Colonialism in the mirror of British imperialism - Welcome to the Stone Age

2 0 0
                                    

Lord Warden of the Marches Thomas Ap Llewelyn surrendered Terbourg after a two-day assault, even though the fortress could have been held for six months. The commander allowed himself to be fired upon just long enough to keep up appearances and then surrendered with barely concealed relief. There were forty cannons, seven thousand two hundred Projectile d'artillerie, twelve thousand bombs, fourteen hundred shells, and seventy thousand pounds of lead in the fort. Larger calibers would have shot it all up first before capitulating and set off a gigantic fireworks display.  

Jokingly, orderlies passed at a stretched gallop hanged men moved by the wind . Llewelyn, a native of Ysgubor-y-coed/Cardiganshire, left for Wales, accompanied only by two rogues scarified in oceanic style. A few hundred years later, a descendant of the loser travels halfway around the world to Australia. This Lord Gruffydd of the Marches is insubstantially young. He appears as a journalist.Travelers of the 19th century put the "Austral..." on the lowest level of humanity. They even succeed in downgrading them in comparisons with the downgraded of Africa, which I will not circulate. Experts suspect that at most thirty thousand aborigines survived the British invasion until 1805. You have to realize who they meet in the first round from 1778 - the damned of Great Britain. Primarily people from the slums. The Crown exports the Youth Bulge. 

A convict stumbles across a paleontological sensation on the east coast, near the bay that James Cook's Endeavour picked up in 1770 and has since been called Botany Bay. Gruffydd happens to be on the spot. He sells his readers a pile of bones as the almost complete skeleton of a fang-toothed marsupial with the appearance of a sabre-toothed cat. There has been nothing like Sparassodonta in Australia since Thylacoleo carnifex, but no one knows that yet. Gruffydd seals a Stone Age bone blade into the ensemble: proof that even the first Australian acted as a deadly displacer as a result of technological advantage. The existence of an Australian Raubbeutler appeared in the Pleistocene is convincing because of the many koalas and kangaroos in the presence of the events.

The fossils remain unidentified for a long time, first in the house of Philip Gidley King. The third governor of New South Wales has a relationship that leads to fatherhood with a female convict. In 1827 the find ended up in the attic of the Australian Museum that had just opened in Sydney. It was later assigned to the giant bandicoot Diprotodon, which took part in a megafauna mass extinction in the late Pleistocene.

American DemonsWhere stories live. Discover now