Peretta From Times Gone By
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Peretta may refer to: * Rômulo Peretta (born 1996), Brazilian footballer * Peretta Peronne, unlicensed female surgeon operating in Paris in the early fifteenth century See also * Perretta Perretta is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Charlotte Anne Perretta (1942–2015), American judge, first woman to sit on the Massachusetts Appeals Court * Julian Perretta (born 1992), English singer-songwriter and producer * H ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Rômulo Peretta
Rômulo Henrique Peretta (born August 26, 1996) is a Brazilian footballer. Peretta previously had play for the youth sides of AA Flamengo. Career Youth Peretta ascended in the youth ranks of AA Flamengo, eventually reaching the U-20 team. There, Peretta was part of the U-20 team that made it to the Copa São Paulo de Futebol Júnior 2016 national tournament in January 2016. He also led Flamengo to a semifinal finish in the U20 Campeonato Paulista (State Cup), losing to eventual champions Corinthians. Professional On 23 February 2016, Peretta joined the Richmond Kickers of the United States third-division United Soccer League. Peretta made his professional debut on 7 May 2016, starting and playing 45 minutes in 1–0 victory over the Wilmington Hammerheads Wilmington Hammerheads FC was a semi-professional American soccer team based in Wilmington, North Carolina. Founded in 1996, the team last competed in the Premier Development League, the fourth tier of the America ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Peretta Peronne
Peretta Peronne was an unlicensed female surgeon operating in Paris in the early fifteenth century. Background The legacy of Peretta Peronne is known exclusively through her prosecution by the Parisian medical faculty in 1411. The ''Commentaries'' of the Parisian medical faculty record the expenditures associated with pursuing cases against practitioners as well as the charters of the Parisian university, which provide documentation for their efforts towards legal recognition of their positions on medical practice. The faculty sought to increase the status of physicians and to emphasize the necessity for training and licensing in order for a medical professional to be recognized as legitimate. This effort in Paris was part of a larger movement in early modern Europe to denounce all non-university trained medical professionals, including surgeons, barber and apothecaries, as either inferior or all together illegitimate. However, in France, the delineation between the types of m ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |