- The
Montoneras originally were
known as the
armed civilian,
paramilitary groups who
organized in the 19th
century during the wars of
independence from...
- the
Spanish American Wars of Independence,
Venezuelan civil wars and in
Montoneras it has been
romanticized and
idealized and
become the
Venezuelan national...
-
during the War of the Pacific. A
picket of
Chilean soldiers and a
Bolivian montonera clashed in Rio Grande,
around San
Pedro de Atacama.
Bolivians are defeated...
- Its name was a
reference to the 19th-century
cavalry militias called Montoneras,
which fought for the
Federalist Party in the
Argentine civil wars. Radicalized...
- turn,
takes refuge among the
Indians if he
knifes someone, or
joins the
montonera (armed rabble) if it
shows up. The
first has the
instincts of civilization;...
- Argentina" (in Spanish). Rosa, José María. "La
Guerra del
Paraguay y las
Montoneras Argentinas".
Editorial Punto de Encuentro,
Buenos Aires, 2011 Mellid,...
-
pentothal on 15
January 1978. Her body was
never found. Saidon, Gabriela: La
montonera: Biografía de
Norma Arrostito.
Editorial Sudamericana, 2005. ISBN 950-07-2659-9...
- The Work You Began: The Last Days of Rich Mullins,
directed by
Andrew Montonera Granger, Thom (2001). The 100
Greatest Albums in
Christian Music. Harvest...
- resistance. It was
coined during the
Peninsula War in
Spain against France.
Montoneras – they were a type of
irregular forces that were
formed in the 19th century...
-
entrance into San Juan of
Facundo Quiroga and some six
hundred mounted montonera hor****. They
constituted an
unsettling presence [. . . ]. That sight...