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Antonio Juan Alfonso Quirós; Mariano Alierta Izuel; Joaquín Almunia; Emilio Alonso Sarmiento; José Luis Álvarez Álvarez; Fernando Álvarez de Miranda y Torres; José Álvarez de Paz; José Antonio Amate; Luis Apostúa; Maria Soledad Arahuetes; José Luis de Arce Martínez; Juana Arce Molina; José María de Areilza, Count of Motrico ...
José Antonio Lasheras Corruchaga (a título póstumo). José Ignacio Sánchez Pérez. Juan Antonio Montesinos García (a título póstumo). Lucero Tena. Magí Castelltort Claramunt. María Teresa Lizaranzu Perinat. Paolo Pinamonti. Pau Roca Blasco. Santiago Iñiguez de Onzoño. Ymelda Moreno y de Arteaga Marquesa de Poza.
1666–1671 Antonio Oca y Sarmiento [3] 1671–1673 Jose Garcia Salcedo [3] 1674–1676 Martin Rebollar y Cuevas [3] 1676–1680 Lope de Sierra y Osorio [3] 1680–1683 Bartolome Estrada de Valdez y Ramirez Jove [3] 1683-1687 Gabriel de Neira y Quiroga [3] 1687-1697 San Miguel de Aguayo [3] 1688–1693 Juan Isidro de Pardiňas Villar de Francos [3]
Juan de La Pezuela y Ceballos, Count of Cheste, 1847–1906. Antonio Hernández y Fajarnés, 1909–1909. Leopoldo Cano y Masas, 1910–1934. Pío Baroja, 1935–1956. Juan Antonio de Zunzunegui y Loredo, 1960–1982. Elena Quiroga de Abarca, 1984–1995. Domingo Ynduráin Muñoz, 1997–2003. Pedro García Barreno, since 2006.
Garcia was "the first United Nations official to have been assassinated in New York City since the founding of the world organization" in 1945. [ 7 ] During the indictment of Eduardo Arocena, Omega 7 was found guilty of at least seven bombings in the Miami, Florida area.
Emilio Hector Rodriguez; Juan Andrés Rodríguez – known as El Monje; Gilberto Andrés Romero Pino; José Ángel Rosabal Fajardo; Zilia Sánchez Domínguez; Tomás Sánchez; Cesar Santos; Raul Santoserpa; Jesús Selgas Cepero; José Omar Torres López; Carlos Trillo Name; Zafra; Juan Ramon Valdez Gomez; Fernando Velázquez Vigil; Pedro ...
Other members include: Nicolás Maduro Guerra – son of President Nicolás Maduro [11]; Carmen Meléndez – former Minister of Defense; On 4 September 2017, Earle Herrera, the president of a Constituency commission, resigned, alleging sectarianism during the election of the commission presidents, which he did not agree with.
Born in 1961 in Madrid, [2] [3] he earned a licentiate degree in history at the Complutense University of Madrid; he later obtained a PhD in the same centre in 1992 under the doctoral supervision of Antonio Fernández García reading a thesis dealing with the positions espoused by the Spanish far-right and the further evolution it experienced during the late francoist period and the Spanish ...