Benedita Sousa Da Silva Sampaio
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Benedita Sousa Da Silva Sampaio
Benedita may refer to: Places *Benedita, Portugal, A '' freguesia'' (civil parish) of Alcobaça Municipality, Portugal People * Benedita Barata da Rocha (born 1949), immunologist *Benedita da Silva (born 1943), Brazilian politician *Benedita Pereira (born 1985), Portuguese actress *Infanta Benedita of Portugal (1746–1829), Portuguese infanta, daughter of King Joseph I of Portugal and his wife Marianne Victoria of Borbón *Maria Benedita Bormann (1853–1895), Brazilian writer of feminist novels and other works using the pseudonym Délia *Maria Benedita Mouzinho de Albuquerque de Faria Pinho Maria Benedita Mouzinho de Albuquerque de Faria Pinho (1865 - 1939), was a Portuguese writer, translator, teacher, propagandist, republican activist and feminist activist. She was a pioneer in the campaign to get women the right to vote and for th ...
(1865–1939), Portuguese writer, translator, teacher, propagandist, republican activist and feminist activist {{disambiguation, given n ...
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Benedita, Portugal
Benedita is a town and parish A parish is a territorial entity in many Christian denominations, constituting a division within a diocese. A parish is under the pastoral care and clerical jurisdiction of a priest, often termed a parish priest, who might be assisted by one or m ... in the Portuguese municipality of Alcobaça. It received town status on May 16, 1984. Although a predominantly rural area, the parish of Benedita is heavily industrialised. Its main industries are the shoe making, leather, knife making, stonemasonry industries. Pig farming is also important economically for this parish. The town of Benedita is one of the main commerce centers in the municipality of Alcobaça. Benedita is one of the 13 parishes that comprise Alcobaça municipality. It is located by south county and has a 30 km length. Its history is long, beginning in 800 AD. Later, Monges de Cister, an organisation of Christians that are in Alcobaça, started to search for places to do agricult ...
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Benedita Barata Da Rocha
Benedita Barata da Rocha (24 February 1949 – 2 October 2021) was a Portuguese immunology, immunologist. She earned her M.D. 1972 from the University of Lisbon, and her Ph.D. 1978 from the University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK. She was "directeur de recherche classe exceptionel" (DRCE) of the CNRS and director of a research unit of the INSERM at the Necker Institute, Paris, France. Her major scientific contributions are in the areas of T cell immune tolerance, T cell memory and development of intraepithelial lymphocytes. In 2007 she received the CNRS Silver Medal award and in 2009 a European Research Council advanced grant. She published more than 100 research articles. Major works * * * * References

1949 births 2021 deaths People from Lisbon Portuguese immunologists University of Lisbon alumni Alumni of the University of Glasgow Research directors of the French National Centre for Scientific Research {{Immunology-stub ...
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Benedita Da Silva
Benedita Souza da Silva Sampaio (, born 26 April 1942) is a Brazilian politician. From a humble background, she faced class and racial prejudice, overcoming it to become the first female and Afro-Brazilian governor of the State of Rio de Janeiro and, later, Minister of the said Secretary of State as well in the Government of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Origin Benedita Souza da Silva Sampaio was born on 26 April 1942 in Praia do Pinto, Rio de Janeiro, to Ovídia da Silva and is one her mother's 13 children. Benedita da Silva is also known as Bene. Background According to Da Silva, her mother's matriarchal tendencies have profoundly influenced her development. She grew up in the favela of Chapéu Mangueira in Copacabana. Da Silva was raped at the age of seven. She had several miscarriages and a baby that died soon after birth. At 16 she started working with the community school of the Chapéu Mangueira favela where she established a women's association and a women's branch of th ...
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Benedita Pereira
Benedita Gonçalves Aires Pereira is a Portuguese actress. She was born in Porto. She received her training from the Balleteatro Training Centre. She had some periods of training with theater, cinema and television professionals such as Carla Bolito, António Pedro Vasconcelos or Nicolau Breyner. She made her first appearances in television in ''A Lenda da Garça'' (The Legend Of The Heron) (1999) and ''O Bairro da Fonte'' (Quarter Of The Fountain) (2002), however it was as the protagonist of the first edition of the youthful series '' Morangos com Açúcar'' (2003/04) that she achieved great popularity. She has continued to appear in other soap operas, such as '' Tempo de Viver'' (2006) and '' Ninguém Como Tu'' (2005). Whilst attending the Lee Strasberg Institute in New York City, she lived with close friend and fellow Portuguese actress Daniela Ruah. She also starred as voice-over in the 2012 video game '' Max Payne 3'' as Fabiana Branco, a São Paulo socialite. ...
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Infanta Benedita Of Portugal
Maria Benedita of Braganza (''Maria Francisca Benedita Ana Isabel Antónia Lourença Inácia Teresa Gertrudes Rita Rosa''; 25 July 1746 – 18 August 1829) was a Portuguese '' infanta'' and the youngest daughter of King Joseph I of Portugal and his wife Mariana Victoria of Spain. She was the Crown Princess of Portugal by marriage to her nephew between 1777 and 1786. Early life Benedita was born in Lisbon, and was named after Pope Benedict XIV. She was well educated, with a focus on religion and accomplishments in the arts. She was educated in music by Davide Perez and in painting by Domingos Sequeira: a panel made by her and her sister can still be seen in the Estrela Basilica. She attended the accession of her father to the throne in 1750, and the wedding of her sister to their uncle in 1760. In contrast to her siblings, who all suffered from physical and mental afflictions of some kind during their lives, Benedica was in good physical and mental health during her ...
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Maria Benedita Bormann
Maria Benedita Câmara Bormann (November 25, 1853 – July 1895) was a Brazilian writer who published feminist novels and other works under the pseudonym Délia. Early life Bormann was born in 1853 in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul. Her parents were Patrício de Fontoura Lima, a civil servant in the Brazilian middle class, and Luísa Bormann de Lima; she also had a sister, Julieta. In 1863, Bormann moved with her family to Rio de Janeiro, then the capital of the Empire of Brazil, Brazilian Empire. In 1872, at the age of 19, Bormann married her maternal uncle, José Bernardino Bormann, a military Marshal (Brazil), marshal who had served in the Paraguayan War. He continued to be active in military work after their marriage, and was away for lengthy periods. (He was made Brazilian War Secretary in 1910, filling the post until 1914.) From her youth onward, Bormann both wrote and drew prolifically, but destroyed all work she did not wish to have published. Career In 1881, Bormann pu ...
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