>be Alfonso Graña, 32yo Spanish yuropoor from butt-of-the-joke county (gallego)>migrate to Perú to make money looking for rubber in the amazon>go deep into the jungle with your buddy and encounter an uncontacted tribe >buddy gets killed but you are spared literally because the chief's daughter wants your BWC, not even memeing>get her pregnant and become apu (chief) after the chief dies>teach indians useful skills like leather-working, salt extraction, to cure meat, to make dams and watermills, etc >more apus acknowledge you, you become apu of apus (king) of a territory half the size of Spain>Standard Oil has to ask your permission to enter the jungle to look for oil>instead of using your power to become rich and spend your money back home you decide to stay and live in the jungle while helping those who want to explore it>to this day one of your grandsons, Kefren Graña, is the leader of his peopleBeing white in a brown country is tutorial mode
>>200171689Did this really happen? Because i can't find any informatiom about this dude online in english. There's not even a wikipedia article about him
>>200172037https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfonso_Gra%C3%B1a
>>200171689What a shame, he could have make an ethnostate in the jungle for spanish people, instead, panchos, ehat a disgrace of a country this is
>>200172961What's wrong with a mestizo ethnostate tho?
>>200174642Mongrel
>>200171689Similar in New Zealand>Born in 1811 in the town of Valverde del Majano, Manuel José was a wool merchant who one day left everything to go to sea in search of fortune. He arrived in Peru, where he boarded the English whaler "Elizabeth", with which he crossed the Pacific Ocean. He arrived at Port Awanui and made friends with the Ngati Porou people of the area. His relationship with them became so close that he married five women: Tapita, Kataraina, Mihita Heke, Uruhana and Maraea. Settled near the East Cape, Manuel José prospered and became a renowned merchant. The family grew with nine children, 41 grandchildren and 299 great-grandchildren. Today, almost two centuries later, his descendants number more than 20,000. None of them has forgotten their Spanish roots, attached to that Maori tradition of worship of the land in which identity is built on the memory of ancestors.>The Paniora family always knew of their Spanish heritage, but in a very vague way. They knew that their ancestor came from a region called Castile in Spain, but they were unaware of the exact location. It was not until 2006 that they discovered the connection with Valverde del Majano, a small town located a few kilometers from the city of Segovia.>In 2007 and 2012, two expeditions from New Zealand arrived in Valverde del Majano. The inhabitants of this village (many of them descendants of Manuel José's sister and, therefore, his relatives) say that the first thing the Paniora did was kneel down and kiss the ground, crying inconsolably with emotion. That long-awaited moment marked the end of a long search. The Paniora had finally found the origin. The place where, according to Maori tradition, they could "stick the spear" and close the circle where the tribe builds its identity.
>>200172961the germans tried that in Paraguay (not the amazon and not even that far from civilization), it didn't turn out wellhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QpbPcosXO-4
>>200172037Here's some info from official Spanish sources Royal academy of historyhttps://dbe.rah.es/biografias/93621/ildefonso-grana-cortizoSpanish Geographical Societyhttps://sge.org/exploraciones-y-expediciones/galeria-de-exploradores/viajeros-espanoles/alfonso-grana/National TVhttps://www.rtve.es/play/videos/cronicas/cronicas-alfonso-grana-rei-dos-xibaros/178075/
>>200174866I prefer the term raza cosmica
>>200172961Instead of 1 failed spain there'll be 2!
>>200179724>Leaf
>>200175218God what an absolute failure of a colony. Also the German guy talking about superiority while shirtless with his brown children lol
>>200171689Dude was an irl isekai protagonist.