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Las Virgenes Road is the truncated version of El Rancho de Nuestra la Reina de Las Virgenes (transl. the ranch of our Lady of the Virgins), also known as Rancho Las Vírgenes. [2] Malibu Canyon Road was named after Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit , in which Malibu, a poor Anglicisation of Humaliwo ( transl. place of the wild surf ), was the name ...
Virgen de la Luz 16 September 1956 Guía de Isora: Pope Pius XII Virgen de la Fuensanta 29 September 1956 Villanueva del Arzobispo: Pope Pius XII Virgen del Prado 30 May 1957 Basilica of Nuestra Señora del Prado, Talavera de la Reina: Pope Pius XII Nuestra Señora del Puy: 25 May 1958: Estella-Lizarra: Pope Pius XII: Nuestra Señora del Soto [245]
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In 1837, Governor Alvarado granted the Triunfo addition to the Las Virgenes grant to Nemecio's father, José Maria Dominguez, and a new survey, or diseño, was drawn. In 1845, Maria Antonia Machado de Reyes (1792–1863) purchased the Rancho Las Virgenes from her uncle Jose Maria Dominguez. Maria Antonia Machado de Reyes was a widow with 14 ...
Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary, Queen of the Caracol, known locally as Mahal na Birhen ng Santo Rosaryo, Reyna ng Karakol or Nuestra Señora Virgen del Santisimo Rosario, Reina del Caracol, is the patroness of the Municipality of Rosario, formerly known as Salinas, in Cavite province, Philippines.
Mary Most Holy of Hope Macarena (Spanish: María Santísima de la Esperanza Macarena), popularly known as the Virgin of Macarena or simply La Macarena, is a Roman Catholic title of the Blessed Virgin Mary associated with a pious 17th century wooden image of the Blessed Virgin venerated in the Basilica de María Santísima de la Esperanza Macarena in Sevilla, Spain.
Our Lady of Suyapa (Spanish: Nuestra Señora de Suyapa), also known as the Virgin of Suyapa (Spanish: Virgen de Suyapa), is a title of the Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus Christ. An 18th-century cedar wood statue (6 cm/2.3 in) of the Virgin is perhaps Honduras' most popular religious image, and the focus of an extensive pilgrimage. [1]
The winning piece, Himno a la Nuestra Señora de Peñafrancia, was composed by the Spanish priest Máximo Juguera, and became the Anthem of the Coronation and the feast itself. In 2024, the Archdiocese of Cáceres celebrated the centennial of the image's canonical coronation. The theme of the celebration was ¡Se siempre la Reina!