Colombia–United Kingdom relations

Colombian - British relations
Map indicating locations of United Kingdom and Colombia

United Kingdom

Colombia
Diplomatic mission
Embassy of Colombia, LondonBritish Embassy, Colombia
Envoy
Ambassador Néstor Osorio LondoñoAmbassador Colin Martin-Reynolds

Colombia–United Kingdom relations are the bilateral and diplomatic relations between Colombia and the United Kingdom. Colombian-Anglo relations begin in 1810, and stem from the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 and the service of the British Legions who helped Colombia to win independence through Simón Bolívar's campaign to liberate New Granada in 1819–1820. However the first known English person to have traveled to modern day Colombia was Sir John Hawkins in 1565.

Country comparison

Common name Colombia United Kingdom
Official name Republic of Colombia United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Coat of arms Colombia United Kingdom
Flag Colombia United Kingdom
Area 1,141,748 km2 (440,831 sq mi) 242,495 km2 (93,628 sq mi)
Population (est. 2023) 52,277,995 68,795,198
Capital Bogotá London
Largest metropolitan area Bogotá – 307.36 km2 (23.96 km2 metro) London – 1,485 km2 (13,709,000 km2 metro)
Government Republic, unitary, presidential, constitutional Parliamentary constitutional unitary
First leader Simón Bolívar Robert Walpole
Current leader Gustavo Petro Keir Starmer
Established
  • 1922
Official languages Colombian Spanish British English
Currency Colombian Peso Pound sterling

Background

Major interest in Colombia for the UK has lain in environmental protection and for Colombia the direct financial investment from the UK, military assistance, and gas production. Bilateral trade currently stands at £1 Billion.[1]

History

Simón Bolivar in 1812

Early contact with the area known today as Colombia began in the 16th century with the limited expeditionary forces of Elizabeth I's privateers, most famously in the search for the mythical city of El Dorado. Until the early modern period British maritime activity, exploration and trade was limited to these skirmishes in the Caribbean such as the Battle of San Juan de Ulúa (1568), which would lead to the Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604) and other successive Anglo-Spanish wars in the area.

By the 17th century the British began to become interested in the South American continent due to these trade and naval rivalries with Spain, with the British fighting Spain over a european regional conflict resulting in their defeat in the War of Jenkins' Ear (1739 to 1748), which lead to the British withdrawing to focus naval efforts on their North American wars (1775-1783) and resulting in the Anglo-Spanish War in the Americas (1779–1783). British maritime activity in the late 1790s became more aggressive and began actively gaining territory in the Caribbean (see Trinidad remained Spanish until 1797) to enable greater British mercantile trade in the area. At the time, they also furthered their interest against Spain, (see the Black Legend). After Napoleonic Invasion of Spain in 1808 looking to gain independence, the Venezuelan Junta formed in Caracas by 1810 was the first Junta to engage in diplomacy to gain ties to Great Britain.

In June 1810 Simon Bolivar travelled to London with Luis Lopez Mendez and Andrés Bello to explain why the Junta of Caracas broke relations with the Spanish Monarchy; to the British Foreign Office under secretary Richard Wellesley; seeking British naval and diplomatic protection, however the Spanish ambassador on the grounds Bolivar had at the time no diplomatic capacity to demand self-rule, engaged the British Foreign Office to turn Bolivar away. Bolivar instead returned to Venezuela and his entourage stayed behind in Somers Town, London, and in the following years did not gain further in their activities due to the fluctuation and instability of the parties and states they represented. Their case was also not helped by how in-flux the first statehoods of Venezuela were also viewed by the British as being too unstable to consider offering support to. But in a bid to engage British assistance, Colombian and Cartagena de Indias officials began to trade with British Caribbean colonial officials, failing to attract any substantial aid. However local naval trade did increase between British Caribbean Naval officials and Venezuela and New Granada, coming into the British sphere of influence.

