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Therefore, the daughter and son of Ángela López Sáenz and Tomás Portillo Blanco are usually called Laura Portillo López and Pedro Portillo López but could also be called Laura López Portillo and Pedro López Portillo. The two surnames of all siblings must be in the same order when recorded in the Registro Civil.
-son (English, Swedish, German, Norwegian, Scottish, Icelandic) "son (of)" (sometimes less recognizable, e.g. "Dixon"; in Iceland not part of a family name but the patronymic (sometimes matronymic) last name (by law), where (usually) the fathers's name is always slightly modified and then son added) [citation needed]
These are the lists of the most common Spanish surnames in Spain, Mexico, Hispanophone Caribbean (Puerto Rico, Cuba, Dominican Republic), and other Latin American countries. The surnames for each section are listed in numerically descending order, or from most popular to least popular.
The Spanish aristocrats baptized their second daughter in Seville earlier this month at the Church of San Román, naming her Sofía Fernanda Dolores Cayetana Teresa Ángela de la Cruz Micaela del ...
The usual noun and adjective in English is patronymic, but as a noun this exists in free variation alongside patronym. [a] The first part of the word patronym comes from Greek πατήρ patēr 'father' (GEN πατρός patros whence the combining form πατρο- patro-); [3] the second part comes from Greek ὄνυμα onyma, a variant form of ὄνομα onoma 'name'. [4]
Her mother was the illegitimate daughter of the Spanish conqueror Hernán Cortés and Tecuichpoch (baptised Isabel), the eldest daughter of Aztec Emperor Moctezuma II. [1] Isabel's father was a wealthy Basque mine owner who had discovered the silver mines at Zacatecas in 1546.
The Spanish actor revealed in an interview with Hola! that the baby she recently welcomed with the help of a surrogate is not her child, but the daughter of her late son, Aless Lequio, who died at ...
The Infantas Isabel Clara Eugenia and Catalina Micaela; daughters of King Philip II of Spain and the Indies (by Sofonisba Anguissola circa 1570). In the medieval Spanish monarchies, whether Castilian, Leonese, Navarran or Aragonese, all sons and daughters of the monarchs, including the firstborns, were infantes.