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La Voz de Galicia (English: The Voice of Galicia) is a Spanish daily newspaper owned by the Corporación Voz de Galicia. La Voz is highest circulation newspaper in Galicia and the eighth-highest circulation general-interest daily newspaper in Spain. It is written primarily in Spanish with Galician used in the cultural and opinion sections. [1 ...
In 2008, she was a finalist for the La Voz de Galicia Novel Prize. Also in 2008, she won the Talismán Prize for Romantic Novels with her first full-length novel, La hija del cónsul (The Consul's Daughter), which was published the same year. [ 4 ]
In 1965, he was allowed to hold public positions again, and moved to the Galician capital Compostela where he taught Galician language and literature at the Rosalia de Castro high school, while he started to also teach at the University of Santiago de Compostela. Finally, in 1972, he became the first ever university professor in the field of ...
Aurelio Ribalta, a Galician writer living in Madrid, called for the protection of the Galician language in 1915. On January 5, 1916, Antón Vilar Ponte started a campaign for the establishment of a League of Friends of the Galician Language in the newspaper La Voz de Galicia and in March 1916 he published Galician Nationalism (Notes for a Book): Our Regional Affirmation, where he supported the ...
Diario de Ferrol is a Galician daily newspaper founded in Ferrol, Spain, in 1998 by Editorial La Capital (company of El Ideal Gallego, DXT Campeón, Diario de Arousa and Diario de Bergantiños). It is the distributed mostly in metropolitan area of Ferrolterra having an important section dedicated to local news.
1882 - La Voz de Galicia newspaper begins publication. 1916 - Irmandades da Fala (political group) organized. 1936 - Statute of Autonomy of Galicia of 1936 was voted and approved. It could never be implemented because of the Spanish Civil War; 1978 - Xunta de Galicia is designated as government of Galicia. [9]
The current toponym Ferrol, though, can only be traced back to the Middle Ages; a document from 1087 [25] mentions sancto Iuliano de Ferrol, near the monastery of San Martín de Jubia (12th century, in Romanesque style), where Ferrol is probably the local evolution of the genitive form of the Latin name Ferreolus; Ferrol was probably, in origin ...
Evaristo Martelo y Paumán del Nero Nuñez y Zuazo-Mondragón, [2] 6th Marquess of Almeiras (1850–1928), was a Spanish aristocrat, writer and politician. He is known chiefly as a poet who contributed to emergence of the literary Galician and who is counted among protagonists of the so-called Rexurdimento.