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Antonio José during the final of the Spanish preselection for Junior Eurovision, 2005. Antonio José was born on 2 January 1995 [1] in the town of Palma del Río, Córdoba, Spain. [2] His father, Antonio Sánchez, [3] is an AVE maintenance technician, [2] and his mother, María Mazuecos, [3] is a housewife and fond of music.
Antonio Díaz (karateka), full name Antonio José Díaz Fernández (born 1980), Venezuelan kata martial artist; Antonio José Álvarez de Abreu, Spanish noble and lawyer; Antonio José Amar y Borbón, Spanish military officer and colonial official; Antonio José Benavides, Venezuelan general; Antonio José Carranza, Venezuelan painter
The story begins with Periquillo's birth and miseducation and continues through his endless attempts to make an unearned living, as a student, a friar, a gambler, a notary, a barber, a pharmacist, a doctor, a beggar, a soldier, a count, and a thief, until late in life he sees the light and begins to lead an honest life.
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Antonio Piñero Sáenz (14 August 1941 in Chipiona, Spain) is a Spanish philologist, writer, and historian, specializing in the Judaism before Christianity, the life of Jesus of Nazareth, the founding of Christianity, and language and literature of the New Testament and early Christianity from a scientific perspective.
José Antonio Fernández may refer to: Josan (footballer), real name José Antonio Fernández Pomares (born 1989), Spanish footballer; José Antonio Fernández Carbajal (born 1954), Mexican businessman; José Antonio Fernández de Castro (1887–1951), Cuban journalist and writer; José Antonio Fernández (tennis) (born 1965), Chilean tennis player
He was born in Quito on 23 January 1775, son of Dr. Andrés Fernández-Salvador y Medrano and Rosa Lopez. (The Fernandez-Salvador family, one of the most prominent in Quito, was originally from Villoslada in Spain.) His father Andrés Fernández-Salvador y Medrano (holder of the 1769 coat of arms certificate) was the grandson of Antonio ...
The 1988 Italian edition from Feltrinelli Editore contains three additional stories. These stories are not in New Directions Publishing's English-language edition, published in 1986, but two—"The Cheshire Cat" and "Wanderlust"—were published in English in The Massachusetts Review in 2019. [5] "The Cheshire Cat" ("Il gatto dello Cheshire")