Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Los disparates (The Follies), also known as Proverbios or Sueños , is a series of prints in etching and aquatint, with retouching in drypoint and engraving, created by Spanish painter and printmaker Francisco Goya between 1815 and 1823.
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
El Caballito, officially Cabeza de caballo ("horse's head"), [1] [2] is an outdoor 28-metre (92 ft) tall steel sculpture by Sebastián (Enrique Carbajal) depicting a horse's head, installed along Mexico City's Paseo de la Reforma, in Mexico. It was dedicated on January 15, 1992.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Negro of Banyoles (born c. 1803), Tswana warrior taxidermied and put on display in Spain; Juan Matta-Ballesteros (born 1945), Honduran drug lord; Arturo Durazo Moreno (1924–2000), Mexican chief of police and convicted criminal; Fernando "El Negro" Chamorro (1933–1994), Nicaraguan rebel; Roberto Fontanarrosa (1944–2007), Argentine cartoonist
Bozal is the Spanish word for "muzzle", and shares it etymology with the word bosal.In their New World colonies, the Spaniards distinguished between negros ladinos [3] ("Latinate Negroes", those who had spent more than a year in a Spanish-speaking territory) and negros bozales (wild, untamed [4] Negroes; those born in or freshly arrived from Africa).
The stablemates would soon go head and head. The two horses battled it out until on the far outside Diamante Negro took over the lead in the final strides and just got up to win. However, in the second jewel, he was not so lucky as El Indu Tlatelolco turned the race into a match race while Diamante Negro was a very distant 4th.
Tecun Uman [1] (1500? – February 20, 1524) was one of the last rulers of the K'iche' Maya people, in the Highlands of what is now Guatemala.According to the Kaqchikel annals, he was slain by Spanish conquistador Pedro de Alvarado while waging battle against the Spanish and their allies on the approach to Quetzaltenango on 12 February 1524.