Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Condorito (Little Condor in Spanish) is a Chilean comic book and comic strip series that features an anthropomorphic condor living in a fictitious town named Pelotillehue, a typical small Chilean provincial town.
Topo Gigio was created in 1958 by the artist "Madame" Maria Perego and Guido Stagnaro, and starred in a children's television show in Italy in the early 1960s.
Laija was born in Tepic, Nayarit, Mexico, and was raised in Culiacán. [1] In 2021, he began posting videos of him singing corridos on social media, later attracting the attention of his cousin, Peso Pluma, who was interested in starting a music career at the time and invited him to Culiacán.
In his memoir Vivir para contarla (Living to Tell the Tale, 2002), García Márquez explained that the novel was inspired by his grandfather, who was also a colonel and who never received the pension he was promised. However, there is also speculation that García Márquez took inspiration from his experience of unemployment in 1956 after the ...
Vogrincic was born on 22 March 1993 in the Casavalle neighbourhood of Montevideo to Guillermo Vogrincic, a former professional footballer who played for Montevideo Wanderers, and Silvia Roldán Risotto.
Between independence from Spain in 1821 and 1915, Honduras did not have an official national anthem and used various unofficial anthems such as "La Granadera" (by Rómulo E. Durón), "El Himno Marcial", "Un Salva Hondureño" (of unknown authorship), "Himno Nacional" (by Valentín Durón), "Marcha a Gerardo Barrios" (by Belgian author Coussin, used during the presidency of José María Medina ...
The Immaculate Conception Cathedral [1] (Spanish: Catedral de la Inmaculada Concepción) also called Comayagua Cathedral [2] [3] It is dedicated to the Virgin Mary and is located in the Central Square of the city of Comayagua in Honduras, [4] it is one of the oldest cathedrals in Central America, it went through construction phases that date from the 16th century until it was completed ...
The Laws of the Indies, the Spanish law which regulated life in Puerto Rico in the early 19th century, stated the plaza's purpose was for celebrations and festivities (Spanish: a propósito para las fiestas), most notably the town patron saint festivals (fiestas patronales), and that the square should be proportionally large enough for the ...