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La Cabrera belongs to the comarca called Sierra Norte de Madrid which is part of the wider autonomous Community of Madrid. Covering an area of 22.40 km 2 (8.65 sq mi), it is bordered to the north by Lozoyuela-Navas-Sieteiglesias, to the east by El Berrueco, to the south by Cabanillas de la Sierra and Torrelaguna, and to the east by Valdemanco.
In 1965, Cabrera Infante was able to revise the galley proofs of the novel and decided to rewrite several passages. The novel was originally intended for publication in 1965 but, for this reason, the printing of Vista de amanecer en el trópico was delayed for a few years and ultimately retitled Tres tristes tigres. [11]
Guillermo Linares, born in Cabrera, is a former NYC council man and current Commissioner of the Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) [7] Jorge Cavoli, also born in Cabrera, has been mayor of Cabrera for two terms. [8] El Prodigio, Krency Garcia. Famous accordion musician, Juan Alcequiez, better known as Juancito.
La Cabrera (Cabreira in Leonese language) is a comarca (shire) in the province of León, Spain. Its surface is 115.87 km 2 and the population was 4,227 inhabitants in 2007. The Sierra de la Cabrera range dominates the landscape of this mountainous comarca.
Philip of Castile (Seville, 28 May 1292 – Madrid, April 1327), was an infante of Castile, son of Sancho IV of Castile and María de Molina. He was Lord of Cabrera and Ribera and regent of his nephew Alfonso XI of Castile. He married his cousin Margarita de la Cerda, daughter of Alfonso de la Cerda
Luis Cabrera de Córdoba (1559–1623) was a Spanish historian and writer. His masterpiece is Historia de Felipe II. He was born in Madrid. His poem Laurentina was written for King Philip II. Only seven of the original 29 cantos have survived, the majority of which are about San Lorenzo.
Juan Alfonso Enríquez de Cabrera y Colonna, 5th Duke of Medina de Rioseco, (3 March 1599 – Madrid, Spain, 6 February 1647), he was hereditary 9th Admiral of Castile, and the 8th Count of Melgar. Juan Alfonso received his titles at the age of 3, when his father Luis III Enriquez de Cabrera died, under regency of his mother Italian Lady ...
While in Villa Cisneros, he wrote La arena y la intimidad (1940), which concerns his experiences not only as a prisoner of the Nationalists but also of the desert. The Romancero cautivo (1936–1939) is an umbrella title for the three short collections of ballads that were also written in captivity. These are: Con el alma en un hilo (1936–1937)