- The
statues known as
Mariblanca are
female figures of
uncertain origin which may
relate to the
fertility goddesses Venus or Fortuna. The name,
which is...
- use,
stands at the
southern end of
Plaza San
Antonio po****rly
known as
Mariblanca, (possibly
because it is a 'sea' of
white sand or mar de
arena blanca...
-
Mariblanca Sabas Alomá (February 10, 1901 – July 19, 1983) was a
Cuban feminist,
journalist and poet. A
political activist, she was also a
Minister without...
- with the
statue of the
Mariblanca appear in the square. The same
occurs in Texeira's map of 1656. Apparently, the name of
Mariblanca was
given by the water...
-
statue stood on the
north side at the
entrance to
Calle del Carmen. The
Mariblanca (a
female figure named for its
white marble) is a copy of a
statue (possibly...
- –
author Jorge Mas
Canosa Marco Rizo – pianist,
composer and
arranger Mariblanca Sabas Alomá –
feminist and
journalist Esteban Salas y
Castro – Baroque...
- Committee. pp. 146–168.
Mariblanca Corrales, p. 35. Wood, pp. 141–142.
Tiqqun 1, pp. 22–26.
Tiqqun 1, pp. 16–17.
Mariblanca Corrales, p. 48.
Civil War...
- The
Fountain de La
Mariblanca was a
fountain located in
Puerta del Sol, in Madrid. Now demolished. Not to be
confused with
other fountains located in Madrid...
- Real Fábrica del Buen
Retiro Monte de
Piedad de
Madrid Fountain de La
Mariblanca Built from the 19th
century Quinta del
Sordo Hotel Florida Palacio del...
-
Among its
founders were
Pilar Morlón de Menéndez,
Pilar Jorge de Tella,
Mariblanca Sabas Alomá,
Ofelia Domínguez
Navarro and
Hortensia Lamar. Its main purpose...