Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
At the base of the Quezon Memorial Shrine is the Museo ni Manuel L. Quezon (lit. ' Museum of Manuel L. Quezon '), a museum that has a collection of relics and memorabilia related to former President Manuel Quezon, as well as a mausoleum which houses the interred remains of Quezon and his wife Aurora Aragon Quezon. [8]
The Quezon Memorial Shrine is an art deco-themed monument designed by Federico Ilustre and was built during the 1950s – serving as the centerpiece of the Quezon Memorial Circle. The 66-meter (217 ft) shrine [2] representing Quezon's age when he died from tuberculosis stands on a thirty-six hectare elliptical lot. It houses an observation deck ...
Sariaya, Quezon: 24 Quezon Ave. Upload Photo: Solis-Oca House Built in 1910; adaptive reuse as library Quezon: Sariaya, Quezon: 37 Quezon Ave. cor. P. Gomez St. Upload Photo: Larry Baylen House Built in the 1950s and formerly known as Dr. Rufino Oreta House Quezon: Sariaya, Quezon: P. Gomez cor. Magdami St. Upload Photo: Danila Rama House ...
Manuel L. Quezon (1878–1944), Former President Commonwealth Government (1935–1944). Formerly buried at Arlington National Cemetery (buried from 1944 to 1946). Transferred to Quezon Memorial Shrine in 1979; Aurora Quezón (1888–1949), Former First Lady of the Philippines, wife of Manuel Quezon. Transferred to Quezon Memorial Shrine in 2005
A mausoleum is an external free-standing building constructed as a monument enclosing the burial chamber of a deceased person or ... Quezon Memorial, in Quezon City, ...
Manuel Luis Quezon y Molina [b] GCGH KGCR (UK: / ˈ k eɪ z ɒ n /, US: / ˈ k eɪ s ɒ n,-s ɔː n,-s oʊ n /, Tagalog: [maˈnwel luˈis ˈkɛson], Spanish: [maˈnwel ˈlwis ˈkeson]; 19 August 1878 – 1 August 1944), also known by his initials MLQ, was a Filipino lawyer, statesman, soldier, and politician who was president of the Commonwealth of the Philippines from 1935 until his death in ...
Buenavista Protected Landscape of Mulanay, Quezon, National Museum of the Philippines The Limestone Tombs of Kamhantik refer to the excavated remains of a thousand-year-old barangay (a term used to connote a polity during the classical era) found in the jungles of Mount Maclayao in Sitio Kamhantik within the Buenavista Protected Landscape of ...
The Quezon Heritage House is a reconstructed version of the house at 45 Gilmore Street in New Manila which served as residence of former President Manuel Quezon's family. The Quezons moved to the house in 1927 when it was offered to them after then-Senator Manuel L. Quezon contracted tuberculosis. [1]