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Pedro Romero Martínez (19 November 1754 – 10 February 1839) was a bullfighter from the Romero family in Ronda, Spain. His grandfather Francisco is credited with advancing the art of using the muleta ; his father and two brothers were also toreros .
Pedro Romero de Terreros was born in Cortegana, Spain, on June 28, 1710, the fifth (of six) child and fourth son of Ana Gómez and José Romero de Terreros. [1] [2] His parents had little land or wealth but were related to the two largest landowners in Cortegana.
In 2009, a countdown ending on 10/10/10 appeared on the group's official website. In an interview conducted that day, October 10, 2010, on the radio station La Mega 107.3 FM during the Fabricado Acá show, Fernando Batoni, Rafael Cadavieco, Diego Márquez, Álvaro Segura and Jaime Verdaguer announced that they had indeed a tour planned for those dates, but that the proposal that was made in ...
José Inocencio Alas – Salvadorian-American former diocesan priest, friend of Archbishop Óscar Romero, and advocate of peasants' rights; left the priesthood in the 1980s while still continuing his advocacy; Alexander Ales – Scottish theologian and former canon; converted to Protestantism sometime in the 1530s
Of the more than 14 hours of news KTLA produces weekdays, only one hour is anchored by a Latino: Pedro Rivera, who joined the station last year. ... Romero had wanted to say goodbye to viewers ...
Jesús Adrián Romero studied the bible in his course studies, after which he was assigned to be a pastor for a 16-year period. Over a span of three years, he completed his work of spiritual guidance in the congregation of the Church of God, in Van Nuys, California, while also attending seminary.
An Arizona pastor was busted for secretly recording videos of women using his church’s bathroom after the camera fell out of a dryer, according to police. Arturo Laguna, a pastor at the Casa de ...
Alberto Magno Rivera Romero (September 19, 1935 – June 20, 1997) was an anti-Catholic religious activist who was the source of many of the theories about the Vatican espoused by fundamentalist Christian author Jack Chick. Chick promised to promote Rivera's testimony even after he died.