By 1814, the United Province of New Granada sent José Maria del Real as an envoy to London for British support against Spanish military intervention, but as part of a long delay tactics on Britains part due to the defeat of Napoleon and the return of Fernando VII's restoration, Britain did not immediately recognise the new states representatives, denying requests for British assistance against Spanish attack by the Spanish General Pablo Morillo in 1815. Cartagena de Indias, under siege of Spanish fleet, even declared itself a British dominion, but was denied the request eventually falling back under Spanish control by 1816. However Bolivar, exiled in Jamaica in 1815, wrote from Kingston to Richard Wellesley, asking for military support against Spain, yet this was ignored based on the foreign policy of the British Foreign secretary Mr. Castlereagh who was aiming to keep the peace amongst the French, Spanish and European powers following a fine tightrope which British foreign policy makers walked in regards to South America after the close of the Napoleonic wars, culminating in the 1814–1815 Grand Alliance at Congress of Vienna, under which France supported Spain keeping its American colonies, and thus Britain supporting Spanish rule in the Americas. However around this time Lopez Mendez had begun recruiting what became the British Legions, over 7,000 ex-military Irish and Englishmen who had been dismissed after the Napoleonic wars ended; who went on to fight for Colombian Independence.

Arthur Sandes

The British Government on paper however were still in support of Spain in official channels, apart from a number of liberal politicians, but British public favour went with Colombian patriots and favoured pressuring government to open new trade markets with these newly formed Spanish American groups in 1817 and 1818. However, by 1822 at the Congress of Verona, Castlereagh shifted position to favour Colombian independence, after the accession of British interest to the Western Question, due to the fluctuating relations with regards to the French Empire and its interests and power relations with the Spanish Empire. With the independence of several Spanish colonies such as Mexico and Peru between 1817 - 1821, and the success of Bolivars armies in the North South-Americas and in 1824 with the signing of the United States-Colombia Trade agreement, the UK under George Canning eventually recognised the Colombian state in 1825.[2]

Canning in the House of Commons defended his policies regarding France, Spain and Spanish America in a speech stating: "I resolved that if France had Spain it should not be Spain with the Indies. I called the New World into existence to redress the balance of the Old" - 12 December 1826

In the later half of the 19th century British merchants came to the area for the Coffee which in this century has become an important import once more. Steamships and steam trains began to be invested in the 1870s–1890s by English merchants and the Colombian government to transport goods such as Bananas, tobacco, coffee and European imports, which proved to create a flourishing community of British expats in Colombia and spread out across the South Americas.[3] The British expat community later controlled a portion of the railways in Colombia such as the Cartagena Railway line, the Colombian Northern Railway and the Southern Bogota Railway line by 1906, with all railways returning to Colombian ownership by the 1930s.[4]

Chronology of Colombian–British relations

Muisca Confederation Map

Early

Colombian Independence

  • 1817 - Daniel Florence O'Leary, James Rooke, Thomas Charles Wright and John Illingworth Hunt enlist under Bolivar army
  • 1819 - Battles of Vargas Swamp and Boyaca. In Angostura Bolivar proclamated the Republic of Colombia included present-day Colombia, Panama, and Venezuela, along with parts of northern Peru, northwestern Brazil and Guyana.
  • 1821 - Francisco Antonio Zea was appointed by Bolivar as special diplomatic agent of Colombia to Europe and United States. In London he negotiated loans of financial creditors Herring & Richardson and gained recognition of his new country only from the United States.
  • 1822 - The ambassador Zea dies in Bath, and a large amount of British private investment is made in the new state
  • 1822 - Jose Rafael Revenga as substitute of Zea as Minister Plenipotentiary of Colombia in London, negotiated Great Britain's recognition of Colombia as an independent country.
  • 1823 - Mary English known as the Belle of Santa Fe resides in Bogotá from 1823 - 1827 being the representative of financial creditors Herring & Richardson[9]
  • March 1823 - John Potter Hamilton ESP the diplomat arrives in Gran Colombia, his 1827 narrative is notable for its depictions of free black men (bogas), such as Agustín Agualongo and women in Colombia
19th century Train used in Aroa Mines
  • 1824 - Bolivar leases the Aroa mines to generate revenue to fight the Spanish in the wars of Independence
  • 1825 - The republic of Gran Colombia was recognised formally by United Kingdom in first South American envoy recognised by European state
  • 1826 - The London stock market crashes reducing the already small number of private brokers willing to invest in what is now considered as a risky financial investment
  • 1826 - Revenga complained to the British government at the direction of Bolívar about the illegal presence of British settlers in Essequibo territory claimed by Colombia.
  • 1827 - The new ambassador of Colombia José Fernández Madrid lives in London
  • 1831 - Gran Colombia was dissolved due to the political differences that existed between supporters of federalism and centralism, as well as regional tensions among the peoples that made up the republic. It broke into the successor states of Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela. Since Gran Colombia's territory corresponded more or less to the original jurisdiction of the former Viceroyalty of New Granada, it also claimed the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua, the Mosquito Coast, as well as most of Esequiba.
  • 1865 - The American jurist Florence Gonzalez translates John Stuart Mill's Considerations on Representative Government
  • 1869 - The historic railway of Ferrocarril de Bolívar based in Puerto Colombia is opened with the backing of British Businessman in Colombia[4]
  • 1881 - Rosa Carnegie-Williams travels to Bogota, publishing her travel writing account A year in the Andes; or, A lady's adventures in Bogotá[permanent dead link] in 1889, which were published into Spanish in 1987
  • 1882 - The English merchant Robert A Joy (1818-?) and the Colombian Manuel J. de Mier funded the Santa Marta Railway in 1882-1906 to connect Bogota with the Magdalena River, and by 1906 reached its longest length of 94 kilometers stretching to Fundación, mostly delivering Bananas[4][3]
  • 1889 - Samuel Smiles Self-Help is published and put into circulation in Colombia, used from 1891 - 1912 to further the goal of the education of the Colombian working classes[10]

