Eldorado - traducción al Inglés
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Eldorado - traducción al Inglés

SOUTH AMERICAN MYTH
Eldorado; The Legend of El Dorado; The Gilded One; Legend of El Dorado; El Dorado (myth); ElDorado; El Rey Dorado; The golden Indian; El dorado; El Dorado (legend); Manõa
  • ''Nieuwe caerte van het Wonderbaer ende Goudrjcke Landt Guiana'' by Jodocus Hondius (1598) shows the city of Manoa on the northeastern shore of [[Lake Parime]]
  • This Muisca raft figure is on display in the [[Gold Museum, Bogotá]], Colombia.}}
  • [[Lake Parime]] (Parime Lacus) on a map by [[Hessel Gerritsz]] (1625). Situated at the west coast of the lake, the city of Manõa or El Dorado.
  • Inspection of the Welser army by [[Georg von Speyer]] (right) and Philipp von Hutten (center) at [[Sanlúcar de Barrameda]].
  • Trinidad and Tobago stamp featuring the 'Discovery of Lake Asphalt by Raleigh, 1595'

Eldorado      
El Dorado, legendary city of riches in South America
El Dorado         
eldorado
Golden State         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The golden state; The Golden State; Golden State (disambiguation); The Golden State (album); The Golden State (song); Golden State (song)
l"Eldorado (la California)

Definición

El Dorado
[??l d?'r?:d??]
(also eldorado)
¦ noun (plural El Dorados) a place of great abundance and wealth.
Origin
Sp., lit. 'the gilded one', the name of a country or city formerly believed to exist in South America.

Wikipedia

El Dorado

El Dorado (Spanish: [el doˈɾaðo], English: ; Spanish for "the golden"), is commonly associated with the legend of a gold city, kingdom, or empire. Originally, El Hombre Dorado ("The Golden Man") or El Rey Dorado ("The Golden King"), was the term used by the Spanish in the 16th century to describe a mythical tribal chief (zipa) or king of the Muisca people, an indigenous people of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense of Colombia, who as an initiation rite, covered himself with gold dust and submerged in Lake Guatavita.

A second location for El Dorado was inferred from rumors, which inspired several unsuccessful expeditions in the late 1500s in search of a city called Manoa on the shores of Lake Parime or Parima. Two of the most famous of these expeditions were led by Sir Walter Raleigh. In pursuit of the legend, Spanish conquistadores and numerous others searched what is today Colombia, Venezuela, and parts of Guyana and northern Brazil, for the city and its fabulous king. In the course of these explorations, much of northern South America, including the Amazon River, was mapped. By the beginning of the 19th century, most people dismissed the existence of the city as a myth.

The legend of the Seven Cities of Gold (Seven Cities of Cibola) led to Francisco Vázquez de Coronado's expedition of 1540 across the New Mexico territory. This became mixed with the stories of El Dorado, which was sometimes said to be one of the seven cities.

Several literary works have used the name in their titles, sometimes as "El Dorado", and other times as "Eldorado".