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According to Chiner and Chacon, the Ordinances of the Ribera (i.e. seaside) (Ordinationes Ripariae), written in 1258, did not yet encode the maritime customs of Barcelona, and that the first reference to "Sea consuls" appears in Barcelona in 1282, just one year before the Consulate of the Sea was created in Valencia.
Guadalupe Borja Osorno (April 4, 1915 – July 19, 1974) was First Lady of Mexico from 1964 to 1970. She was the wife of Mexican president Gustavo Díaz Ordaz . [ 1 ]
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José Francisco Morazán Quesada was born on October 3, 1792, in Tegucigalpa (then in the Captaincy General of Guatemala, now the capital of Honduras) during the waning years of Spanish colonial rule to Eusebio Morazán Alemán and Guadalupe Quesada Borjas, both members of an upper-class Creole family dedicated to trade and agriculture.
Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada y Rivera, also spelled as Ximénez and De Quezada, (Spanish: [gonˈθalo xiˈmeneθ ðe keˈsaða]; 1509 [1] – 16 February 1579) was a Spanish explorer and conquistador in northern South America, territories currently known as Colombia.
The Llotja de la Seda, seat of the Consulate of the Sea in Valencia since 1498.. The Consulate of the Sea (Catalan: Consolat de mar; pronounced [kunsuˈlad də ˈmaɾ]) was a quasi-judicial body set up in the Crown of Aragon, later to spread throughout the Mediterranean basin, to administer maritime and commercial law.
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ar.wikipedia.org تسكين العاصفة; Usage on es.wikipedia.org La tempestad calmada; Usage on fr.wikipedia.org
Juan Quezada Celado (6 May 1940 - 1 December 2022 [1]) was a Mexican potter known for the re-interpretation of Casas Grandes pottery known as Mata Ortiz pottery. Quezada is from a poor rural town in Chihuahua , who discovered and studied pre Hispanic pottery of the Mimbres and Casas Grandes cultures.