Columna The New York Times, 27.03.2017 Anne O’Donnell, profesora adjunta de historia y de estudios rusos y eslavos (U. de New York)[caption id="attachment_47067" align="alignright" width="237"]
Red Century[/caption]
Vacant offices. Barren corridors. The hush of work not being done settles across the capital city, a silence of memos untyped, papers unpushed, file... 


Golda Meir, la admirada “Mujer de Hierro” de Israel[/caption]
"Siempre sentía demasiado frío por fuera y demasiado vacío por dentro". Así describía Golda... 
Skies break over Nuremburg, gabled rooftops of the great medieval city radiant in autumn light. Orderly columns of troops march over the Pegnitz River. We see his winged chariot, a Junkers Ju 52,... 
Kabaka Palace in Kampala[/caption]
From the very start, much of Africa was inaccurately mapped out by European invaders. They proceeded to trade and negotiate tracts of land they had marked out for themselves, with no regard for the numerous chiefdoms and kingdoms... 
African National Party[/caption]
Large scale urbanization and economic growth during the Second World War fueled fears within the white Afrikaner population that the country’s existing racial barriers would collapse. This reinforced support for the severely conservative National Party’s... 
Martin Mcguiness en una foto de archivo... 
EFE[/caption]
El nacionalismo radical irlandés perdió hoy a una de...