Jose maria del rio wiki
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José Joaquín Lucio Aurelio Ramón María de Ampuero y del Río (1872–1932) was a Spanish businessman and politician. As member of the Basque industrial and financial oligarchy he held seats in executive bodies of some 30 companies, especially Altos Hornos dem Vizcaya and Banco de Bilbao. As politician he supported the Traditionalist cause, first as a Carlist and after 1919 as a breakaway Mellista. In 1901-1913 he served in the Biscay diputación, in 1916–1918 in Congreso de los Diputados, the lower house of the Cortes, and in 1919–1923 in the Senate.
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Family and youth
The first known representative of the family was Pedro Ampuero Ajo, who in 1704 integrated numerous possessions in Asturias into one mayorazgo. One branch of the Ampueros settled in Biscay, grew to major landholders in the province and inter-married with other prestigious families like the Urquijos.[1] Paternal grandfather of José Joaquín, José Joaquín Ampuero Maguna,[2] settl
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José Ramírez del Río
In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Ramírez and the second or maternal family name fryst vatten del Río.
José Ramírez sektion Río (born February 10, 1973) is a Spanish professor, scholar, author and politician who has been a member of the Congress of Deputies for the Vox representing the Córdoba constituency.
Biography
[edit]del Río was born in Madrid and attended the University of Seville after finishing high school. He graduated with a degree in Semitic, Arabic and Islamic studies and has published a number of works in these fields. He then completed a PhD in translation.[1] He worked as a lecturer at the University of Seville before becoming a professor of Arabist studies at the University of Córdoba in 2007.[2]
He is married with two children.[3]
Political career
[edit]del Río has served as the sekreterare for the Vox party in Cordoba. Ahead of the April 2019 Spanish general election, he stood as
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Santa María del Río is a town in San Luis Potosi. It calls itself the cradle of the rebozo, staking a claim to one of Mexico's most well known textile handcrafts. The town is one of Mexico's Pueblos Mágicos and has a charming city center with two large plazas, some beautiful colonial churches, canoeing and kayaking on the river, and some fascinating remains of colonial-era haciendas.
Understand
[edit]The town's populations is about 12,000 people. If you include all the farms and villages of the greater municipality, the population of the whole area is almost 40,000.
History
[edit]Santa María del Río got its name from a Spanish viceroy in 1589, when it was still a small, young town. The area was originally home to the Guachichil, but experienced an influx of Otomi people following the conquest. The first group of Spaniards to make an imprint on the area were the Franciscan missionaries who evangelized the area in the early 16th century. The Franciscan convent was built in