-
tradotte da
Girolamo de Rada e per cura di lui e di Niccolò Jeno de’
Coronei ordinate e
messe in luce. Firenze, 1866. [4] T’
verteta t’ paa-sosme kaltsue...
- New York: Appleton-Century
Crofts 1961. Alexander,
Robert J. "Caudillos,
Coroneis, and
Political Bosses in
Latin America." In
Presidential Power in Latin...
-
considered very
leftist and was
dismissed from
office due to the "Manifesto dos
coronéis". Jânio's
maneuver failed, and his
resignation was accepted. But rejection...
-
dominance of the
cacao plantation owners – the "colonels" (Portuguese:
coronéis). They sit at the very top of the
societal structure and
control the region...
-
interior of the
Northeast was
under the
dominion of
local oligarchs called coronéis, who
enforced their power through violence and fear. Two
notable examples...
- with a
metaphor for
social harmony at its heart. Settlers, the
infamous "
Coroneis", Indians,
spirit workers,
African slaves and
forest spirits are enacted...
-
political autonomy for
Juazeiro from the city of Crato. At first, the
coronéis of the
Cariri region were
divided over the decision, but
Floro Bartolomeu...
- president, De Rada as
honorary chairman and
Archimandrite Pietro Camodeca de’
Coronei as president. In
January 1897, he
founded the
magazine "The
Albanian Nation"...
-
Ezequiel Zamora Caudillo Continuismo Alexander,
Robert J. "Caudillos,
Coroneis, and
Political Bosses in
Latin America." In
Presidential Power in Latin...
-
power and
complex relations of
parentage and patronage. The so-called "
coronéis" kept many
dependents on
their properties who
provided them with services...