto marítimo descrito en las historias bíblicas del profeta Jonás y el Rey Salomón. En el año 2003 la UNESCO declaró Patrimonio de la Humanidad a la “Ciudad Blanca”, como le llaman a uno de sus sectores reconocido por la arquitectura Bauhaus, que es una tendencia artística alemana de principios del siglo XX. Tel Aviv también es considerada como la capital cultural de Israel gracias a sus museos, salas de conciertos musicales, especialmente de ópera, y sus centros de artes escénicas. Tel Aviv presume de un clima cálido prácticamente todo el año y sin duda es una ciudad referente para el mundo.
Bienvenid@s a un nuevo episodio de Multiverso Sonoro. Volvemos a la carga con una de las series que más amor y odio (más lo segundo) a levantado en las últimas semanas, acercándoos nuestra humilde opinión de ‘Los Anillos de Poder’, la serie de Prime Video que nos lleva a los “orígenes” de ‘El señor de los Anillos’. Para tremenda gesta no estaremos solos, pues requerimos del escudo de la maravillosa Mónica de la Fuenta (@accidentalmente) de ‘Madresfera’. Empezamos: 0h 00m 00s - Introducción 0h 02m 28s - Noticias - Keanu Reeves se cae del esperado proyecto ‘El diablo de la Ciudad Blanca’ - La serie sobre el universo ‘Spawn’ sigue adelante cuando parecía que estaba en el dique seco - Harrison Ford aterriza en Marvel para interpretar al General Ross - Y quien “vuelve a aterrizar” esta vez en DC es nada más y nada menos que Henry Cavill 0h 09m 10s El tráiler del mes: Creed 3 0h 12m 48s Renovaciones y cancelaciones 0h 14m 00s El Señor de los Anillos: los Anillos de Poder 01h 42m 37s Comentarios de los oyentes 01h 46m 35s Despedida Podéis contactar con nosotros mediante nuestro perfil de Twitter @multisonoro o nuestro correo electrónico multiversosonoropodcast@gmail.com. Además, tenéis nuestros twitters personales que son @_nanoc_ y @miguelgatri. Esperamos como siempre vuestros comentarios o audios. ¡¡También tenemos Instagram así que buscadnos (@multiversosonoro) para ver fotos nuestras y más sorpresas!! Pasaros por la web www.nacionpodcast.com donde encontraréis todo este contenido. También podréis apoyar el proyecto mediante el Patreon de Nacion Podcast y por supuesto podéis acceder a compras de Amazon donde una pequeña parte servirá para ayudar a seguir creciendo a la red sin que el precio del producto suba ni un solo céntimo para vosotros.
This week we take a look at a so-called “lost city” that may have been found…. But was it really? And is the curse real? This week we discuss La Ciudad Blanca! Sponsor Raycon – BuyRaycon.com (Code: tales15) Thank you, Jeff Wampler, for helping with the research!! Check out our sources below for more info and to continue learning! Please Rate & Review us wherever you get your Podcasts! Mail us something: GYT Podcast PO Box 542762 Grand Prairie, TX 75054 Leave us a Voicemail or shoot us a text! 430-558-1304 Our Website WWW.GraveYardPodcast.com Patreon https://www.patreon.com/GraveYardTales Youtube: Youtube.com/c/GraveYardTales Rumble – GraveYard Tales Podcast Do you want GraveYard Merch?!?! Go to https://www.teepublic.com/stores/graveyard-tales?ref_id=22286 to get you some! Visit Podbelly.comto find more shows like us and to get information you might need if you're starting your own podcast. Thank You Darron for our Logo!! You can get in touch with Darron for artwork by searching Darron DuBose on Facebook or Emailing him at art_injector@yahoo.com Thank you to Brandon Adams for our music tracks!! If you want to hear more from Brandon check him out at: Soundcloud.com/brandonadamsj Youtube.com/brandonadams93 Or to get in touch with him for compositions email him at Brandon_adams@earthlink.net Our Contacts WWW.GraveYardPodcast.com Email us at: GraveYardTalesPodcast@gmail.com Find us on social media: Twitter: @GrveYrdPodcast Facebook: @GraveYardTalesPodcast Instagram: @GraveYardTalesPodcast Sources https://www.nationalgeographic.com.es/mundo-ng/grandes-reportajes/en-busca-de-la-ciudad-blanca_10092 https://www.conservation.org/stories/biological-treasures-of-the-lost-city-of-the-monkey-god-in-honduras https://www.monah.org/precolumbian-nonlinked#:~:text=Ancient%20cultures%20located%20south%20of,Aztec%2C%20Maya%2C%20and%20Inca. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Ciudad_Blanca https://www.outlookindia.com/outlooktraveller/explore/story/70529/have-you-heard-of-the-ciudad-blanca-of-honduras https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/explorers-found-ancient-lost-city-monkey-god-almost-lose-their-faces-flesh-021179 https://www.livescience.com/white-city-monkey-god Documentary – The Lost City of the Monkey God
Locutora: Betina de Perú. Hoy hablaremos sobre Arequipa, mejor conocida como la ciudad blanca. Muchas gracias por escucharnos, si quieres acceder a ventajas y apoyar este podcast, hazte suscriptor premium en: www.charlashispanas.com
Ubicada en el centro sur de Albania, la ciudad de Berat es uno de los principales núcleos monumentales del país. La apodan “la ciudad de las mil ventanas” por la encantadora estampa de sus casas otomanas, que parecen observarnos desde las colinas de los barrios musulmán y cristiano ortodoxo: Mangalem y Gorica. Los separa un poderoso río de caudal variable, el Osumi, y los vigila desde las alturas el castillo de Berat, toda una ciudadela habitada desde la antigüedad, donde las viviendas siempre han coexistido con iglesias y mezquitas. Una mezcla que puede resultar chocante, pero que refleja la buena relación entre confesiones motivada por cinco siglos de convivencia a raíz de la ocupación turca. En la historia más reciente de Albania, sus casi cincuenta años de régimen comunista han dejado visibles cicatrices en el patrimonio religioso de esta ciudad, declarada Patrimonio de la Humanidad conjuntamente con la sureña Gjirokastra. Paseamos por sus tres centros históricos en compañía de la traductora Edlira Gabili; además visitamos el imprescindible Museo Iconográfico Onufri con el guía Andi Shahini y la profesora de la Universidad Complutense Isabel Rodríguez López, experta en iconografía clásica. Viajamos también al pasado en el Museo Etnográfico Nacional con el historiador Eladi Romero, coautor de la guía de Albania de la editorial Laertes. Recorremos el barrio ortodoxo con la guía Anxhelika Hodo y probamos la deliciosa gastronomía beratesa junto a la traductora Alba Beqaj. Por último buscamos el costado más natural de la región en los parques nacionales Tomorr y Bogovë, así como en los impresionantes cañones del río Osumi. Escuchar audio