Modern

Falkland Islands, Stanley fingerposts

1903 - Panama was separated from Colombia

  • 1938 - Jaime Jaramillo Arango arrives in Europe, where he is witness to Kristallnacht, the Blitz and becomes the Colombian Ambassador to the UK between (1938;)1943 - 1945
  • 1940 - The British Council establish English examinations in Colombia.[11]
  • 1955 - Cricket in Colombia became more institutionally recognised on 20 May 1955 with the creation of the Bogotá Cricket Club (BCC) whose first chairman of the club was the Englishman Reginald Brand alongside and Indian Rishiraj Patel.
  • 1956 - Arango establishes the Anglo Colombian School in Bogotá
  • 1959 - Alfonso López Pumarejo dies in London, with Mass being attended in his name at Westminster Cathedral
  • 1961 - Elizabeth Masson founds the Colegio de Inglaterra
  • 1975 - Sebastian Snow crosses the Darién Gap with the Canadian Wade Davis in 1975 as part of his unbroken walk from Tierra del Fuego to Costa Rica, with the trip documented in The Rucksack Man (1976) and Davis's The Serpent and the Rainbow (1985)
  • 1978-1981 - Aline Helg travels between England and Colombia to write her 1987 work La educación en Colombia, 1918-1957: una historia social, económica y política
  • 1982 - Colombia backs UK in the Falkland Islands sovereignty dispute
  • 1987 - David Wood (1951–?) author of An Englishman in Colombia (2013) visits Colombia
  • 1980's - SAS train Colombian special forces in counter-narcotics[1]
  • 2003 - David Hutchinson the banker was kidnapped by FARC for 10 months residing in the Andes[12]
  • 2011 - Steve Cossey purchases and restores the No.8 Baldwin 1921 steam train, purportedly "the oldest operational steam engine in Colombia".[13][14]
  • 2015 - Mike Slee releases the nature Documentary Colombia: Wild Magic
  • 2016 - Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos visits UK on a state visit.
  • 2017 - Levison Woods walks through 1,700 miles across South America for Channel 4 for the programme Walking the Americas[15]
  • 2020 - 16 June - Bilateral trade agreement between two reached for post-Brexit

Britons in Colombia

Colombians in the United Kingdom

Economic relations

Following Brexit, the United Kingdom signed a continuity trade agreement with three Andean countries (Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru) on the 15 May 2019.[16][17] Colombia was not able to ratify the free trade agreement by 1 January 2021 and could not provisionally apply the agreement. Through the exchange of diplomatic notes the United Kingdom and Colombia agreed to a bridging mechanism arrangement, which was signed on 18 October 2019, allowing the two countries to continue to trading on preferential terms until Colombia could complete its domestic procedures to fully ratify the agreement.[18] Colombia ratified the agreement on 21 April 2022 and the UK-Andean countries free trade agreement entered into force on 28 June 2022 for Colombia.[19]

