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Francisco Romero (racing Driver)
Francisco Romero may refer to: * Francisco García Romero (1559–1630s), Spanish military officer * Francisco Romero (bishop) (died 1635), served as archbishop in Italy * Francisco Romero (bullfighter) (1700–1763), Spanish matador * Francisco Romero (philosopher) (1891–1962), Latin American philosopher * Francisco Romero (surgeon), Spanish surgeon *Francisco Romero (mayor) Francisco Romero (ca. 1790 – ca. 1870) was an interim Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, in 1847 and again in 1866. Background Francisco Romero came to Puerto Rico from Venezuela around 1821 and settled in Ponce, where he was a landowner. In 1 ..., interim mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico {{hndis, Romero, Francisco ...
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Francisco García Romero
Francisco García Romero (1559–1630s) was a Spanish military man and conquistador. Biography Francisco was born in 1559 in Cáceres, Spain, son of Francisco García Moroto and Inés Martin. He arrived in the Rio de la Plata in 1603, occupying distinguished political positions in the city, where served as alcalde, fiel ejecutor, attorney general and deputy of the Cabildo of Buenos Aires. Francisco García Romero married in Asunción Asunción (, ) is the capital and the largest city of Paraguay. The city stands on the eastern bank of the Paraguay River, almost at the confluence of this river with the Pilcomayo River. The Paraguay River and the Bay of Asunción in the north ... to Mariana González de Santa Cruz, daughter of Bartolomé González de Villaverde and María Santa Cruz, belonging to a distinguished family of conquerors. References External links * https://web.archive.org/web/20130617044301/http://www.eldiariolomense.com.ar/142.htm {{DEFAULTSORT:Ga ...
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Francisco Romero (bishop)
Francisco Romero (died 16 July 1635) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop (Personal Title) of Vigevano (1621–1635) and Archbishop of Lanciano (1618–1621). ''(in Latin)'' Biography On 30 September 1607, Francisco Romero was ordained in the Order of the Brothers of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel. On 14 May 1618, he was appointed by Pope Paul V as Archbishop of Lanciano. On 20 May 1618, he was consecrated bishop by Giovanni Garzia Mellini, Cardinal-Priest of Santi Quattro Coronati, with Paolo De Curtis, Bishop Emeritus of Isernia, and Giovanni Battista Lancellotti, Bishop of Nola, serving as co-consecrators. On 11 January 1621, he was appointed during the papacy of Pope Gregory XV Pope Gregory XV (; ; 9 January 1554 – 8 July 1623), born Alessandro Ludovisi, was the head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 9 February 1621 until his death in 1623. He is notable for founding the Congregation for the ... as Archbishop ...
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Francisco Romero (bullfighter)
Francisco Romero (1700–1763) was a significant Spanish matador. He reputedly introduced the famous red cape ( muleta) into bullfighting in around 1726. He was apparently the inventor of several characteristics that started to be used in a key period for bullfighting when the modern on foot system was defined, as the use of the ''muleta'' (cape) and ''estoque'' (sword) to kill the bull face to face, thus being perhaps the very first one to kill a bull face to face. He was the founding father of a bullfighting dynasty, fundamental for bullfighting history. He was the father of Juan Romero, also a bullfighter, and grandfather of Pedro Romero (1754–1839), who killed some 5,600 bulls in his 28-year career, founded a bullfighting school at Sevilla in 1830. Biography Little is known about his life. He was born in Ronda around 1700. During the first years of the 18th century, at Ronda, Francisco Romero, at the end of a bullfight, asked for permission to kill the bull by himself. Up to ...
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Francisco Romero (philosopher)
Francisco Romero (1891–1962) was a Latin American philosopher who spearheaded a reaction against positivism. Biography Romero was born in Seville, Spain, but spent much of his adult life in Latin America, especially Argentina, where he emigrated in 1904. He entered the Argentine army in 1910 and retired with the rank of major in 1931. He became a friend of the Argentine philosopher Alejandro Korn, and when he left military service he took over Korn's professorships at the universities of La Plata and Buenos Aires. Due to his strong disapproval of the Peronist government, he resigned his university positions in 1946, not returning until 1955. Romero began to publish on literary subjects during the First World War. Known as the "dean of Ibero-American philosophers," he became an influential critic, philosopher, and translator. Romero is interested in examining the space of human culture, especially with respect to creativity and social responsibility. A strongly anti-ideological ...
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Francisco Romero (surgeon)
Francisco Romero was a Spanish physician who became the first successful heart surgeon, on record, by performing an open pericardiostomy to treat a pericardial effusion in 1801. He performed the first successful open heart surgery in history. According to a lost, but later found, memoir belonging to Romero, he performed at least two successful open pericardial drainages with no deaths. Also according to his memoir, he performed five open drainages of pleural effusions with success, with one patient dying at 6 months. Romero is credited as the first heart surgeon, since he was the first medical doctor on record to cut into the pericardium The pericardium (: pericardia), also called pericardial sac, is a double-walled sac containing the heart and the roots of the great vessels. It has two layers, an outer layer made of strong inelastic connective tissue (fibrous pericardium), ..., the lining of the heart, on a living patient with a successful outcome. References * Aris A ...
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Francisco Romero (mayor)
Francisco Romero (ca. 1790 – ca. 1870) was an interim Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, in 1847 and again in 1866. Background Francisco Romero came to Puerto Rico from Venezuela around 1821 and settled in Ponce, where he was a landowner. In 1836, Romero had been one of a team of three assistants to Barrio Playa mayor, Sargent Rafael Muñoz, before becoming mayor of Ponce some 10 years later. First mayoral term (1847) Romero was mayor of Ponce starting on 1 July 1847, and ended his mayoral term around 31 August 1847 when Juan Lacot took over. Second mayoral term (1866) Romero was interim corregidor mayor of Ponce starting on 1 September 1866 and ending sometime around 31 October 1866Eduardo Neumann Gandía. "Verdadera y Auténtica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce. 1913. p.276. when another interim corregidor mayor, Carlos Cabrera y Martínez, took over. References Notes See also *List of Puerto Ricans *List of mayors of Ponce, Puerto Rico This is a list of mayors ...
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Francisco Romero (physician)
Francisco Romero may refer to: *Francisco García Romero (1559–1630s), Spanish military officer *Francisco Romero (bishop) (died 1635), served as archbishop in Italy *Francisco Romero (bullfighter) (1700–1763), Spanish matador *Francisco Romero (philosopher) (1891–1962), Latin American philosopher *Francisco Romero (surgeon), Spanish surgeon *Francisco Romero (mayor) Francisco Romero (ca. 1790 – ca. 1870) was an interim Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, in 1847 and again in 1866. Background Francisco Romero came to Puerto Rico from Venezuela around 1821 and settled in Ponce, where he was a landowner. In 1 ..., interim mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico {{hndis, Romero, Francisco ...
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