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The Durruti Column (Spanish: Columna Durruti), with about 6,000 people, was the largest anarchist column (or military unit) formed during the Spanish Civil War. [1] During the first months of the war, it became the most recognized and popular military organisation fighting against Franco, and it is a symbol of the Spanish anarchist movement and its struggle to create an egalitarian society ...
The Aguiluchos Column (Spanish: Columna de los Aguiluchos; English: Harriers Column) was the last of the great Catalan anarcho-syndicalist columns.Later, more militias left Catalonia for the front, but they would no longer do so in the form of a column but rather as reinforcement units of the existing columns.
According to the police investigation, in 1968 Antonio García murdered his then wife, Gloria Soto, with a machete. [3] [7] For this crime, García was sentenced to 185 years in prison. [7] However, he managed to escape two years later. In 1974, García was again captured by a civilian in a farm in the Guaraguao barrio of Ponce.
Salvador Elizondo (1932–2006) Elena Poniatowska (born 1932) Juan García Ponce (1932–2003) Vicente Leñero (1933–2014) Sergio Pitol (1933–2018) Gabriel Zaid (born 1934) Fernando del Paso (1935–2018) Carlos Monsiváis (1938–2010) José Emilio Pacheco (1939–2014) Jesús Gardea (1939–2000) Homero Aridjis (born 1940) Héctor Aguilar ...
During 2010, former Beltran Leyva cartel lieutenant Óscar Osvaldo García Montoya (a.k.a. El Compayito [22]) attempted to regroup some cartel remnants under a gang he called La Mano Con Ojos. [11] García Montoya was arrested on August 11, 2011; [11] the Attorney General of Mexico had placed a 5 million pesos (US$400,000) bounty for his ...
The date of the Historia Roderici, however is confirmed by the Chronica Naierensis and has the support of Ramón Menéndez Pidal, Antonio Ubieto Arteta, R. A. Fletcher, and B. F. Reilly. [14] Coat of arms on the lid of the sepulchre of Count Gonzalo and his brother Munio at the monastery of San Salvador de Oña
Félix Rubén García Sarmiento (18 January 1867 – 6 February 1916), known as Rubén Darío (US: / d ɑː ˈ r iː oʊ / dah-REE-oh, [1] [2] Spanish: [ruˈβen daˈɾi.o]), was a Nicaraguan poet who initiated the Spanish-language literary movement known as modernismo (modernism) that flourished at the end of the 19th century.
Jesús García Corona (13 November 1881 – 7 November 1907) was a Mexican railroad brakeman who died while preventing a train loaded with dynamite from exploding near Nacozari, Sonora, in 1907. As " el héroe de Nacozari ", he is revered as a national hero and many streets, plazas, and schools across Mexico are named after him.