List of Ambassadors in United Kingdom to Colombia

Resident diplomatic missions

  • Colombia has an embassy and a consulate-general in London.[20]
  • United Kingdom has an embassy in Bogotá.[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Colombia connection: The UK's discreet role". BBC News. 1 November 2016. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  2. ^ https://www.cancilleria.gov.co/sites/default/files/Document%20Bicentenary%20UK.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ a b Empresas de vapores en el Caribe Colombiano: la navegacion fluvial y los ferrocarriles en el Magdalena Grande y el Bajo Magdalena 1870–1930, Joaquin Valoria-de-la-Hoz, October 2016, No.40, Caudernos de historia Economica y Empresarial, ISSN 1692-3707, p.12 See [1]
  4. ^ a b c Dawn of the Railway Era in Colombia, J. Fred Rippy, November 1943, The Hispanic American Historical Review, Vol. 23, pp. 650-663
  5. ^ Researching the history of slavery in Colombia and Brazil through ecclesiastical and notarial archives, Jane Landers, Pablo Gómez, José Polo Acuña, Courtney J. Campbell p. 259-292, Notaria Primera de Quibdo, Libro de Venta de Esclavos 1810-188, Fol. 132r. Notaría Primera de Riohacha Archive, Protocolo 1, Riohacha, 23 March 1831. Notaría Primera de Riohacha Archive, Protocolo 1, Riohacha, 4 May 1831. Baptism of María Olalla, Book of Baptisms, San Gerónimo de Buenavista, Montería, Córdoba, 20 February 1809
  6. ^ Case of Venezuela, William Lindsay Scrugg, 1898, p.38
  7. ^ a b Researching the history of slavery in Colombia and Brazil through ecclesiastical and notarial archives, 2015, Jane Landers, Pablo Gómez, José Polo Acuña, Courtney J. Campbell, pp. 259-292, Notaria Primera de Quibdo, Libro de Venta de Esclavos 1810-188, Fol. 132r. Notaría Primera de Riohacha Archive, Protocolo 1, Riohacha, 23 March 1831. Notaría Primera de Riohacha Archive, Protocolo 1, Riohacha, 4 May 1831. Baptism of María Olalla, Book of Baptisms, San Gerónimo de Buenavista, Montería, Córdoba, 20 February 1809
  8. ^ "The Gilded Legend of El Dorado". History. 21 January 2017. Archived from the original on 1 March 2021. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  9. ^ Adventuring Through Spanish Colonies: Simón Bolívar, Foreign Mercenaries and the Birth of New Nations, Matthew Brown, 2006, p.185, Liverpool University Press
  10. ^ Business goals and social commitment. Shaping organisational capabilities - Colombia's Fundacion Social, 1984-2011, José Camilo Dávila, Carlos Dávila, Lina Grisales, David Schnarch, July 2014, p.2, Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
  11. ^ Stoneman, Phil (8 October 2019). "Colombia Connection: UK Rules, OK?". The Bogotá Post. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  12. ^ "British kidnap victim tells of jungle ordeal". www.telegraph.co.uk. 10 May 2003. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  13. ^ Snyder, Matt (28 July 2011). "Englishman buys Bogota steam train for restoration". Colombia News | Colombia Reports. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  14. ^ "Bogota Colombia Steam". Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  15. ^ "Levison Wood: What I learned walking 1,800 miles from Mexico to Colombia". The Telegraph. 18 February 2017. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  16. ^ Hollingbery, George (15 May 2019). "UK signs trade continuity agreement with Colombia, Ecuador and Peru". GOV.UK. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
  17. ^ "Peru, Ecuador and Colombia sign trade deal with UK ahead of Brexit". Reuters. 15 May 2019. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
  18. ^ "United Kingdom - Colombia". World Trade Organization. Retrieved 8 February 2024.
  19. ^ "Joint Statement on UK-Colombia trade dialogue". GOV.UK. 19 May 2022. Retrieved 8 February 2024.
  20. ^ "Inicio | Embajada de Colombia". reinounido.embajada.gov.co.
  21. ^ "British Embassy Bogotá - GOV.UK". www.gov.uk.

Read other articles:

Japanese professional wrestler This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.Find sources: Shunma Katsumata – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this temp...

 

 

أندرو ر غوفان (بالإنجليزية: Andrew R. Govan)‏  معلومات شخصية الميلاد 13 يناير 1794(1794-01-13)مقاطعة أورانجبورغ  الوفاة 27 يونيو 1841 (47 سنة)مقاطعة مارشال  مواطنة الولايات المتحدة  الحياة العملية المدرسة الأم جامعة كارولاينا الجنوبية  المهنة سياسي  الحزب الحزب الجمهوري الديمق

 

 

Digital video service Microsoft Movies & TVScreenshot of Movies & TV app in Windows 10.Launch dateOctober 16, 2012; 11 years ago (2012-10-16) as Xbox VideoPlatform(s) Windows 8 and later Windows Server 2012 and later (optional) Windows Phone 8 and later (defunct) Xbox 360 S and later Windows Mixed Reality Websitewww.microsoft.com/movies-and-tv Microsoft Movies & TV (US only),[1][2] or Microsoft Films & TV (Canada, UK, Ireland, Australia, and N...

