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Banco de la Nación Argentina (BNA; English: Bank of the Argentine Nation) is a large bank in Argentina, and the largest in the country's banking sector. History
The Headquarters of the Bank of the Argentine Nation (Spanish: Casa Central del Banco de la Nación Argentina), more often referred locally as Banco Nación Casa Central, is a monumental bank building next to the Plaza de Mayo, founding site of Buenos Aires and host of major events in the history of the country.
The building was designed to house the new headquarters of Banco de la Nación, a financial entity of the Peruvian State.After the fire that occurred during the Four Quarters March in 2000 that destroyed the original building (built by Enrique Seoane Ros), [5] the headquarters had moved to the district of San Isidro.
The BN was created January 27, 1966, by Law 16000, approved by the Peruvian congress and was signed into law by the then-president Fernando Belaúnde Terry.Its predecessors date to 1905, when José Pardo created the Caja de Depósitos y Consignaciones or Bank of Deposits and Consignments.
Mapa en Relieve de Guatemala The Relief map of Guatemala was made by Francisco Vela in 1905 and still exists. This map (horizontal scale 1:10,000; vertical scale 1:2,000) measures 1,800 m 2 , and was created to educate children in the scape of their country.
In 2016, Credomatic de México S.A. de C.V., a subsidiary of BAC International Inc., signed a contract to transfer to Banco Invex S.A. its Mexican credit cards business [4] In 2017 the group started to use BAC Credomatic as brand for all their bank and credit card services, using a new modern logo. [citation needed]
Español: Mapa mundial de migraciones humanas, con el polo norte como centro. Africa es el punto de partida, leyéndose desde la parte superior izquierda hasta América del Sur en el extremo derecho. Los patrones de migración estan basados en estudios del ADN mitocondrial (matrilinear). Los números representan miles de años.
The bank soon opened branches elsewhere in Argentina, and it changed its name in 1865 to the London and River Plate Bank (Banco de Londres y Río de la Plata). The bank expanded over the years to have operations in Uruguay, Brazil and Chile. [2] In 1918, it was acquired by Lloyds Bank Limited.