Home  |  Links   |  Contact Us   |  Bookmark
   Travel Forum Search :
     News        Travel Topics        Travel Forum       Travel Directories        Dictionary  
Travel Forum    Europe
Travel Discussion Forum

 Where is a great Mediterranean summer getaway?
My partner and I would like a nice (relatively cheap) summer break in the sun. Neither of us like the "over the top BRIT tourist destination". We'd liked somewhere quiet with a good ...


 Why slickrick always connected in trukey section ? why he's not in UK section ? maybe he's gay with tanju ?
...


 What is the country code for russian email?
British websites tend to end with the letters ".uk". I think French email and websites end with the letters ".fr". What would the letter code for websites and email addresses ...


 Should I buy a car in Greece, Bulgaria, or Germany and bring it to Turkey?
I am an ex-pat living in Turkey. The cars a very expensive here, but the country does allow for foreign people to bring cars in from abroad.

Does anyone know if it is a good idea to do ...


 What is the sterotype of Polish people?

Additional Details
Thanks for your answers, but I was meaning more in the sterotype look of polish people....


 What kind of border controls are there between belgium and germany.?
can i just drive right across or will i be required to produce documents?...


 Why do Americans walk around in shorts, in Europe, at the wrong time of the year??
...


 Are you polish such nice people?
I'm a police officer in Greece,in traffic police actually.All the polish people I have stopped for control seemed very kind,even those that were drunk!They were very cooperative and smily all ...


 Malta or Cyprus?
For swimming in warm water, old architecture, nice people and food ..
(I have a feeling Malta as there are too many UK squaddies in Cyprus)...


 What do you think about Armenian decision to temporarily suspend visas for Turkish citizens during that game?
...


 Anyone going abroad next month and if yes where?
...


 Why all the questions in this section is about everything except ''travel''??
...


 Ecstasy in Amsterdam?
I am going to Amsterdam and would like to know about the use of the drug there. It is not legal but is the use widespread there?
Additional Details
And where can I buy it?...


 What is a good souvenir from The Netherlands that's really Dutch.?
I don't want wooden shoes or tulips. I'd like something I could display in my home....


 I'm going to Amsterdam....?
can anyone recommend some good bars and coffee shops in the dam please? dont give me chain stores like the bulldog and the ...


 I am a French resident visiting the London. I flew in via Dublin. How long can I stay?
...


 Who has visited Hagia Sophia?
What did you think as you walked inside?...


 Christmas Holidays?
i'm looking for a place to go for the christmas holidays which is warm, not too expensive and preferably in ...


 How old do you have to be to drink alcohol in Europe?
Specifically in Greece, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Finland, Denmark and such....


 Do people have maids and drivers in Russia?
Do they?...



Why does American history books claim that U.S. purchased Alaska?

Russian history books have always stated that Russia leased Alaska to USA for 100 years then in 1967, USA was to give Alaska back to Russia...
Additional Details
...depends on how one defines "pseudo history" and "science freak"...

    



Show all answers


RE
Rating
If so, it wasn't the only international agreement that the United States has violated over the years. For example, in the Treaty of Guadalupe, with Mexico, the US promised that Mexican and US citizens would be able to travel freely back and forth between the two countries without visas or immigration restrictions...forever. Until the US Senate unilaterally repealed the provision.


wschmerz
Rating
Russian history books write EXACTLY THE SAME as Americans - that Alaska was sold to USA. I know, there are several science freaks, pretending to be Russian historians, who state that Alaska was leased (despite the fact, that all the historical documents talk about SALE, not LEASE).

It's very bad that you can't distinguish between "history book" and "pseudo-history book, written by a freak".

FYI read this [ http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Продажа_Аляски ].


Mark
Because they did:

Purchase of Alaska, 1867

The purchase of Alaska in 1867 marked the end of Russian efforts to expand trade and settlements to the Pacific coast of North America, and became an important step in the United States rise as a great power in the Asia-Pacific region. Beginning in 1725, when Russian Czar Peter the Great dispatched Vitus Bering to explore the Alaskan coast, Russia had a keen interest in this region, which was rich in natural resources and lightly inhabited. As the United States expanded westward in the early 1800s, Americans soon found themselves in competition with Russian explorers and traders. Moscow, however, lacked the financial resources to support major settlements or a military presence along the Pacific coast of North America and permanent Russian settlers in Alaska never numbered more than four hundred. Defeat in the Crimean War further reduced Russian interest in this region.