ستار تريك: العدوStar Trek: Nemesis (بالإنجليزية)[1][2][3] الشعارمعلومات عامةالتصنيف Star Trek film (en) الصنف الفني فيلم أكشن[5][6] — فيلم خيال علمي[5][6][7] — فيلم مغامرة[6] المواضيع أندرويد — استنساخ تاريخ الصدور  القائمة ... 2002 13 ديسمبر 2002[3] 13 ديسمبر 2002&...

 

 

Pour les articles homonymes, voir Louis II. Louis II de Flandre Titre Comte de Flandre, de Nevers et de Rethel 26 août 1346 – 30 janvier 1384(37 ans, 5 mois et 4 jours) Prédécesseur Louis Ier et II Successeur Marguerite III Comte d'Artois et de Bourgogne 9 mai 1382 – 30 janvier 1384(1 an, 8 mois et 21 jours) Prédécesseur Marguerite Ire Successeur Marguerite III Biographie Dynastie Maison de Dampierre Date de naissance 2...

 

 

سيرو نافيا    علم شعار الاسم الرسمي (بالإسبانية: Cerro Navia)‏    الإحداثيات 33°25′00″S 70°43′00″W / 33.416666666667°S 70.716666666667°W / -33.416666666667; -70.716666666667  [1] تاريخ التأسيس 1981  تقسيم إداري  البلد تشيلي[2]  التقسيم الأعلى محافظة سانتياغو  خصائص جغرافية &...

イギリスの政治家初代ミドルトン伯爵セントジョン・ブロドリックSt John Brodrick1st Earl of Midleton 生年月日 1856年12月14日没年月日 (1942-02-13) 1942年2月13日(85歳没)出身校 オックスフォード大学ベリオール・カレッジ所属政党 保守党(-1891)→アイルランド統一主義者同盟(英語版)(1891-1919)→統一主義者反分離連盟(英語版)(1919-1922)称号 初代ミドルトン伯爵、第9代ミドルトン

 

 

Scottish banknote Ten pounds(United Kingdom)Value£10 sterlingWidth132 mmHeight69 mmSecurity featuresSee-through window, raised print, security thread, mask, microlettering [1]Material usedPolymerYears of printing1838–present2017–present (current design)ObverseDesignRobert BurnsDesign date2017ReverseDesignOld and New Towns of EdinburghDesign date2017 The Clydesdale Bank £10 note, also known informally as a tenner, is a sterling banknote. It is the second smallest d...

 

 

This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: multiple citations with missing URLs. Please help improve this article if you can. (October 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Alberta provincial highway system Standard highway markers for AlbertaAlberta's provincial highway system as of 2016Highway namesProvincial HighwaysAlberta Highway XX (Hwy XX)System links Provincial highways in Alberta The Canadian province of Alber...

Cattura di CristoAutorePietro Lorenzetti Data1310-1319 circa Tecnicaaffresco UbicazioneBasilica inferiore di San Francesco, Assisi Dettaglio La Cattura di Cristo è un affresco di Pietro Lorenzetti, facente parte delle Storie della Passione di Cristo nel transetto sinistro della basilica inferiore di San Francesco ad Assisi. Il ciclo è databile al 1310-1319 circa. Indice 1 Descrizione e stile 2 Note 3 Bibliografia 4 Voci correlate 5 Altri progetti Descrizione e stile Nella scena della Cattur...

 

 

Stout produced by the Guinness Brewery Guinness Foreign Extra StoutTypeStoutManufacturerDiageoCountry of origin IrelandIntroduced1801Alcohol by volume 7.5 (varies)ColourDeep Ruby RedFlavourRoasted malt, dark cherries, diacetyl[1]IngredientsGrain, water, hops and yeast[2]VariantsGuinness Extra Smooth[3]WebsiteForeign Extra Stout Guinness Foreign Extra Stout bottle label until 2005Guinness Foreign Extra Stout (FES) is a stout produced by the Guinness Brewery, a...

