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El padrecito (transl. "The Little Priest") is a 1964 Mexican comedy film directed by Miguel M. Delgado , starring Cantinflas , Ángel Garasa and Rosa María Vázquez . [ 1 ]
Oblivion Verses (French: Les Versets de l'oubli, Spanish: Los versos del olvido) is a 2017 French-German-Dutch-Chilean drama film written and directed by Iranian filmmaker Alireza Khatami, in his feature film debut.
Que te perdone Dios... yo no (English title: Ask God for Forgiveness... Not Me) [1] is a Mexican telenovela produced by Angelli Nesma Medina for Televisa. It is the remake of the telenovela Abrázame muy fuerte, produced in 2000. [2] Zuria Vega, Mark Tacher, Sergio Goyri and Rebecca Jones star in this telenovela.
Museo del Prado; Antonello da Messina; Usuario:Ángel Luis Alfaro/artículos; Cristo muerto sostenido por un ángel (Antonello da Messina) Arte de la Edad Moderna; Cristo muerto; Pintura italiana del Museo del Prado; Cristo muerto sostenido por ángeles; Varón de dolores; Anexo:Pintura italiana medieval y renacentista en las colecciones ...
Miguel Pro, whose full name was José Ramón Miguel Agustín, [7] was born into a mining family on January 13, 1891, in Guadalupe, Zacatecas.He was the third of eleven children, four of whom had died as infants or young children.
The "Real Santuario del Santísimo Cristo de La Laguna" was listed as a Cultural Monument in 2005 by the Canary Islands Government. In 2024 the Christ of La Laguna was declared by the Military Archbishop of Spain, Monsignor Don Juan Antonio Aznárez Cobo, as patron saint of the Field Artillery Regiment number 93 of Tenerife (RACA 93). [6]
Carlo Crespi was the third of thirteen children born to Daniele Crespi, a peasant, and his wife Luisa Croci. In 1907, he began his novitiate in Foglizzo and between 1909 and 1911 he studied philosophy in Valsalice, where he met priest Renato Ziggiotti, who would live to become the successor of John Bosco.
Cristo Rey (English: Christ the King) is a statue 26 meters tall located in the Cerro de los Cristales (Hill of the Crystals) in the village of Los Andes, west of the city of Cali, Valle del Cauca, Colombia. [1] The hill is so named because of the large amount of quartz that could be collected in the surrounding area.