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Leona Vicario was an only child, the daughter of a wealthy businessman from Castilla la Vieja, Spain. Her mother was Camila Fernandez de San Salvador, from Toluca. Leona acquired an extensive education in the sciences, fine arts, painting, singing, and literature.
Andrés Eligio Quintana Roo (30 November 1787 – 15 April 1851) was a Mexican liberal politician, lawyer, and author. He was the husband of fellow independence activist Leona Vicario.
The town is named for Leona Vicario the wife of Mexican Independence figure Andrés Quintana Roo. Its population was 6,791 inhabitants at the 2020 census. [1] It is located in the western part of the municipality and lies at an elevation of 10 metres (33 ft) above sea level. Leona Vicario railway station is just outside the town.
Vicario is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Enzo Vicario (born 1942), Italian bobsledder; Guglielmo Vicario (born 1996), Italian footballer; Jaron Vicario (born 1999), Italian footballer; Leona Vicario (1789–1842), Mexican revolutionary; Marco Vicario (1925–2020), Italian film actor, screenwriter, producer and director
Amado Nervo José Clemente Orozco Diego Rivera David Alfaro Siqueiros Rufino Tamayo. Mauricio Alejo, artist-photographs and videos [1]; Manuel Álvarez Bravo, photographer; recipient, 1984 Hasselblad Award
Leona Vicario station (named for Leona Vicario, a figure in the Mexican War of Independence) is a train station in the municipality of Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo, just outside the town of Leona Vicario. The station connects with and serves local transportation and tourism in the Holbox area.
There is some onomastic evidence to support Pérez de Urbel's position. A document dated to 994 is subscribed by one Salvador Pérez, son of Pedro Fernández, a possible son of Fernán González and Urraca Garcés. The Salvadórez are also thought to be related to the house of Lara, perhaps through Salvador's brother, Count Munio González.
The medievalist scholar and professor Margarita Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León agrees that there was in fact a relationship with the Alfonsos, nevertheless, she proves that María Gutiérrez and Nuño Álvarez were not Gonzalo's parents, but rather those of his wife Goto Núñez, [12] [13] as evidenced in a donation made in 1087 by Gonzalo ...