enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Teodora Alonso Realonda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teodora_Alonso_Realonda

    Teodora Alonso Realonda y Quintos (November 9, 1827 – August 16, 1911) was a wealthy woman in the Spanish colonial Philippines.She was best known as the mother of the Philippines' national hero Jose Rizal.

  3. Leonor Rivera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonor_Rivera

    They employed codes in their letters because Rivera's mother did not favour Rizal as a suitor for her daughter. A letter from Mariano Catigbac dated June 27, 1884 referred to Rivera as Rizal's “betrothed”. Catigbac described Rivera as having been greatly affected by Rizal's departure, frequently sick because of insomnia.

  4. María Clara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/María_Clara

    In the novel, María Clara is regarded as the most beautiful and celebrated lady in the town of San Diego. A devout Roman Catholic, she became the epitome of virtue; "demure and self-effacing" and endowed with beauty, grace and charm, she was promoted by Rizal as the "ideal image" [1] of a Filipino woman who deserves to be placed on the "pedestal of male honour".

  5. José Rizal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/José_Rizal

    In one account detailing Rizal's 1887 visit to Prague, Maximo Viola wrote that Rizal had succumbed to a 'lady of the camellias'. Viola, a friend of Rizal's and an early financier of Noli Me Tángere, was alluding to Dumas's 1848 novel, La dame aux camelias, about a man who fell in love with a courtesan. While noting Rizal's affair, Viola ...

  6. Alberto Mansion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alberto_Mansion

    The house is noted for its connection to the family of José Rizal. Alonzo is the father of Rizal's mother Teodora Alonso Realonda. Biñan is where Realonda would spend her teenage years and where she would meet Rizal's father Francisco Mercado who lived in a house nearby. [2] The property would later be passed down through several generations.

  7. Josephine Bracken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josephine_Bracken

    Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken (August 9, 1876 – March 14, 1902) was the common-law wife of Filipino nationalist José Rizal during his exile in Dapitan. [2] [3] [4] Hours before Rizal's execution on December 30, 1896, the couple were allegedly married at Fort Santiago following Rizal's alleged reconciliation with the Catholic Church.

  8. Riley Keough reveals details on mother Lisa Marie Presley's ...

    www.aol.com/riley-keough-reveals-details-mother...

    When the artist asked if they had photos showing the position of the ink, what happened next floored Riley. The biggest reveals in Lisa Marie Presley’s memoir, from Elvis to Michael Jackson

  9. Rizal sa Dapitan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rizal_sa_Dapitan

    José Rizal (Martinez) was exiled in Dapitan in 1892, and he began adapting to his new home. He helped the local residents by offering free education to all children, befriending his student Jose Asiniero (Hernando), and rendering his services as a doctor, including treating his mother, Doña Teodora Alonzo (Carpio), who visited him with his sisters Maria (Pangilinan) and Narcisa (Dumpit).