Atanasio Duarte
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Atanasio Duarte
Atanasio is a masculine given name which may refer to: *Atanasiu di Iaci (Atanasio in Italian), 13th century Italian Benedictine monk and historiographer *Atanasio Aguirre, President of Uruguay from 1864 to 1865 *Atanasio Bello Montero (1800–1876), Venezuelan musician *Atanasio Bimbacci (c. 1654–1734), Italian painter of the Baroque period *Atanasio Amisse Canira (born 1962), Mozambican Roman Catholic Bishop of Lichinga * Atanasio Echeverría y Godoy, late 18th-century Mexican botanical artist and naturalist *Atanasio Girardot (1791–1813), Colombian revolutionary leader *Atanasio Ndongo Miyone Atanasio Ndongo Miyone was an Equatoguinean musician, writer and Fang political figure. He wrote the lyrics to Equatorial Guinea's national anthem, Caminemos pisando las sendas de nuestra inmensa felicidad. He was executed in 1969 following a fa ... (died 1969), musician from Equatorial Guinea, lyrics writer of the national anthem * Atanasio Monserrate (), Indian politician {{given ...
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Atanasiu Di Iaci
Frate Atanasiu di Iaci or Athanasiu da Jaci ( it, Atanasio) was a Benedictine Order, Benedictine monk and historiographer from Acireale, Aci. He wrote ''Vinuta di lu re Japicu in Catania'' (c.1295), a Sicilian language, Sicilian chronicle (or Romance (heroic literature), romance) of the arrival and stay of James I of Sicily, James I in Catania in May 1287. He may also be the author of another Sicilian history, ''Lu rebellamentu di Sichilia'', written circa 1290, by an anonymous person of Messina. Vincenzo di Giovanni suggested that Atanasiu was of Saracen ancestry. Vincenzo de Gaetano first expressed doubt about the authenticity of the ''Vinuta'' and the historicity of Atanasiu. The ''Vinuta'' appears in no earlier work than Pietro Carrera, ''Delle memorie historiche della città di Cantania'' (1639). He claimed to have found it in a manuscript of :it:Monastero di San Nicolò l'Arena (Catania), San Nicolò l'Arena, now lost. It was first published by the Pietro Bentivegna of Palerm ...
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