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  2. Dominican Republic literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominican_Republic_literature

    Pedro Francisco Bonó. The first novel written by a Dominican was El montero (published in Paris, France in 1856), by Pedro Francisco Bonó, although some literary historians argue that the first Dominican novel is Los amores de los indios (published in Havana, Cuba in 1843) by Alejandro Angulo Guridi or even Cecilia, by the same author, which, although published incomplete in the Sunday ...

  3. Pedro Mir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedro_Mir

    Pedro Julio Mir Valentín (3 June 1913, San Pedro de Macorís – 11 July 2000, Santo Domingo) was a Dominican poet and writer, named Poet Laureate of the Dominican Republic by Congress in 1984, and a member of the generation of "Independent poets of the 1940s" in Dominican poetry.

  4. La Poesía Sorprendida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Poesía_Sorprendida

    La Poesía Sorprendida (Spanish for “Surprised poetry”) was a Dominican literary movement and avant-garde journal that existed from October 1943 to May 1947. Rebelling from the nationalism and realism that prevailed in Dominican poetry at the time, the sorprendistas sought to cultivate a universal poetics that explored the psyche and soul in surrealistic ways.

  5. Museo de las Casas Reales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museo_de_las_Casas_Reales

    It was the Palace of the Real Audiencia of Santo Domingo, called then Edificio de las Casas Reales, and it is the first (oldest) headquarters of Spanish power in the New World. [ 2 ] The building dates back to the sixteenth century, and was built to house the administrative offices of the Spanish colonies in the Americas , at the time any ...

  6. Tito Canepa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tito_Canepa

    Tito Enrique Canepa Jiménez (21 September 1916 – 11 February 2014) [1] was a leading Dominican painter of the generation that came of age in the 1930s and 1940s. Canepa's artistic identity was shaped in New York City, where he lived from the age of 21, never returning to stay in his native country.

  7. Edgar Smith (poet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Smith_(poet)

    Edgar Smith (born August 8, 1973) is a Dominican author and poet born in Villa Consuelo, a neighborhood in the capital city of Santo Domingo. [1] He is the eldest child of Juana I. Fernández and Ramón Smith, [2] a member of the International Taekwon-Do Federation Hall of Fame.

  8. La Trinitaria (Dominican Republic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Trinitaria_(Dominican...

    Statues of the three founding fathers. From left to right: Francisco del Rosario Sánchez, Juan Pablo Duarte and Matías Ramón Mella. La Trinitaria (Spanish: [la tɾiniˈtaɾja], The Trinity) was a secret society founded in 1838 in what today is known as Arzobispo Nouel Street, across from the "Del Carmen's Church" in the then occupied Santo Domingo, the current capital of the Dominican Republic.

  9. Raymond Martini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Martini

    Raymond Martini, also called Ramon Martí in Catalan, was a 13th-century Dominican friar and theologian. He is remembered for his polemic work Pugio Fidei (c. 1270). In 1250 he was one of eight friars appointed to make a study of oriental languages with the purpose of carrying on a mission to Jews and Moors.

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