Russia offered to sell Alaska to the United States in 1859, believing the United States would off-set the designs of Russia's greatest rival in the Pacific, Great Britain. The looming U.S. Civil War delayed the sale, but after the war, Secretary of State William Seward quickly took up a renewed Russian offer and on March 30, 1867, agreed to a proposal from Russian Minister in Washington, Edouard de Stoeckl, to purchase Alaska for $7.2 million. The Senate approved the treaty of purchase on April 9; President Andrew Johnson signed the treaty on May 28, and Alaska was formally transferred to the United States on October 18, 1867. This purchase ended Russia's presence in North America and ensured U.S. access to the Pacific northern rim.

For three decades after its purchase the United States paid little attention to Alaska, which was governed under military, naval, or Treasury rule or, at times, no visible rule at all. Seeking a way to impose U.S. mining laws, the United States constituted a civil government in 1884. Skeptics had dubbed the purchase of Alaska "Seward’s Folly," but the former Secretary of State was vindicated when a major gold deposit was discovered in the Yukon in 1896, and Alaska became the gateway to the Klondike gold fields. The strategic importance of Alaska was finally recognized in World War II. Alaska became a state on January 3, 1959.

Enjoy!


(Φ)kaksi_guy
Rating
Vovka, why don’t you mention California as well?
Just compare Alaska and Siberia; Alaska is a tidy land while Siberia is ear-deep in crap; I mean ecology!


N!vag
Rating
In 1867, Russia sold Alaska to the United States for $7,200,000 or about 2 cents per acre. The U.S. purchase was accomplished solely through the determined efforts of Secretary of State William H. Seward, and for many years afterward the land was derisively called Seward's Folly or Seward's Icebox because of its supposed uselessness. Since Alaska appeared to offer no immediate financial return, it was neglected.

Therefore, its Alaska that wanted the US to buy its land and not the US wanting to buy Alaska.


sux_2b_ewe
Rating
Russia sounds like it's the USA's ex-wife.


Robob
Rating
Russia thus turned to the only other potential buyer, the United States. In the mid-nineteenth century, Russia and the United States were drawn together by a common hostility toward Great Britain and a basic agreement on most foreign policy issues. Of the major European powers, Russia was the only one to support the Union in the American Civil War of 1861-65. The United States had already become aware of the possible Russian interest in selling Alaska in the mid-1850s, during the term of President Franklin Pierce. Faced with the breakup of the nation, however, the administrations of Presidents James Buchanan and Abraham Lincoln were in no position to respond positively to Russian offers. Ardent expansionists such as William H. Seward, secretary of state under both Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, nonetheless retained an abiding interest in obtaining Alaska, which they saw as an integral component of Manifest Destiny and the American drive to the Pacific. In 1867, Seward reached an agreement with the Russian ambassador in Washington to purchase the territory for $7.2 million.
Of course Russian history books are true also. NOT!!!


RUgirl
Rating
Russia had Alaska. Then russian queen sold it to America.
Dont believe american books, i found many history mistakes in them. Or propagandas.


roar
Rating
That's not true. If it was Russia would have Alaska.


Al Bundy
If that's true, then the Russians got screwed. Seriously, though, we have a property law that states that if an improvement is made on the land, that the user's of the land are entitled to compensation for those improvements, which usually includes permanent ownership of the land. Also, it's possible that the agreement of 1867 could've been amended since then, especially considering the effects of WW2 and the Cold War.



Rating



 Enter Your Message or Comment


User Name:  
User Email:   
Post a comment:









  
Terms of Service   |   Privacy Policy
© 2011 TravelExpertGuide                 



0.104
CATEGORIES   ARCHIVE   TRAVEL
 HOME Forum Links
 NEWS Forum1 Links1
 FORUM Forum2 Links2
 DICTIONARY  All RSS Feeds