-
Melchior de
Aymerich (Ceuta, Spain, 5
January 1754 – Havana, Cuba, 11
August 1836) was a
Spanish general and
provincial administrator,
serving as the last...
-
Joseph Gaudérique
Aymerich (20
February 1858 – 11 June 1937) was a
French military officer in its
colonial empire.
Aymerich was born in Estagel, in the...
- to be very
little scholarly consensus on the
spelling of
Aymerich's name. "Nicolau
Aymerich" is the
correct form of his name in
medieval Catalan language...
- Ángela
Figuera Aymerich (October 30, 1902 in
Bilbao –
April 2, 1984 in Madrid) was a
Basque and
Spanish poet and writer.
Angela was born in Bilbao, Spain...
- expected.
Hopes for a
quick victory were short-lived. Field-Marshal
Melchor Aymerich,
acting President and
supreme commander of
Royalist forces in Quito, sent...
-
already in hand.' The
summary of the
Directorium Inquisitorum, by Nicolás
Aymerich, made by Marchena,
notes a
comment by the
Aragonese inquisitor: Quaestiones...
-
notable Modernista buildings include the
Masia Freixa (1907), the
Vapor Aymerich, Amat i
Jover textile mill (1907) (now the
Museum of
Science and Industry...
- The
Aymerich Fábrica de
Automoviles (AFA) was a
Spanish automobile manufactured between 1943 and 1944.
Little is
known about the
marque other than that...
-
Roser Tarragó
Aymerich (born
March 25, 1993) is a
Spanish water polo player. At the 2012
Summer Olympics, she
competed for the
Spain women's
national water...
- José de
Sucre against a
Royalist army
commanded by
Field Marshal Melchor Aymerich. The
defeat of the
Royalist forces loyal to
Spain brought about the liberation...