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The location of La Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana headquarters in Quito. La Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana (The House of Ecuadorian Culture) is a cultural organization founded by Benjamín Carrión on August 9, 1944, during the presidency of Dr Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra. It was created to stimulate, to direct and to coordinate the development ...
The existing museum is run by the Ministry of Culture which had existed for sixteen years but the relationship was in her opinion confused and the existing location in the Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana was inappropriate for an enterprising national museum. [5]
This article lists events occurring in Mexico during 2025. The list also contains names of the incumbents at federal and state levels and cultural and entertainment activities of the year. Incumbents
Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana; Casa del Alabado Museum of Pre-Columbian Art; City Museum (Quito) Ciudad Mitad del Mundo; Cochasquí; Ecuador National Museum of Medicine; Guayaquil Municipal Museum; Gustavo Orcés V. Natural History Museum; La Capilla del Hombre; Luis Adolfo Noboa Naranjo Museum; Martínez-Holguín House Museum; Metropolitan ...
Benjamín Carrión Palace. Benjamín Carrión Palace (Spanish: Palacio Benjamín Carrión) is a palace and museum in Quito, Ecuador.Named after Benjamín Carrión, a diplomat, cultural promoter, and an Ecuadorian writer.
Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana (The Ecuadorian House of Culture) published a picture of the golden sun in a 1953 bulletin. [3] Shortly after, in the mid-1950s, archaeologist Emilio Estrada acquired the second golden sun in the Manabí Province . [ 2 ]
Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana (House of Ecuadorian Culture) Culture House, Reykjavík, see Safnahúsið; Dunker Culture House, Helsingborg, Sweden; Government House, Belize, site of the House of Culture Museum; Kulttuuritalo (The House of Culture), Helsinki; Kulturhuset (The House of Culture), Stockholm
Tourism in Mexico burgeoned subsequent to the establishment of the Mexican republic. Noteworthy figures such as Alexander von Humboldt, Frannie Calderón de la Barca, John Lloyd Stephens, and Edward B. Tylor significantly contributed to the burgeoning interest in Mexico as a tourist destination through their writings and explorations.