El profesor Fernando Viviescas del Instituto de Estudios Urbanos nos guía por un mundo donde la Ciudad Universitaria nunca se construye, dejando huérfano el sueño de consolidar una gran universidad pública que abra las mentes de Colombia al mundo. Invitados/as: Fernando Vivivescas, Instituto de Estudios Urbanos Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Créditos: Dirección: Juan David García Arteaga Producción sonora: Equipo producción Podcast Radio UNAL. Investigación y presentación: Juan David García Arteaga
With half the world's continents being home to a panoply of monkey species, it's no wonder the people of Center & South America, Asia, and Africa hold monkeys in high esteems as mythological and religious figures. Hear about Hanuman, howlers, Hapi, and a helluva lot more (and yes, Sun Wukong, obviously). Links to all the research resources are on the website. 04:45 Japan: Sarugami 09:57 Central/South America: howler monkey god 13:50 Africa: Gbekre Hapi, Babi 17:35 India: Hanuman 27:00 China: Sun Wukong Hang out with your fellow Brainiacs. Reach out and touch Moxie on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Become a patron of the podcast arts! Patreon or Ko-Fi. Or buy the book and a shirt. Music: Kevin MacLeod, David Fesilyan, RKCVC, and Chris Haugen. Sponsors: Sly Fox Trivia, Sambucol Want to start a podcast or need a better podcast host? Get up to TWO months hosting for free from Libsynwith coupon code "moxie." The Kerkopes were sons of the Titan Okeanos (Oceanus) by Theia, a daughter of the Aithiopian (Ethiopian) king Memnon. They were proverbial as liars, cheats, and accomplished knaves. They once stole Heracles' weapons, during the time he was the penitent servant of Omphale. He punished them by tying them to a pole he slung over his shoulder with their faces pointing downwards, the only way they appear on Greek vases. The sight of Heracles' dark-tanned butt set them all to laughing, so that Heracles let them go free. But it's all fun and games until you tick off Zeus. My name's… You know what I love about humans? The contrary coincidence that we are as complimentary as we are [contrary]. In normal person speak, that is to say, we're as alike as we are different. And how is that manifesting in your earballs today? Monkey gods! My nerd brethren will be extra excited to know it's not just Sun Wu Kong. Monkeys inhabit the tropical rainforests of Africa, Central America, South America and Asia, and so the peoples of Africa, Central America, South America and Asia have monkeys in their faiths and folklores. Monkey mythology is an important part of both Hindu / Buddhist lore (India) and Zodiac / Taoist / Buddhist lore (China). In the various tales... the monkey is portrayed initially as foolish, vain, and mischievous. Yet, in each tradition, the monkey learns valuable lessons along the way, makes changes, and eventually gains redemption. The monkey thus embodies the themes of repentance, responsibility, devotion, and the promise of salvation to all who sincerely seek it. Monkey lore in India dates to at least 500 BCE and the monkey god Hanuman. Revered for his bravery, strength, and dedication to justice, he is connected to the sun, the wind, and thunder. Monkeys in general are revered in several parts of India. Monkey lore in China predates Buddhism, for the Monkey appears in the Chinese Zodiacal beliefs, believed by scholars to date to around 1100 BCE. In some parts of China, the Monkey is the "Great Sage Equal to Heaven." In Chinese mythology, the monkey god was the afore-mentioned Sun-Wukong, the Monkey King and trickster god who stars in the 16th-century book Journey To The West. Sun-Wukong is the basis for Goku in Dragonball, only one of the biggest anime franchises in the world. Monkey lore in Japan took hold after the arrival of Buddhism in the mid-6th century CE and the monkey was alternately a messenger to the gods or a physical manifestation of a god. The Monkey was thought to protect against demons as well as disease and is a patron of fertility, safe childbirth, and harmonious marriages. But not all monkeys, or thing that looked like monkeys, were your friend, though I would probably still try to pet it, regardless because -let's face it- I'm going to die trying to pet something I should have (fingers crossed). If you find yourself in the land of the rising sun, once the world reopens for safe travel, obviously, you'll want to keep a keen eye out for sarugami. According to folklorist Yanagita Kunio, sarugami are a prime example of “fallen” gods—spirits once revered as gods, but who have since been forgotten. I would have called them forsaken gods, which is twice as accurate and five times as metal. These beliefs never entirely vanish, though, and such spirits often remain as degenerate versions of their former selves, i.e. yōkai or demon. Sarugami look just like the wild monkeys, only bigger and more vicious, a subtle distinction. They can speak, and sometimes they are seen wearing human clothes as well, two less subtle distinctions. Long ago, before Buddhism arrived, monkeys were worshiped as gods in parts of Japan. The southern part of Lake Biwa in modern-day Shiga Prefecture was an important center of monkey worship, based at Hiyoshi Taisha. Monkeys were seen as messengers and servants of the sun, in part because they become most active at sunrise and sunset. Because of this, monkey worship was popular among farmers, who also awoke and retired with the sun. Over the centuries, as farming technology improved, people became less reliant on subsistence farming. More and more people took up professions other than farming. As a result, monkey worship began to fade away, and the monkey gods were forgotten. Today, monkeys are viewed as pests by farmers, as they dig up crops, steal food from gardens, and sometimes even attack pets and small children. Sarugami behave for the most part like wild monkeys. They live in the mountains and tend to stay away from human-inhabited areas. Buuut, when sarugami does interact with humans, it almost always ends in violence. Most legends follow a pattern: a sarugami kidnaps a young village woman and heroes are called upon to go out into the wilderness, kill the monster and save the girl. This puts sarugami on the same keel as trolls and brainless monsters, quite a demotion indeed. It's not all bad for the sarugami, though. While the early monkey cults had vanished, sarugami worship continued throughout the middle ages in esoteric religions such as Kōshin. In Koshin, monkeys came to be viewed as servants of