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Zea was born in Mexico City.. One of the integral Latin Americanism thinkers in history, Zea became famous thanks to his master's thesis, El Positivismo en México (Positivism in Mexico, 1943), in which he applied and studied positivism in the context of his country and the world during the transition between the 19th and 20th centuries.
La educación en Nueva España en el siglo XVIII. Seville: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas 1970. Plaza y Jaén, Bernardo de la. Crónica de la Real y Pontificia Universidad de México escrita en el siglo XVIII. 2 vols. Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 1931. Ramìrez, Tàmmas.
Nuevas Mutaciones, el siglo XVIII, Colección de Documentos para la historia de Nayarit, CEMCA/Universidad de Guadalajara, 1990. Historia de los cristianos en América Latina Siglos XIX y XX. México, Editorial Vuelta, 1989. A la voz del rey. México, Cal y Arena, 1989. El Gran Nayar. México 1989. CEMCA/Universidad de Guadalajara, 1989.
Elvira completed her studies at the Normal School for Teachers in Mexico City in 1898 and graduated in 1900 as a primary education teacher. In 1900, she received a scholarship to study in Europe and moved to study in Italy accompanied by Professor Silvina Jardón, taking a course in experimental psychology to specialize in special education with the teacher Maria Montessori.
Raquel Dzib Cicero was born in 1882 in Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico to Justo Pastor Dzib and Francisca Cicero. In spite of her family's poverty, Dzib was determined to improve her education. She enrolled in the Instituto Literario de Niñas (ILN) (Literary Institute for Girls) [1] under the direction of Rita Cetina Gutiérrez. [2]
Antología crítica de narradoras mexicanas nacidas en el siglo XIX. Edition of Ana Rosa Domenella y Nora Pasternac. México: Programa Interdisciplinario de Estudios de la Mujer, El Colegio de México, 1991. pp. 139–177. [Segunda edición: 1997.] 6; Laura Méndez de Cuenca.
Laureana Wright González was born on 4 July 1846 in Taxco, Guerrero, Mexico to American father James Wright and his Guerreran wife, Eulalia González. [1] The family relocated to Mexico City, for better economic opportunities when Wright was a child [2] and there learned Spanish, English and French. [3]
The convent of the college of Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco. The archaeological site of Tlatelolco with the church at background. The Colegio was built by the Franciscan order on the initiative of the President of the Audiencia Sebastián Ramírez de Fuenleal, Bishop Don Juan de Zumárraga, and Viceroy Don Antonio de Mendoza on the site of an Aztec school, for the sons of nobles (in Nahuatl: Calmecac).