Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Biography. According to the official account, Manuel Ricardo Palma y Carrillo was born on February 7, 1833, in Lima, inscribed as the son of Pedro Ramón Palma and Guillerma Carrillo y Pardos, possibly his grandmother. On April 6, 1837, his father married Dominga Soriano y Carrillo, Guillerma's daughter. However, the documentary evidence shows ...
The adjective "Peruanas" ("Peruvian") was not used by Palma. The adjective was used for the first time in 1890 on their first publication in Argentina. There are in total 453 Traditions of which six are set during the Incan Empire, 339 during the Viceroyalty, 43 during the Emancipation, 49 during the Republic and 16 that cannot be placed within ...
Ricardo Palma University (Spanish: Universidad Ricardo Palma; URP) is a private university located in Lima, Peru. Located in the district of Santiago de Surco , it was founded on July 1, 1969. [1] It is named after Peruvian writer Ricardo Palma .
Peruvian author and scholar Ricardo Palma, who was director of the library in 1884, noted in one of his recounts that of the 56,000 works the library possessed before the war, only 378 were left at the end of the occupation. [citation needed] In 2007, 3,778 books were returned to Peru from Chile. [1]
After Montero's death in 1869, his painting of Atahualpa was looted when the Chilean Army entered and occupied Lima during the War of the Pacific, being exhibited in the country's National Museum prior to its return to Peru through the efforts of Ricardo Palma.
National University of Trujillo, Trujillo [37] National University Toribio Rodríguez de Mendoza, Chachapoyas [38] Universidad Nacional Pedro Ruiz Gallo, Lambayeque [39] Universidad Nacional de Cajamarca, Cajamarca [40] Universidad Nacional de Jaen, Jaen [41] Universidad Nacional de la Amazonía Peruana, Iquitos.
Ricardo Palma Bridge ( Spanish: Puente Ricardo Palma) is a reinforced concrete beam bridge that crosses the Rímac river, connecting Abancay Avenue with Jirón Hualgayoc and thus connecting the districts of Lima and Rímac, both part of the historic centre of Lima, the capital city of Peru. [1] It is named after the Peruvian author, scholar ...
Clemente Palma y Ramírez was born on December 3, 1872, in Lima, Peru, son of famous Peruvian author Ricardo Palma and Ecuadorian Clemencia Ramírez. On 1876, his father later married Cristina Román, which whom he had seven other children: Félix Vital, Angélica, Ricardo, Peregrina Augusta, Cristina, Cristián and Renée Cristina.