the mountain deities, or as mountain deities themselves, acting as intermediaries between the world we live in and the heavens. The famous three wise monkey statues—mizaru, kikazaru, and iwazaru (“see no evil, hear no evil, say no evil”)—come from Kōshin and are a prime example of sarugami worship. Three rather famous monkeys hail from the land of the rising sun, usually referred to as "Speak No Evil, Hear No Evil, See No Evil." By the time of Tokugawa/Edo period, from 1603 to 1867, the three monkeys were portrayed in Buddhist sculptures. The message is that we should protect ourselves by not letting evil enter our sight, not allowing evil words to enter our hearing, and finally to not speak and engage in evil words and thoughts, but a lot of folks, especially in the West, take it to mean to ignore or turn a blind eye to something that's wrong. Legend has it, long ago the Buddha appeared at Hiyoshi Taisha, a Shinto shrine located in the city of Ōtsu, Shiga Prefecture, about the same time a large gathering of monkeys arrived in the area. The collective noun for a group of monkeys is a troop, btw, or a tribe, or because we have the option, a carload and, yes, a barrel. You can say a barrel of monkeys. So the Buddha took the form of a monkey, and foretold the fortunes of the faithful worshipers at Hiyoshi Taisha. This appearance had been foreseen thousands of years prior by Cang Jie, the legendary inventor of Chinese writing, in the neighborhood of 2650 BCE. Of course, the legend also says Legend has it that he had four eyes, and that when he invented the characters, the deities and ghosts cried and the sky rained millet. When Cang Jei invented the word for god (神), [sfx forvo] he constructed it out of characters meaning indicate (示) [sfx] and monkey (申) [sfx] to foretell this event. In other words, “monkey indicates god.” Isn't that an intersting etymology? To reference a Twitter trend, red flag emoji, red flag emoji, red flag emoji. It's not that words *never have good backstories like that; it's that words *almost never have coold backstories. Also, if someone tells you a common word is actually an anagram, tell ‘em I said “Bless your heart,” because that's even more rare. In the Americas, the Mayans of Guatemala and Mexico worshiped a howler monkey god, or maybe a pair of twin gods, depending on the story, patron of the arts; music, scribes and sculptors. The Howler Monkey also corresponds to knowledge of history and rituals, as well as prophecy. There is a fabled lost "Ciudad Blanca" or white city in Honduras is supposedly dedicated to the Monkey God. Pre-Columbian Toltec and Maya texts call it "The ancient place where the aurora originates." In Aztec mythology of Mexico, the monkey was connected to the sun, and was guarded by Cochipilli, the god of flowers, fertility, and fun! My kinda Among the Classic Mayas, the howler monkey god was a major deity of the arts, both visual and musical. Two monkey gods or two versions of the same god, I'm not sure, have been depicted on classical vases in the act of writing books and sculpting busts. This may be a depiction of a creation story, with the book containing the birth signs and the head the life principle or 'soul.' Copán in western Honduras in particular is famous for its representations of Howler Monkey Gods. Spanish friar Bartolomé de las Casas stated that in the region of Alta Verapaz, the two monkeys were two of the thirteen sons of the upper god, and were celebrated as cosmogonic creator deities. Among the Quiché Mayas in the midwestern highlands, they were held in somewhat less esteem. They'd been turned into monkeys after getting in a scrap with their half-brothers, the Maya Hero Twins, who had top billing as far as the mythos was concerned. MIDROLL While African-Americans have had to deal with “monkey” as an epithet, peoples in Africa traditionally held primates in high esteem. The root of the word Primate, is Prime, which means first, chief, excellent, and best. Of all the wild things in the wild woods, monkeys and apes were seen as the most intelligent animals, and so they became symbols of wisdom. That's why Rafiki in “The Lion King” is a baboon, based on the baboon depiction of the god of wisdom Djehuti, Tehuti, or Thoth. Yes, Thoth is usually depicted with the head of an Ibis bird, such as on the fabulous Crash Course Mythology series, but the baboon form was popular too. In the Ivory Coast, The role of Monkeys as guardians of the crossroads or gateways to the Ancestors can also be found in the God Ghekre or Gbekre of the Baule people of the Ivory Coast. Gbekre or Mbotumbo is both judge of hell and helper of the living against their enemies. Skillfully-carved wooden statues of Ghekre were common and combined animal and human traits. Over in the old kingdom, you hope it will be a while before you meet the Egyptian monkey god Hapi. Not to be confused with another Egyptian god named Hapi, who was ostensibly a human figure expressing both male and female characteristics. One of the four sons of Horus, Hapi is depicted protecting the throne of Osiris in the Underworld. He is commonly depicted with the head of a hamadryas baboon, and it's Hapi's job to protect the lungs of deceased persons being mummified, which is why the canopic jar the holds the lungs is often topped with a a hamadryas baboon head motif lid. When embalming practices changed in the Third Intermediate Period about the 3k years ago, the mummified organs were placed back inside the body, so an amulet of Hapi would be added to the mix to still invoke his protection. When his image appears on the side of a coffin, he is usually aligned with the side intended to face north. Lung-loving Hapi wasn't the only baboon about in ancient Egypt, but he was definitely the nicer of the two. The other tended to be a little…. murdery….and a bit problematic. Babi ‘bull (i.e. dominant male) of the baboons' lives on human entrails, which is not outlandish for a baboon, as they are omnivores with tremendous fangs and a well-earned reputation for carnivoration. He also kills all humans on sight, so be sure you know the right prayers and spells to protect yourself, especially after death. Your heart will be weighed against a feather in the Hall of the Two Truths to see if you can get a seat upgrade to paradise. To his credit, though, Babi can use his immense power to ward off dangers like snakes and control turbulent waters, so, like the rest of us, a mixed bag. Baboons also have libidos turned up to 11, so send the kids out of the room now. Babi