 

 

Juan José Ballesta Información personalNombre de nacimiento Juan José Ballesta Muñoz Nacimiento 12 de noviembre de 1987 (36 años)Parla (España) Nacionalidad EspañolaCaracterísticas físicasAltura 1,76 m FamiliaHijos Juan José Ballesta Rebollo (n. 2007)Información profesionalOcupación Actor Área Película y televisión Años activo desde 1997Premios artísticosFestival Internacional de San Sebastián Concha de Plata al mejor actor2005 7 VírgenesPremios Goya Mejor actor revela...

У Вікіпедії є статті про інших людей із прізвищем Ігнат. Юрій ІгнатЮрій Робертович Ігнат  Полковник Загальна інформаціяНародження 23 грудня 1977(1977-12-23) (45 років)Національність українецьAlma Mater Національна академія сухопутних військ імені гетьмана Петра СагайдачногоВійс...

 

 

Swedish opera singer (1790–1871) Anna Sofia Sevelin. Anna Sofia Sevelin née Thunberg (23 July 1790 – 25 February 1871) was a Swedish opera singer (alto). She was a Hovsångerska and a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts. Life Anna Sofia Sevelin was the daughter of the church musician Olof Thunberg. She married the ballet dancer and actor Per Erik Sevelin in 1813. She was enrolled as a student at the Royal Dramatic Training Academy in 1806. She made her debut in 1807, and was enga...

 

 

Italian architect (1599–1667) Francesco BorrominiBorromini (anonymous youth portrait)BornFrancesco Castelli(1599-09-25)25 September 1599Bissone, Condominiums of the Twelve Cantons (Italian possessions of the Old Swiss Confederacy)Died2 August 1667(1667-08-02) (aged 67)Rome, Papal StatesOccupationArchitectBuildingsSan Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, Sant'Agnese in Agone, Sant'Ivo alla Sapienza, Oratorio dei Filippini Francesco Borromini (/ˌbɒrəˈmiːni/,[1] Italian: [franˈt...

Ground meat and tomato dish popular in Latin America and the Philippines This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Picadillo – news · newspapers · books · ...

 

 

Voce principale: Associazione Calcio Cesena. Associazione Calcio CesenaStagione 2015-2016Sport calcio Squadra Cesena Allenatore Massimo Drago All. in seconda Giuseppe Galluzzo Presidente Giorgio Lugaresi Serie B6º Coppa ItaliaQuarto turno Maggiori presenzeCampionato: Gomis (38)Totale: Gomis (38+1) Miglior marcatoreCampionato: Ciano (11)Totale: Ciano (13) StadioOrogel Stadium-Dino Manuzzi (23,860) Abbonati9 715[1] Maggior numero di spettatori14 353[1] vs. Bari (15 novembr...

 

 

Comic book anthology series Whiz ComicsWhiz Comics #2 (February 1940), the first appearance of Captain Marvel, cover art by C. C. Beck.Publication informationPublisherFawcett ComicsScheduleMonthlyFormatAnthologyGenreSuperheroPublication dateFeb. 1940 – June 1953No. of issues155Main character(s)Captain Marvel Whiz Comics was an anthology comic book series published by former American comic book publishing company, Fawcett Publications between February 1940 until June 1953.[1] It is w...

Proses membuat tepung dari jagung dalam festival rakyat di Slovakia. Tepung adalah partikel padat yang berbentuk butiran halus atau sangat halus tergantung proses penggilingannya. Biasanya digunakan untuk keperluan penelitian, rumah tangga, dan bahan baku industri. Tepung bisa berasal dari bahan nabati misalnya tepung terigu dari gandum, tapioka dari singkong, maizena dari jagung, atau hewani misalnya tepung tulang dan ikan. Jenis tepung Terigu - adalah tepung/bubuk halus yang berasal dari bi...

 

 

American soccer player (born 1993) Fatai Alashe Personal informationFull name Abdul-Fatai AlasheDate of birth (1993-10-21) October 21, 1993 (age 30)Place of birth Southfield, Michigan, United StatesHeight 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)Position(s) MidfielderYouth career2008–2011 Vardar SCCollege careerYears Team Apps (Gls)2011–2014 Michigan State Spartans 86 (8)Senior career*Years Team Apps (Gls)2013 Reading United 9 (1)2014 Portland Timbers U23s 11 (2)2015–2018 San Jose Earthqua...

 

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!