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  2. La Loba Negra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Loba_Negra

    La Loba Negra (The Black She-wolf) is an opera in 3 acts by Francisco Feliciano with libretto by Fides Cuyugan-Asensio. The opera was based on a novel attributed to Jose Burgos , but was proven to be a hoax made by Jose E. Marco .

  3. Jose E. Marco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jose_E._Marco

    Jose E. Marco was a Filipino writer and forger who created some of the most infamous hoaxes and forgeries relating to Philippine history, producing artifacts purported to have come from the pre-colonial and Spanish eras such as the Code of Kalantiaw, touted as the first law code in the Philippines, and La Loba Negra, a novel supposedly written by Filipino proto-nationalist priest Jose Burgos ...

  4. Lobo (racial category) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobo_(racial_category)

    De Chino cambujo e India, Loba. Miguel Cabrera De negro e india, lobo (from a black man and an Amerindian woman, a Lobo is begotten). Anon. 18th c. Mexico. Lobo (fem. Loba) (Spanish for "wolf") is a racial category for a mixed-race person used in Mexican paintings illustrating the caste system in 17th- and 18th-century Spanish America.

  5. Fides Cuyugan-Asensio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fides_Cuyugan-Asensio

    Fides Belza Cuyugan is born on August 1, 1931, in Lucena, Philippines.She is the daughter of Gervasio Santos Cuyugan and Jacinta Belza. During the war she directed, wrote, performed, and designed short musicals and plays.

  6. Virginia Moreno - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia_Moreno

    In 1969, she won the National Historical Playwriting Contest for her play The Onyx Wolf, also known as La Loba Negra and Itim Asu. Also in 1969, she studied at the British Film Institute in London under a British Council grant. In 1973, she was co-director of the documentary The Imaginative Community: 7 Poets in Iowa.

  7. Quilombo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quilombo

    Documentation about refugee slave communities typically uses the term mocambo for settlements, which is an Ambundu word meaning "war camp". A mocambo is typically much smaller than a quilombo. "Quilombo" was not used until the 1670s, primarily in the more southerly parts of Brazil. [2]

  8. Chino (casta) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chino_(casta)

    In Mexican casta paintings, a ‘’chino’’ could refer to offspring of a Lobo (African + Indigenous) and Negra (pure African woman); Lobo and India (pure Indigenous woman); Mulatto (European + Negra) and an India; a Coyote and a Mulata; a Spaniard and Morisca (light-skinned woman with African ancestry); and a Chamicoyote and Indian woman. [4]

  9. José Burgos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/José_Burgos

    Historical marker installed in 1939 in Vigan. José Burgos, baptized José Apolonio Burgos y García, was born in Vigan, Ilocos Sur on February 9, 1837, to a Spanish officer, Don José Tiburcio Burgos y Calderón, and a Filipino mestiza mother named Florencia García.