was considered the god of virility of the dead. One spell in a funerary text identifies the deceased person's phallus with Babi, ensuring that the deceased will be able to get down, make love in the afterlife. He was usually portrayed with an erection, and that erection is also the bolt of the gate between the night and day *and the mast of the ferry which conveyed the righteous to the Field of Reeds to chill with Osiris. Why, I cannot say and do not wish to Google. There's lots of good googling if you look up Hanuman, the Hindu primate deity. Hanuman, depicted as a bipedal monkey with a red face, is worshipped both in his own shrines and as a secondary figure in temples to Rama. You'll know if you're at a Hanuman-exclusive temple, because it will be absolutely alive with monkeys. You can't mistreat a monkey in or around a temple of the monkey god, which the monkeys figured out centuries ago. Hanuman was the child of the wind god and a nymph. As a little god-ling, he tried to fly up and grab the sun, which he mistook for a fruit. The king of the gods Indra struck Hanuman with a thunderbolt on the jaw, the word for which is hanu, hence his name. Unable or unwilling to behave, Hanuman was cursed by powerful sages to forget his magic powers, cool powers like flight and the ability to become massively large at will, until he was reminded of them. Hanuman led the monkeys to help Rama, an incarnation of Vishnu, recover his wife from the demon king of Lanka, which is surprisingly *not modern-day Sri Lanka. Jambavan, the king of the bears, reminded Hanuman of his powers, which allowed him to cross the water demoness-filled strait between India and Lanka in one leap. The Lankans discovered Hanuman and set his tail on fire, but he used that fire to burn Lanka to the ground. He then flew to the Himalayas and returned with enough medicinal herbs to tend to all the wounded in Rama's army. For his service to Rama, Hanuman is upheld as a model for all human devotion. Hanuman is also a popular figure among Buddhists in most of Asia, with temples and even whole districts of towns bearing his name. Like a game of telephone, the farther you get from India, the more Hanuman's story changes. For example, the original Sanskirt telling portrays him as effortlessly chaste, whereas he has wives and children in other traditions. And if his exploits sounded a tiny drill bit familiar, you won't be surprised to know that he has been identified as the inspiration for the monkey hero Sun Wu Kong of the great Chinese poem Xiyouji “Journey to the West,” and Sun Wo Kong is the inspiration for Sun Goku in Dragonball, so in a way, Dragonball is based on a Hindu god. There is a wrinkle in our tale of Hanuman, and that's actual monkeys. Monkeys are wild in India, like deer, racoons, and pigeons. You might rightly surmise by the animals I've grouped them with that monkeys are routinely pests, and what pest they are. Think about how clever a racoon is, then make it an acrobat who can understand a train schedule. In Delhi, rhesus macaques have become a menace. Government buildings are practically under siege. Macaques use Delhi's tree-lined streets to swing between the buildings, damaging power lines in the process. If you're walking around outside with food, you can almost expect to have a fight on your hands. And you thought seagulls at the beach were bad. Being inside is no safe bet either. The macaques like to enter offices through open windows and destroy paperwork and generally being chaos Muppets. There are an estimated 40,000 monkeys living in Delhi. That is a pre-covid number, so it wouldn't surprise me if the macaques have been making hay while the sun shines. But then I suppose you have to factor how dependent they are on robbing humans for food, in which case their numbers may have gone down during proper lock-down, though there would have been a terrifying period of too many monkeys and not enough pack lunches. Many solutions to keep monkey and man separate have been tried and many solutions have failed. For a time, the city employed a crack squadron of the larger black-faced langur monkeys to scare away the macaques. It worked a treat, but the unit was disbanded after animal rights activists protested against keeping the langurs captive. Thankfully for the workers in the area, there is no such concern for the three dozen men who are hired to pretend to be langurs. Before you form the image in your mind, no, they're not wearing costumes, but I would pay money to see that. They mimic the langurs' barks and howls to scare the macaques away. Unfortunately, the monkeys return as soon as the primate-impressionists leave. One complication, which you see in urban animal control the world over, is that people feed the macaques. They are associated with a god, after all. The fact that feeding the macaques is against the guidelines passed by Parliament doesn't seem to enter into it. You also can't work on the monkey problem on Tuesdays. That's the day Hanuman is worshipped, so all monkeys get a free pass, and a free meal, every week. So what can be done? In a few words, not much. The government warns citizens not to make eye contact with the monkeys, as they interpret it as threatening, and avoid getting between a mother and child. If you didn't go looking for trouble but it found you anyway, the official circular recommends: “Do not ever hit any monkey. Keep hitting the ground with a big stick to make [the] monkey leave.” Bonus fact: In 2014, the government of India found that Hanuman had been issued a biometric ID card. The card lists a mobile phone number and an address in the western state of Rajasthan. The picture looks like it's from a painting and it's not clear whose iris scan and fingerprints were associated with the card. MIDROLL 2 Okay, okay, we're finally going to talk about the monkey in the room. I saved the best for last, the first name that would come to many minds if you asked them to name a monkey god, though he's not really a god, he's just incredibly powerful, or OP as the kids say, the one, the only, the triple-immortal monkey king Sun Wukong. [sfx wrestler walk-on music] Sun Wukong is the main and most enduring character from the 500 year old novel, Journey to the West. The 1900 page book about the 36000 mile journey starts with Sun Wukong's origin story, then sees him gather a five-man band --a pig demo, a fallen river spirit, a white dragon horse, and a regular human monk– for an epic adventure. Sun Wukong was born from a rock on the summit of Flower