Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Universidad Mesoamericana (in English, Mesoamerican University) is a private university in Guatemala. It has branches in Guatemala City and Quetzaltenango. History
Quetzaltenango (Spanish pronunciation: [ketsalteˈnaŋɡo], also known by its Maya name Xelajú or Xela [ˈʃela]) is both the seat of the namesake Department and municipality, in Guatemala. The city is located in a mountain valley at an elevation of 2,330 meters (7,640 feet) above sea level at its lowest part.
Universidad Francisco Marroquín, founded in 1971; Universidad Rural de Guatemala, founded in 1995; Universidad del Istmo, founded in 1997; Universidad Panamericana, founded in 1998; Universidad Mesoamericana, founded in 1999; Universidad Galileo, founded in 2000; Universidad San Pablo de Guatemala, founded in 2006; Universidad InterNaciones ...
Universidad Mesoamericana, a university in Guatemala with campuses in Guatemala City and Quetzaltenango; See also. Mexico; Americas (terminology)
They are institutions of higher education created by decree of local congresses, under the legal figure of decentralized public bodies. These state institutions develop the functions of teaching, generation and innovative application of knowledge, as well as the extension and dissemination of culture.
Club Social y Deportivo Xelajú Mario Camposeco, commonly known as Xelajú MC or just Xela and nicknamed Superchivos is a Guatemalan professional football club competing in the Liga Nacional, the top tier of Guatemalan football.
Biblioteca Francisco Xavier Clavigero. In 1988 Universidad Iberoamericana moved to a 48-acre (19 hectares) new campus in the Santa Fe area of Mexico City. Besides classrooms, laboratories, and workshops in physics, chemistry, photography, design, psychology, engineering, communications, architecture, and nutrition, the university houses the Francisco Xavier Clavigero library, the FM 90.9 radio ...
The department takes its name from the city of Quetzaltenango, which serves as the departmental capital. [4] Although the original Kʼicheʼ inhabitants knew the city by the name Xelaju, the Nahuatl-speaking allies of the Spanish Conquistadors named it Quetzaltenango in their own language, meaning "land of the quetzal birds".