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His name appears very variously as Onuphrius, Onouphrius, Onofrius and in different languages as Onofre (Portuguese, Spanish), Onofrei (Romanian), Onofrio (Italian), etc. In Arabic , the saint was known as Abū Nufir ( Arabic : ابو نفر ) or as Nofer ( Arabic : نوفر ), which, besides being a variant of the name Onuphrius, also means ...
Beretta, Antonio Ballesteros- Fernando el Católico, Ejército revue, Ministerio del Ejercito, Madrid, nr 16, p. 54-66, May, 1941. Casas, Rafael Dominguez (1990) San Juan de los reyes: espacio funerário y aposento régio – in Boletín del Seminário de Estúdios de Arte y Arqueologia, number 56, p. 364–383, University of Valladolid.
San Onofre or Santo Onofre may refer to: Onuphrius, known as San Onofre in Spanish and Santo Onofre in Portuguese, 4th-century Egyptian hermit honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church; San Onofre, Sucre, a municipality in the Sucre Department of Colombia; San Onofre State Beach, located in San Diego County, California
Los Reyes is about a working-class family and Edilberto "Beto" Reyes, the head of the family, who suddenly gets hired as president of a multinational company. This happens when he stops the former president of the company, a middle-aged woman with a terminal disease, from committing suicide.
Sant'Onofrio al Gianicolo is a titular church in Trastevere, Rome.It is the official church of the papal order of knighthood Order of the Holy Sepulchre.A side chapel is dedicated to the Order and a former grand master, Nicola Canali is entombed there.
San Onofre State Beach (San Onofre, Spanish for "St. Onuphrius") is a 3,000-acre (1,214 ha) state park in San Diego County, California. [1] The beach is 3 miles (5 km) south of San Clemente on Interstate 5 at Basilone Road. The state park is leased to the state of California by the United States Marine Corps.
Rancho Santa Margarita y Las Flores was a 133,440-acre (540.0 km 2) Mexican land grant in present-day northwestern San Diego County, California, given by Governor Juan Alvarado in 1841 to Andrés Pico and Pío Pico. [2] The grant was located along the Pacific coast, and encompassed present-day San Onofre State Beach and Camp Pendleton.
It was later included in El Aleph under the title "Los dos reyes y los dos laberintos". It deals with a number of Borgesian themes: labyrinths, supposed obscure folk tales, Arabia, and Islam. [ 2 ] The story is itself referenced in-universe by characters of Borges' " Ibn Hakkan Al-Bokhari—Dead in His Labyrinth ", also found in The Aleph .