Fruit Mountain and becomes king of the monkeys that live there. He finds more than one way to make himself immortal and goes off on adventures. The idea of living forever really appeals to Sun, so when he returns, he trains the monkeys into an army to take down the Eastern Dragon King by force, so he can take his and all monkeys' names from the Book of Life and Death, releasing them from the cycle of death and rebirth. He then defeats some Heavenly warriors sent to capture him, gets a post in Heaven only to rage quit when he finds out it has no actual power whatsoever, returning yet again as The Great Sage Equal of Heaven, and committing a series of monkey-shines and outright crimes. He steals quite a variety of things, including the Heavenly Empress's peaches, the dishes prepared for an important banquet, all the holy wine, and the pills of immortality created by Lao Tzu, which kicks off a war between Heaven and Flower Fruit Mountain, whoopsie-doodles. Wu Kong is captured, but As no weapon or even lighting can scratch him, he is burnt in Lao Tzu's furnace for 49 days. This backfires on the Jade Emperor of Heaven giving him new powers and making him really angry. When the furnace is opened, he leaps out of it and proceeds to wreck total havoc in Heaven, fighting thousands of Heavenly soldiers by himself. The Heavenly Emperor asks the Buddha for help, and the Buddha outwits and outperforms the egomaniacal monkey king and traps the cheeky monkey underneath the Mountain of Five Elements. Sun Wukong stayed trapped there for 500 years, and we still haven't gotten to the journeying part of Journey to the West. The story was not only entertainment, but effectively Buddhist propaganda. Sun Wukong is far and away the most powerful power character in the story, more powerful than the Jade Emperor and all his armies, but he was no match for the Buddha. It's like if you've been reading Deadpool comics for months, then suddenly Deadpool gets beaten the spirit of Bob Ross, so that you'll want to take up painting and generally be pleasant and soft-spoken and keep a squirrel in your pocket, I don't know, this analogy got away from me pretty quickly. The story spread with the religion, as well as independent of it, becoming a touchstone throughout Asia. In Japan, the Monkey King is known as Son Goku, for example, while in Korea his name is Son Oh Gong. The story is popular throughout the rest of Asia as well, all the way to Vietnam, Thailand, and even Malaysia and Indonesia. So just how powerful is Sun Wukong? How about the strongest non-omnipotent character in all of fiction? Here are just a few of his greatest hits. He could run “with the speed of a meteor” and cover 34,000mi/54,000km in one leap, so Superman better watch his back. Sun Wukong carries a staff that can be as small as a pin or as big as a mountain, but always weighs 8 tons. He can freeze people in mid-fight, not that he needs to, control the weather, and make copies of himself. One of his abilities is called the 72 earthly transformations And that… In another myth, designed to explain their name ("tail-men" in Greek), Zeus changed the Cercopes into monkeys (from this we have the genus Cercopithecus). In still another myth, Zeus turned them to stone for trying to deceive even him, the stone was shown to visitors to Thermopylae. Acmon, companion of Diomede, insulted Aphrodite and is turned into a bird. In Greek mythology, Cercopes were two demigods brothers. They were thieves and they even attempted to steal Heracles' weapons. Zeus changed them into monkeys. This myth, inspired zoologists to name the genus of monkeys depicted in Minoan frescoes as Cercopithecus. Sources: https://www.wilderutopia.com/environment/wildlife/howler-monkeys-among-the-maya-divine-patrons-to-the-artisans/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howler_monkey_gods Hart, George (2005). The Routledge Dictionary of Egyptian Gods and Goddesses (PDF) (2nd ed.). Routledge. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-415-34495-1. http://africancreationenergy.blogspot.com/2015/12/african-monkey-gods.html https://yokai.com/sarugami/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babi_(mythology) https://symbolsage.com/sun-wukong-monkey-king/ https://symbolsage.com/three-wise-monkeys/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hapi_(Son_of_Horus) https://www.britannica.com/topic/Hanuman https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/monkeys-india-delhi-parliament-video-rhesus-macaques-government-offices-a8679151.html https://www.reuters.com/article/us-india-monkeys/monkeys-run-amok-in-indias-corridors-of-power-idUSKBN1OA01R https://mythopedia.com/topics/sun-wukong https://www.vbtutor.net/Xiyouji/summary.htm https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-29175870 https://www.theoi.com/Georgikos/Kerkopes.html http://www.hellenicaworld.com/Greece/Mythology/en/Cercopes.html
La recomendación del día es “el asesino de las postales y el silencio de la ciudad blanca”
En este episodio hablamos sobre el misterio y de la leyenda del Sisimite un ser sobrenatural que existe en las cuevas de Centro America y que tiene una conexión con el Dios Mono y la Ciudad Blanca. Link de Grupos ☕Buy me a coffee: Invitanos a un Cafe
In Episode 8 of the Coffee Break Spanish Travel Diaries Season 2, we're in Sucre, the constitutional capital of Bolivia, also known as La ciudad blanca for its white buildings. Join Coffee Break Spanish hosts Mark and Marina as they explain some of the language used in this episode, including the useful phrases contar con and tomar rumbo.The podcast episodes will be published weekly from 22nd April. However, if you would like to binge the entire season then you can access all 10 episodes on the Coffee Break Academy. Our premium version includes lesson notes with additional examples and explanations of the language in each lesson, and a pronunciation practice video to help you improve your speaking. Click here to access the course on the Coffee Break Academy.At Coffee Break Spanish we provide content for beginners, intermediate and advanced learners, along with regular mini lessons on social media. Visit coffeebreakspanish.com for all the information you need to build your confidence in Spanish, whatever your level. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
El libro de crónicas de Jorge Turpo reúne 15 textos escritos entre Arequipa y Tacna. Esta crónica explica la relación entre el expresidente Alberto Fujimori, donde se explica su relación con la Ciudad Blanca.
