Until the early 19th century the word Biscayne (= Biscayan) was a demonym and ethnonym referring ambiguously to the Basques of Spain excluding Navarre, or more often the Basques in general. For example, Saint Francis Xavier identified himself as a Biscayne, or "vizcaino", as he wrote it, meaning a Basque. The word Biscayne left an imprint in different place-names and surnames (last names) of America and Philippines, related to the Basque whale hunting and colonization of the New World. As of the 19th century, the concept shifted gradually to mean anything related to the Basque province of Biscay, in Spain. - Source: Wikipedia
- News
- Policy
-
Commentary
- Commentary Main
- Corrections
- Editorials
- Letters
- Cheryl K. Chumley
- Kelly Sadler
- Jed Babbin
- Tom Basile
- Tim Constantine
- Joseph Curl
- Joseph R. DeTrani
- Don Feder
- Billy Hallowell
- Daniel N. Hoffman
- David Keene
- Robert Knight
- Gene Marks
- Clifford D. May
- Michael McKenna
- Stephen Moore
- Tim Murtaugh
- Peter Navarro
- Everett Piper
- Cal Thomas
- Scott Walker
- Miles Yu
- Black Voices
- Books
- Cartoons
- To the Republic
- Sports
- Sponsored
- Events
-
Video/Podcasts
- Corrections
- All Videos
- All Podcasts
- The Front Page
- Threat Status
- Politically Unstable
- The Sitdown with Alex Swoyer
- Bold & Blunt
- The Higher Ground
- Court Watch
- Victory Over Communism
- District of Sports
- Capitol Hill Show
- The Unregulated Podcast
- ForAmerica
- Washington Times Weekly
- God, Country & American Story
- Games
-
- Subscribe
- Sign In