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Juan de Dios is currently in a wheelchair and can’t walk. Sandra Gonzales can walk and is in very good condition. The Colegio Bilingue Real has since been expanded piecemeal to include more levels of education. In 1991, the junior high school, Secundaria Bilingue Real, was added. Because of high local demand for quality education, the school ...
The Royal College of the University of San Marcos (Spanish: Colegio Real de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, CRSM), also known by its former name of Royal College of San Felipe (Spanish: Colegio Real San Felipe), is a historic building in the Barrios Altos neighbourhood of Lima, Peru.
1° de Mayo may refer to: 1º de Mayo (Seville Metro), in Seville, Spain; 1° de Mayo (Mexibús, Line 1), in Ecatepec de Morelos, Mexico; 1° de ...
Primero de Mayo (Los Mangos), settlement in Pueblo Viejo Municipality, Veracruz, Mexico; Avenida Primero de Mayo , a major road in Bogotá, Colombia; ARA Primero de Mayo, first Argentine exploration ship in the Melchior Islands, Antarctica; Club Primero de Mayo, Bolivian football club from Trinidad, Beni, promoted in the 2008 Copa Simón Bolívar
Throughout its history, the university had a total of four colleges under tutelage: the Colegio Real y Mayor de San Martín and the Colegio Real y Mayor de San Felipe y San Marcos, the Real Colegio de San Carlos—focused on law and letters, derived from the merger of the two previous ones—and the Royal College of San Fernando—focused on ...
The Plaza Primero de Mayo was inaugurated in 1925, on land belonging to an old English Protestant cemetery, that operated on the site between 1833 and 1891. [2] This cemetery was known by the name of La Victoria, located on the street of that name, now Hipólito Yrigoyen.
The Real Colegio Seminario del Corpus Christi (Royal College and Seminary of Corpus Christi) is a former Roman Catholic school and seminary founded in 1583 in the Spanish city of Valencia. It is located in calle de la Nau in the old city, opposite La Nau , the former Universidad Literaria .
Originally the name of the school was the Real Colegio de San Ignacio de Loyola. [5] While students were considered to be secular, their education nonetheless was based on Catholic principles including moral and religious instruction. [2] After Independence, the name dropped the word "Real" (royal) in favor of Nacional (national).