Propuesta de eliminar la inmunidad parlamentaria y reelección no prospera en el Congreso. | Pedro Cateriano asume cargo de primer ministro. | Colapsan centros hospitalarios en Arequipa para atender nuevos casos covid-19. | Gobierno toma el control sanitario de la Ciudad Blanca.
¡Hoy le toca El Mame a la ciudad que alberga esta transmisión en vivo! ¿Cómo fue su fundación? ¿Por qué le decimos "Ciudad Blanca"? ¡Ko'ox Pa'l Mame!
El equipo de Tribuna Picante conversó con la periodista Graciela Pamo desde la Ciudad Blanca de Arequipa, con quien analizamos el futuro del FBC Melgar de cara al inicio de la fase 2 y cuales serían los objetivos inmediatos del rojinegro en la temporada 2020. El Podcast Picante llega gracias a #ConservasDePescadoElFinoPez --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tribuna-picante/support
From Atlantis to Ciudad Blanca, Troy and Shangri-La, history is full of legends about lost civilizations. But how does humanity lose an entire city, empire or society? Are any of the stories of lost cities true? Tune in to learn more in this week's classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Símbolos de #Arequipa. José y Víctor Dávalos hicieron de cada tema. un homenaje a la tierra que los vio nacer."Nadie ama lo que no conoce" y porque conocieron su tierra, brotaban el sentimiento en cada interpretación. Compartimos un breve resumen de su amplia carrera musical y con ello, el homenaje de #ContactoPerú a la brava Ciudad Blanca, cuna de Melgar. LOCUCIÓN Y EDICIÓN DE AUDIO: Elena Guevara y Luis Crispín TEXTOS Y PRODUCCIÓN: Soledad Nalvarte --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/soledad-nalvarte/message
En este episodio conversamos con el biólogo Marcio Martínez sobre la sobre la biodiversidad de la biósfera del Río Plátano, la gestión ambiental de los pueblos originarios y la legendaria Ciudad Blanca. ¡Bienvenidos!
¡Hola, amigas! En este episodio postconfinamiento, las gintonizadas os contamos las series que hemos estado viendo durante nuestro encierro. Hemos quemado Netflix, HBO, Amazon Prime, Movistar + y… ¿Qué podemos decir? Que seguimos en shock con 365 Días. Queremos la casa de Lola en la serie Valeria, bailar con el machaca de White Line, volver a reírnos con Yo Nunca y ser tan valientes como la prota de Unorthodox. Y si ya nos ponemos a pedir, no nos importa resolver un crimen junto a Javier Rey en El Silencio de la Ciudad Blanca. Pues eso: os esperan dos horas de charla ininterrumpida para yonkis televisivas. Podcast (des)conducido por @mayboeken, @Silvia_Sancho_, @pequezurita y @lacanta_rero.
Una de las buenas recomendaciones para deleitarnos en el mundo del cine por Richard Douglas.
Eva García Sáenz de Urturi charla con Juan Ramón Lucas sobre “Los señores del tiempo”, el tercer y último libro de “La trilogía de la ciudad blanca”.
País España Dirección Daniel Calparsoro Guion Roger Danès, Alfred Pérez Fargas (Novela: Eva García Sáenz de Urturi) Música Fernando Velázquez Fotografía Josu Inchaustegui Reparto Belén Rueda, Javier Rey, Aura Garrido, Manolo Solo, Àlex Brendemühl, Sergio Donado, Ramón Barea, Itziar Ituño, Pedro Casablanc, Rubén Ochandiano, Richard Sahagún, Ramón Agirre, Josean Bengoetxea, Itziar Aizpuru, Joseba Apaolaza Sinopsis Vitoria, 2016. Los cadáveres de un chico y una chica de veinte años aparecen desnudos en la cripta de la Catedral Vieja. Unai López de Ayala, un inspector experto en perfiles criminales, debe cazar al asesino ritual que lleva aterrorizando a la ciudad desde hace dos décadas. La sucesión imparable de crímenes y una investigación policial contaminada por las redes sociales llevarán al límite a Unai, enfrentándolo a un asesino camaleónico y despiadado que podría estar más cerca de lo que creía.
