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An example of the blend of Mayan and Spanish cultures in Valladolid
The hot, humid air this evening was charged with the nervous electricity of an approaching storm-
Valladolid, Yucatán, México
August 4, 2010
Valladolid is an incredible place- The ancient Maya had a town here called "Zací", which was destroyed by the Spanish under a nephew of the conquistador Montejo family. They had established a town further away, but plagued by mosquitos, they arrived here and established Valladolid on March 24, 1545. The Mayans of the region, of course, did not take kindly to this invasion and, in the face of horrific horrific exploitation, staged numerous revolts over the following centuries, culminating in the Caste Wars of the 1840's, in which the town was sacked and many of the residents slaughtered. In other parts of Mexico, the tensions and fallout stemming from the Spanish colonial system still run very high, but here there seems to be some peace at the moment.
It's a small town, and you seem to run into the same people over and over again. Due its proximity to some major archeological sites, it has begun to see more tourism over the past ten years- predominantly European backpacker types- We twice bumped into some Germans who were traveling through the Yucatán and Central America. As far as we could tell, we were the only Americans in town. It's a compact, densely packed place and there are a number of modest hotels near the zócalo and a handful of exceptional restaurants.
Under the extreme tropical sun (by mid-afternoon, you can't walk half a block without being drenched in sweat), the narrow, brightly colored streets are a flurry of activity -stores specializing in leather and clothing; -food vendors selling strange fruits, medicines, and streetfood; -bicycles, cars, traffic cops; -old Mayan women dressed in traditional huipiles sewing embroidery on the sidewalk or walking the streets in pairs.
The language here is accented by Mayan, and occasionally you hear pure Yucatec Mayan being spoken, as it is still the first language of many.
Catalog #: 01_00081999
Title: Kokusai, Ki-59, Theresa
Corporation Name: Kokusai
Official Nickname: Theresa
Additional Information: Japan
Designation: Ki-59
Tags: Kokusai, Ki-59, Theresa
Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive
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Imperial Japanese Army Air Force Kawasaki Ki-100-1b at the RAF Museum, Cosford, Shropshire, 8 July 2020. The Ki-100 was an unexpectedly successful lash-up of Kawasaki Ki-61 Hein airframes which did not have the 1,160hp Kawasaki Ha-40 engines (license-built Daimler Benz DB601’s) they were designed for since the factory producing them had been totally destroyed by an USAAF bombing raid in January 1945. However, there were more powerful 1,500hp Mitsubishi Ha-112 engines available and even though they were 14-cylinder, two-row, air-cooled, radial engines much wider than the V12 inline liquid-cooled DB engines, they were attached to the Ki-61 airframes to produce the Ki-100 – and the unlikely result was one of the best IJAAF fighters of the war, able to mix it with the best Allied fighters, except at high altitudes where the power of the engine dropped off. The war ended before many were built (about 378) and the example preserved at Cosford is the only surviving example. It was captured at an airfield in Saigon in August 1945. Pictured is an undercarriage leg and wing bomb/drop tank rack.