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La historia de Juana (English: Juana's Story) [1] is a Mexican telenovela produced by W Studios for TelevisaUnivision. [2] It is based on the 2002 Venezuelan telenovela Juana la virgen, created by Perla Farías. The series stars Camila Valero as the title character, alongside Brandon Peniche. [3] It aired on Las Estrellas from 3 June 2024 to 30 ...
During his stay in Paraguay, Cabanellas de Torres wrote a biography of Dr. José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia, dictator of that country and, in Argentina, he wrote two books on the Spanish Civil War: La guerra de los mil días (The Thousand Days' War) and Cuatro generales (Four Generals), both in two volumes, considered by the author himself as ...
Joanna of Aragon (Spanish: Juana, Italian: Giovanna; 16 June 1455 – 9 January 1517) was Queen of Naples as the second wife of King Ferdinand I.She served as regent (General Lieutenant) of Naples between the abdication and flight of her husband's son Alfonso II on 22 February 1495 until the formal succession of Alfonso's son, Ferdinand II.
Juana Capdevielle was born in Madrid and went to Pamplona to study at a high school. She moved back to Madrid in order to pursue a university education and later travelled to France, Germany, Switzerland and Belgium. After she married Francisco Pérez Carballo, governor of La Coruña, she moved to Galicia. [1]
On August 28, Juana Rivas will gave the minors to Francesco Arcuri, who took them to Italy. On July 27, 2018, Juana Rivas is sentenced to five years in prison, six years of disqualification from exercising parental authority, 30,000 euros of compensation to her ex-partner and the payment of legal costs.
Miguel Primo de Rivera permitted him to go into the reserves in 1926, which led him to participate in a revolt frustrated in 1929. For his support of the republicans, on 17 April 1931 the provisional government of the Republic named him commander-in-chief of Andalusia .
She was the sister of Fernando Ruiz de Castro [1] and the half-sister of Inês de Castro [2] and Álvaro Pires de Castro. Among her advisors were her uncle-in-law Enrique Enríquez the Younger and Men Rodríguez de Sanabria . [2] In 1354, after the death of her husband Diego López de Haro, with whom she had a son, she met Peter of Castile. He ...
Juana Rouco Buela (Madrid, 1889 – Buenos Aires, 1969) was a Spanish-Argentine laundress, anarcha-feminist organizer, public speaker, and advocate of women's political militancy. She was committed to the emancipation of women and was a central figure of Argentine anarcho-syndicalism . [ 1 ]