HCP #195 - Buscando Justicia, Silencio de la Ciudad Blanca, Violet & Finch, Trinchera Infinita, Crown S3, Todos los Chicos 2 y Noche de Venganza --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/adrian-andrade8/message
Producciones Esquizoides presenta: Yo hablé con Franco Nero 13. En esta ocasión recomiendo la lectura de la trilogía de: Silencio en la ciudad blanca. 1 - Silencio en la ciudad blanca. 2 - Los ritos del agua. 3 - Los señores del tiempo. Podéis encontrarme en Wwitter en: @fernandomg1981
Producciones Esquizoides presenta: Yo hablé con Franco Nero 13. En esta ocasión recomiendo la lectura de la trilogía de: Silencio en la ciudad blanca. 1 - Silencio en la ciudad blanca. 2 - Los ritos del agua. 3 - Los señores del tiempo. Podéis encontrarme en Wwitter en: @fernandomg1981
En este episodio hablamos sobre los posibles finales que puede tener el pedido de adelanto de elecciones del presidente Vizcarra. Además hablamos de los Juegos Panamericanos Lima 2019 y nosotros recordamos nuestra incapacidad para practicar deportes olímpicos en la infancia. Y, como solo se ama lo querido, Renato hace una diatriba, al mismo estilo de reservista etnocacerista, sobre la Ciudad Blanca y sus taras sociales.
Join ITP for our BIGGEST interview yet with none other than Steve Elkins, a man whose decades long search for the Lost City of the Monkey God, or Ciudad Blanca, culminated in a game-changing 2015 expedition into the Honduran Rainforest and a recently released documentary detailing the incredible effort. [Click here for the details on the March 16 2019 Lost City of the Monkey God documentary viewing in Washington D.C ](https://dceff.org/film/lost-city-monkey-god/) [Link to Chris Fisher's Website and List of Publications ](http://www.chrisfisher.science/publications/) Thank you to our Producer, Charlene Ramler, and all of our Patreon Supporters! Want to support the show? [Join ITP’s Patreon Community](https://www.patreon.com/intotheportal)! For more information and resources [visit our website](https://www.intotheportal.com) [Visit Coffee Gator](https://coffeegator.com) to get 15% off your purchase with Promo Code QUARK Join Into The Portal on [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/intotheportalpodcast/)! Proud members of the [Podfix Network](https://www.podfixnetwork.com) [Official Into The Portal Storefront](https://www.teepublic.com/stores/into-the-portal) Hit ITP up on [Twitter](https://twitter.com/IntoThePortal1)! Check out ITP on [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9nYn-T9na-QVC0NmfTnExA?view_as=subscriber) Have any comments, corrections or feedback for the show? Email us at Intotheportalmailbox@gmail.com
Join ITP for our BIGGEST interview yet with none other than Steve Elkins, a man whose decades long search for the Lost City of the Monkey God, or Ciudad Blanca, culminated in a game-changing 2015 expedition into the Honduran Rainforest and a recently released documentary detailing the incredible effort. [Click here for the details on the March 16 2019 Lost City of the Monkey God documentary viewing in Washington D.C ](https://dceff.org/film/lost-city-monkey-god/) [Link to Chris Fisher's Website and List of Publications ](http://www.chrisfisher.science/publications/) Thank you to our Producer, Charlene Ramler, and all of our Patreon Supporters! Want to support the show? [Join ITP’s Patreon Community](https://www.patreon.com/intotheportal)! For more information and resources [visit our website](https://www.intotheportal.com) [Visit Coffee Gator](https://coffeegator.com) to get 15% off your purchase with Promo Code QUARK Join Into The Portal on [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/intotheportalpodcast/)! Proud members of the [Podfix Network](https://www.podfixnetwork.com) [Official Into The Portal Storefront](https://www.teepublic.com/stores/into-the-portal) Hit ITP up on [Twitter](https://twitter.com/IntoThePortal1)! Check out ITP on [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9nYn-T9na-QVC0NmfTnExA?view_as=subscriber) Have any comments, corrections or feedback for the show? Email us at Intotheportalmailbox@gmail.com
Antonio Muñoz Molina nos abrió las puertas de su casa para hablarnos de Un andar solitario entre la gente, la historia de un caminante que escribe siempre a lápiz, recortando y pegando cosas, imitando el ejemplo de clásicos como Quincey, Baudelaire, Poe o Joyce, a los que evoca el autor con su talento y maestría.En el Retiro de Madrid Gregorio León entrevistó a María Dueñas, que en 2018 se asomó a Nueva York, haciendo moverse por la gran metrópoli a las hermanas Victoria, Mona y Luz, que se ven en la necesidad de buscarse la vida en 1936. Las hijas del Capitán es una de las novelas del año, sin duda. Y Eva García Sáenz de Urturi ha cerrado la Trilogía de la Ciudad Blanca con Los señores del tiempo. Vitoria es la protagonista, la Vitoria actual y la de 1192. Esta vez Kraken se enfrenta a unas desconcertantes muertes que siguen un modus operandi medieval: son idénticas a los asesinatos descritos en la novela Los señores del tiempo.
Kraken. Vitoria. Intriga. Emoción. Historia. Son palabras que se nos vienen a la cabeza para explicar el fenómeno de la serie de la Ciudad Blanca, puesta en pie por Eva García Sáenz de Urturi. Hace apenas dos años que publicó el primer título de la trilogía. Ahora llega su desenlace, con Los señores del tiempo. Y Gregorio León la entrevistó.Aprovechando que Tusquets publica una edición especial de Patria, novela que lleva 112 semanas entre las más vendidas en España, con traducciones en decenas de países, preparamos un reportaje especial con Fernando Aramburu, en el que el autor relata cómo fue el origen de esta obra convertida ya en clásica.En la sección de Audiolibros, recuperamos la última novela de Mikel Santiago, otro thriller apasionante, marca de la casa: La isla de las últimas voces. Y a modo de curiosidad, nos asomamos a la historia para recordar casos de escritores clásicos cuyos manuscritos fueron rechazados por editores, y para sorprendernos de reliquias literarias por las que se pagaron miles y miles de euros, desde el mondadientes de Dickens a una radiografía de Hemingway.
