The Anglish Moot
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In 1976, a tharlreving junta overthrew Isabel Perón, leading to "La Guerra Sucia" ("The Dirty War"), one of the most {{over|shandful|disgraceful}} tides in the eretide of Latin America, which was to end in 1983.
 
In 1976, a tharlreving junta overthrew Isabel Perón, leading to "La Guerra Sucia" ("The Dirty War"), one of the most {{over|shandful|disgraceful}} tides in the eretide of Latin America, which was to end in 1983.
   
Today Fair Winds is {{over|frithtful|peaceful}} and {{over|adwelling|attractive}} to everyone. The town has always been and is still {{over|ongot|recognized}} for its {{over|bookcraft|literature}}, film and learning.
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Today Fair Winds is {{over|frithtful|peaceful}} and {{over|adwelling|attractive}} to everyone. The town has always been and is still {{over|ongot|recognized}} for its {{over|bookcraft|literature}}, film and learning.[[Category:Boroughs]]
 
{{Stub}}
 
[[Category:Boroughs]]
 

Revision as of 17:42, 14 November 2017

Fair Winds
Escudo de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires
Land Silverland
Revetung Spanish
Dweller(s) Hover(s)
Stighted 1536
Landswath 78 miles²
Ledescore 2,890,000 (2010)

Fair Winds or Goodwinds (Spanish: Buenos Aires) is the revetown of Silverland in the northeast of the land on the shores of the rith which bears the land's name.

One of the biggest town in South America, Fair Winds has a long and frimdy eretide.

It has been home to some of the bremest writers and craftsmen in the eretide of Latin America.

The city has seen thrift booms that brought in stunning wealth as well as thrift meltdowns that have driven folk into armhood.

Fair Winds was orded twice. A settling at the nowa day stow was shortly outled in 1536 by conquistador Pedro de Mendoza, but harrying by arland Redlanders forced the settlers to shrithe to Asunción, Paraguay in 1539. By 1541 the town had been forsook. However another settling was made in 1580, which was to last.

The town was to wield all trade in the land of nowa-day Silverland, Paraguay, Uruguay and also Bolivia. In 1617 the landship of Buenos Aires was forsaken by Asunción.

As it grew, it became too powerful for the arlanders to strike, but became open to seareavers. At first, much of the town's thriving was done unlawfully, as all acknowledged trade with Spain had to go through Lima.

Fair Winds was orded on the shores of the Río de la Plata (Platte Rith), overset as "River of Silver." It was given this name by early rossers and settlers, who had gotten some silver hursts from arlanders.

In the H18th, cow farming in the open grasslands umb the town became with ovetful, and micklereds of leather hides were sent to Europe, to make shoes, cladding... and a frothering of other wares.

In the Napoleonish eld, Britain struck the town twice in 1806-1807, looking to further weaken Spain while also gaining worthy New World landholds to edstow the ones it had so tidely lost in the American Upwending. The first strike, led by Colonel William Carr Beresford, spowed, although it was won back by the Spanish out of Montevideo about two months later. A twithe British thrack was held in 1807 under John Whitelocke. The British took Montevideo but Fair Winds was thoroughly warded, leaving them to withdraw.

When Spain was taken by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1808, the boroughmen wanted selfood, and in 1810 they stighted there own ledeward, although full selfood would not come until 1816.

When San Martín was outcast to Europe, there was a lack of reding in Silverland ; a gouth soon broke out.

Silverland was shedded between those who belikened a strong kernel wield (mainly from Fair Winds) and those who belikened more landshire self-reding, which led to more unrest in 1829. The land's first lawwrit was dighted in 1853.

The newly selfhood had to carry on struggling. England and France both tried to take Buenos Aires in the mid-1800s but failed. Fair Winds forblew as a trading hove, and the sale of leather went on, namely after railroads were built faying the port to the interior of the country where the cattle ranches were. Towards the en of the century, the young city developed a taste for European high kith, and in 1908 the Colón Theater opened its doors.

As the city bulkbuilt in the early H20th, the town spanned inwanderers, mostly from Europe, mainly from Spain and Italy, as well as Welsh, British, Germans and Jews.

Many more Spanish settled bewhile and shortly after the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). The Perón years (1946-1955) saw the settling of Nazi war outlaws. In latter years, the land has welcomed inwanderers from Mornfrithland, China, Eastern Europe and Latin America.

Juan Perón along with his breme wife Evita became foresitter in 1946.

Perón was a with strong leader and was belikened by everyone, openinh learnhalls and healing stows and narrowing the gap between rich and arm.

On Afterlithe 16 1955, Fair Winds saw one of its darkest days, as heramights against Perón, seeking to withdraw him, bebid the fleet to bomb the Plaza de Mayo (which was a gathering stow for Peroners) and led to the death of 364 people and scathing hundreds more. Thankfully the loft and landmight did not dealnim, and the upstrike swethered. However Perón was withdrawn by another uprising three months later.

In 1976, a tharlreving junta overthrew Isabel Perón, leading to "La Guerra Sucia" ("The Dirty War"), one of the most shandful tides in the eretide of Latin America, which was to end in 1983.

Today Fair Winds is frithtful and adwelling to everyone. The town has always been and is still ongot for its bookcraft, film and learning.