Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
El blasonamiento quedó descrito oficialmente en el artículo 2.º de dicha ley que a la letra dice: «El Escudo Nacional está constituido por un águila mexicana, con el perfil izquierdo expuesto, la parte superior de las alas en un nivel más alto que el penacho y ligeramente desplegadas en actitud de combate; con el plumaje de sustentación ...
The coat of arms of Mexico (Spanish: Escudo Nacional de México, lit. "national shield of Mexico") is a national symbol of Mexico and depicts a Mexican (golden) eagle perched on a prickly pear cactus devouring a rattlesnake. [1]
Español: El águila republicana, en la Exedra de la Plaza patria de Aguascalientes, es una réplica de la que se ubica en lo alto del Monumento a la Raza, la escultura es autoria de Georges Gardet, no de Jesús F. Contreras como erróneamente se piensa.
La Bandera del Primer Imperio fue establecida oficialmente por Decreto del 7 de enero de 1822, que dicta que "el pabellón nacional y las banderas del ejército deberán ser tricolores, adoptándose perpetuamente los colores verde, blanco y encarnado en fajas verticales y dibujándose en la blanca una águila coronada; todo en la forma que ...
It was created by decree on December 29, 1933, by President Abelardo L. Rodríguez as a reward to the services given to Mexico or humankind by foreigners. It corresponds to similar distinctions given to Mexican citizens such as the Condecoración Miguel Hidalgo or the Belisario Domínguez Medal of Honor.
The crested caracara (Caracara plancus), also known as the Mexican eagle, [3] is a bird of prey (raptor) in the falcon family, Falconidae.It was formerly placed in the genus Polyborus before being given in its own genus, Caracara.
It was first published in 1900 by the Mexican historian and archivist, Francisco del Paso y Troncoso. A modern English translation of Aguilar's chronicle is published in The Conquistadors: First-Person Accounts of the Conquest of Mexico, [2] In his elderly years, he was diagnosed with gout and he soon died in Mexico at the age of 92. [3]
Aguila Saleh Issa (born 1944), Libyan jurist and politician; Chris Aguila (born 1979), American major league baseball player; Cynthia del Águila (born 1959), Guatemalan teacher and politician; Juan del Águila (1545–1602), Spanish general; Roberto Solis or Pancho Aguila (born 1945), American fugitive and poet