Plenamente consolidada como una de las autoras de relatos más reputadas de España, la murciana Lola López Mondéjar nos ofrece el regalo de una nueva colección, publicada bajo el sello Páginas de Espuma. El título es Qué mundo tan maravilloso. Y Gregorio León se tomó un café con ella. También marcó el teléfono de Miguel Sáez Carral. Después del éxito de Apaches, convertido en serie de televisión, ahora ofrece un thriller sentimental, con tres patas. Un juego a tres bandas que nos atrapa desde la primera página.Celebramos con Eva García Sáenz de Urturi la aparición de la obra que cierra la trilogía de la Ciudad Blanca.Y rescatamos en la sección de Audiolibros un clásico de Frederick Forsyth: El fantama de Manhattan.Sin olvidarnos de Arturo Pérez-Reverte, que pasea por París la tercera entrega de Falcó: Sabotaje.
Obrim amb l'espai d'estrenes, aquesta setmana amb Coco de Pixar i Wonder. Avui toca crítica del tràiler amb l'èpica d'Avengers: Infinity War. A l'espai de crítica comentem Paddington 2. A les xafarderies repassem l'escabrós assumpte de Harvey Weinstein. Tanquem amb l'espai de fantàstic i terror d'en Francesc Morales amb el llibre El diablo en la ciudad blanca, futura pel·lícula de Martin Scorsese i Leonardo DiCaprio.
Obrim amb l'espai d'estrenes, aquesta setmana amb Coco de Pixar i Wonder. Avui toca crítica del tràiler amb l'èpica d'Avengers: Infinity War. A l'espai de crítica comentem Paddington 2. A les xafarderies repassem l'escabrós assumpte de Harvey Weinstein. Tanquem amb l'espai de fantàstic i terror d'en Francesc Morales amb el llibre El diablo en la ciudad blanca, futura pel·lícula de Martin Scorsese i Leonardo DiCaprio.
Trigésimo episodio de Un mar de libros. Os traemos: - Novedades. - Las "challenges" de lectura de Goodreads. - Reseña: "El silencio de la ciudad blanca" de Eva Garcia Sanz de Urturi - Ranking: Fnac.es. Notas del programa: Eva Garcia Sanz: http://www.evagarciasaenz.com Entrevista presentación: http://bit.ly/2r5X2jb Goodreads: www.goodreads.com Subscríbete y déjeme tu reseña y comentarios. Twitter: @unmardelibros1 Email: unmardelibros@yahoo.com Web: www.unmardelibros.com Amazon libro "Disfruta 100 libros al año" - http://amzn.to/2q3mn94 MUSICA UTILIZADA: [Intro] Like it Hot - Boogie Belgique [Noticias] Inspiration - Akashic Record [Texto] Passando - Mattia Vlad [Cierre] This is Jazz - Magikstudio
Trigésimo episodio de Un mar de libros. Os traemos: - Novedades. - Las "challenges" de lectura de Goodreads. - Reseña: "El silencio de la ciudad blanca" de Eva Garcia Sanz de Urturi - Ranking: Fnac.es. Notas del programa: Eva Garcia Sanz: http://www.evagarciasaenz.com Entrevista presentación: http://bit.ly/2r5X2jb Goodreads: www.goodreads.com Subscríbete y déjeme tu reseña y comentarios. Twitter: @unmardelibros1 Email: unmardelibros@yahoo.com Web: www.unmardelibros.com Amazon libro "Disfruta 100 libros al año" - http://amzn.to/2q3mn94 MUSICA UTILIZADA: [Intro] Like it Hot - Boogie Belgique [Noticias] Inspiration - Akashic Record [Texto] Passando - Mattia Vlad [Cierre] This is Jazz - Magikstudio
Today we talk with Chris Begley about the Lost City of the Monkey God, or Ciudad Blanca "The White City". Chris tells us about looking for actual ruins in Honduras, working with National Geographic, and how things like satellite images and LiDar actually work.Links Ciudad BlancaF. A. Mitchell-Hedges - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaGeorge Gustav Heye - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaTheodore MordeThe City of the Monkey God: Archaeologists claim to have found city lost for 1,000 years in remote Honduran jungleHas the White City of the Monkey God been found after 500 years? Ruins could be legendary lost jungle city where lurid tales say tribe worshiped a giant simian deity and bred chimp-human childrenLOST CITY DISCOVERED IN THE HONDURAN RAIN FORESTThomas Athol Joyce - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaExplorer Seeks Fabled Lost City; Spurns Weaker Sex CompanionshipChristopher StewartChris Begley: Transylvania University BioNational Geographic BioKentucky professor a real-life Indiana JonesEwan McGregor: Tested to the limits in HondurasFinding understanding instead of a 'lost city.'ContactsEmail us at ArchyFantasies@gmail.comFollow us on Twitter at @Archyfantasies and find us on FaceBook. Theme Music by ArcheopSoup ProductionsProduced by Chris Webster and Tristan BoyleEdited by Chris Webster
CALL-IN: 858-815-2333 Tune in tonight, Monday, March 2, 2015 at 10pm Pacific Time for the latest episode of Playtime With Sandra Radio with your hostess, Sandra LONDON of Live & Grind. *Music, courtesy of Naked Girls Radio and FreeMusicArchive *News and Current Events *Trivia *Erotica Chat With You Soon, Sandra LONDON of Live & Grind