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  1. Há 3 dias · An Oxford student has created a new augmented reality Instagram filter to encourage debate about a controversial Cecil Rhodes statue. Reuben Meller is a student at Oxford's Ruskin School of Art and his creative tool allows users to digitally "remove, contextualise or retain" the contentious statue at Oriel College - providing an ...

  2. Há 5 dias · El derrocamiento de Cecil John Rhodes después de arrojar heces humanas contra la estatua y de que la universidad accediera a las demandas de los estudiantes para su retirada, Universidad de Ciudad del Cabo, 9 de abril de 2015, 2015. Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut . David Goldblatt. “Sin segundas intenciones”

  3. Há 17 horas · 3. O Colosso de Rodes é uma caricatura do colonizador e empreiteiro britânico Cecil Rhodes, satirizando seus planos ambiciosos de construir uma linha telegráfica e uma ferrovia que ligaria dois extremos do continente africano, a Cidade do Cabo, na África do Sul, ao Cairo, no Egito.

  4. Há 5 dias · The Legacy of Cecil Rhodes in the University of Oxford – School Information System. Global History: On 9 June 2020, more than a thousand people gathered in central Oxford demanding that Oriel College remove the statue of imperialist and mining magnate, Cecil Rhodes.

  5. Há 5 dias · Sceptical of their intentions, the ruler of Matabele, King Lobengula, regularly turned away those who approached him for mining concessions. While he doubted the intention of the miners, King Lobengula trusted missionaries. In 1888, Rhodes and Rudd exploited this situation, convincing the king to sign a treaty of friendship essentially granting ...

  6. Há 4 dias · In the late 1800s, Cecil Rhodes set up a secret society to preserve the expansion of the British Empire. Known as the Milner group, their main focus from 1920 to 1938 was to maintain the balance of power in Europe by building up Germany and pitting them against France and Russia.

  7. Há 3 dias · Cecil John Rhodes was born in Bishop's Stortford in 1853 and suffered from ill-health all of his life. He was sent to South Africa, when a teenager, as it was thought the better climate would benefit his fragile health. 2. Cecil Rhodes returned to England in 1873 to study at university.