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The image displays an open book, likely a historical text, resting on a light-colored, possibly tiled, surface. The book's left page features a black and white engraved illustration of General José M. Hernandez (El Mocho), depicted from the chest up in a military uniform with a decorated peaked cap and a prominent beard. Directly beneath the illustration, the caption "GENERAL JOSE M. HERNANDEZ (El Mocho)" is printed. The left page also contains multiple paragraphs of Spanish text, with a finger partially obscuring some words in one of the provided crops. This text details political and economic events, including General Manuel Antonio Matos's opposition to Castro, the involvement of jailed bankers, public humiliation in Caracas, and threats to send individuals to the Castillo de Puerto Cabello. It also mentions foreign companies like the New York & Bermúdez Company.

The right page of the book is entirely filled with Spanish text across several paragraphs. This content describes historical events in Venezuela, including navigation on the Orinoco River, the German railway company, and a French cable company. It discusses Matos organizing uprisings and Castro's efforts to suppress them. A significant army of over 14,000 men is mentioned as being concentrated in Villa de Cura. The text also refers to the presence of German, English, French, Italian, Dutch, and North American warships off the Venezuelan coasts. Further details describe Castro entrenching 6,000 men in La Victoria, a 22-day battle, the withdrawal of "La Libertadora" troops on November 2, and Juan Vicente Gómez's role in the conflict. The final episode of the conflict is stated to have occurred in Ciudad Bolívar. The text concludes by referring to "La Libertadora" as the last of Venezuela's internal wars, leading to an era of peace.

The visible text explicitly mentions the Venezuelan locations of Villa de Cura, Puerto Cabello, Caracas, La Victoria, and Ciudad Bolívar. The city of Santa Ana, Venezuela, is not mentioned in any of the visible content within this image.
FM-x6dG13

Jun 7, 2026, 5:10 AM

Santa Ana, Venezuela

Moment

Stake attention in this memory

historical
authoritative
serious
informative
formal

The image displays an open book, likely a historical text, resting on a light-colored, possibly tiled, surface. The book's left page features a black and white engraved illustration of General José M. Hernandez (El Mocho), depicted from the chest up in a military uniform with a decorated peaked cap and a prominent beard. Directly beneath the illustration, the caption "GENERAL JOSE M. HERNANDEZ (El Mocho)" is printed. The left page also contains multiple paragraphs of Spanish text, with a finger partially obscuring some words in one of the provided crops. This text details political and economic events, including General Manuel Antonio Matos's opposition to Castro, the involvement of jailed bankers, public humiliation in Caracas, and threats to send individuals to the Castillo de Puerto Cabello. It also mentions foreign companies like the New York & Bermúdez Company. The right page of the book is entirely filled with Spanish text across several paragraphs. This content describes historical events in Venezuela, including navigation on the Orinoco River, the German railway company, and a French cable company. It discusses Matos organizing uprisings and Castro's efforts to suppress them. A significant army of over 14,000 men is mentioned as being concentrated in Villa de Cura. The text also refers to the presence of German, English, French, Italian, Dutch, and North American warships off the Venezuelan coasts. Further details describe Castro entrenching 6,000 men in La Victoria, a 22-day battle, the withdrawal of "La Libertadora" troops on November 2, and Juan Vicente Gómez's role in the conflict. The final episode of the conflict is stated to have occurred in Ciudad Bolívar. The text concludes by referring to "La Libertadora" as the last of Venezuela's internal wars, leading to an era of peace. The visible text explicitly mentions the Venezuelan locations of Villa de Cura, Puerto Cabello, Caracas, La Victoria, and Ciudad Bolívar. The city of Santa Ana, Venezuela, is not mentioned in any of the visible content within this image.

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43651

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0

Creator

+$0.03

Revenue

+$0.00

TVL

$0.00

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FM-x6dG13

Jun 7, 2026, 5:10 AM

Santa Ana, Venezuela

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