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Coras De Nayarit F.C. Footballers
Coras may refer to: People * Jean de Coras (1515–1572), French jurist * Jacques de Coras (1630–1677), French poet * Marcel Coraş (born 1959), Romanian footballer Biology * Coras (spider), ''Coras'' (spider), a genus of spiders Other

* The Cora people, a native people of Mexico; see also: ** Cora language ** Misión Santiago de Los Coras * Coras F.C., a Mexican association football club based in Tepic, Nayarit, Mexico * Coras F.C. B, the official reserve team of Coras F.C. * Córas na Poblachta, a minor Irish political party founded in 1940 * Córas Iompair Éireann, a public transport authority in Ireland {{disambiguation, surname Language and nationality disambiguation pages ...
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Jean De Coras
Jean de Coras, also called Corasius (1515–1572) was a French jurist. Life Born in Réalmont as the son of a Civil law notary, notary, he studied law in Toulouse, Cahors, Orléans and perhaps also in other cities, under teachers such as Franciscus Curtis junior and Marianus Socinus junior. After his 1535 promotion in Padua by Filippo Decio, he taught law at the University of Toulouse starting in 1536, in Valence, Drôme, Valence (1545) and in Ferrara (1550), where he became one of the most popular professors of the time. In 1552, De Coras became a member of the Toulouse ''parlement'' and participated in the famous trial of Martin Guerre, of which he wrote the best-known record, ''Arrest Memorable du parlement de Tolose'' (1560). In 1562, having converted from the Roman Catholic Church to the Calvinist Reformed Church of France, he failed in an attempt to open Toulouse to the Huguenots, but was rehabilitated on account of his connections to the royal court. Even so, De Coras later ...
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Jacques De Coras
Jacques de Coras (1625 – 24 December 1677) was a French poet born in Toulouse. Grandson of the Huguenot jurist Jean de Coras, he was raised in the Protestant Reformed Church of France. After serving as a cadet in the military, he studied theology, and exercised the functions of a Protestant minister in Guyenne Guyenne or Guienne (, ; oc, Guiana ) was an old French province which corresponded roughly to the Roman province of '' Aquitania Secunda'' and the archdiocese of Bordeaux. The name "Guyenne" comes from ''Aguyenne'', a popular transformation o .... He was, during the same time, associated with the person of Turenne, and he converted to Catholicism. He mixed to good effect his poetic studies and his religious work. He died in 1677. Works *''la Conversion de Jacques de Coras, dédiée à nosseigneurs du clergé de France''; 1665, Paris, in-12. *''Jonas, ou Ninive pénitente''; 1663, Paris, in-12. *Three poems, ''Josué, Samson,'' and ''David'', were published under t ...
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Marcel Coraş
Marcel may refer to: People * Marcel (given name), people with the given name Marcel * Marcel (footballer, born August 1981), Marcel Silva Andrade, Brazilian midfielder * Marcel (footballer, born November 1981), Marcel Augusto Ortolan, Brazilian striker * Marcel (footballer, born 1983), Marcel Silva Cardoso, Brazilian left back * Marcel (footballer, born 1992), Marcel Henrique Garcia Alves Pereira, Brazilian midfielder * Marcel (singer), American country music singer * Étienne Marcel (died 1358), provost of merchants of Paris * Gabriel Marcel (1889–1973), French philosopher, Christian existentialist and playwright * Jean Marcel (died 1980), Madagascan Anglican bishop * Jean-Jacques Marcel (1931–2014), French football player * Rosie Marcel (born 1977), English actor * Sylvain Marcel (born 1974), Canadian actor * Terry Marcel (born 1942), British film director * Claude Marcel (1793-1876), French diplomat and applied linguist Other uses * Marcel (''Friends''), a fictional ...
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Coras (spider)
''Coras'' is a genus of funnel weavers first described by Eugène Simon in 1898. It has fifteen described species that occur in eastern North America from Nova Scotia south to Florida. They can be readily distinguished from other genera in the subfamily by their anterior median eyes being larger than the anterior lateral eyes, whereas in other genera the reverse is true, along with a number of more technical reproductive features. The type species In zoological nomenclature, a type species (''species typica'') is the species name with which the name of a genus or subgenus is considered to be permanently taxonomically associated, i.e., the species that contains the biological type specim ... is '' Coras medicinalis'' (so named because its web was used in medicine). These spiders are frequently found at or near ground level, or in cellars of houses, where they construct small and rather messy sheet webs on the ground and attached to nearby more elevated things. These webs are ...
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Cora Language
Cora is an indigenous language of Mexico of the Uto-Aztecan language family, spoken by approximately 30,000 people. It is spoken by the ethnic group that is widely known as the Cora, but who refer to themselves as ''Naáyarite''. The Cora inhabit the northern sierra of the Mexican state Nayarit which is named after its indigenous inhabitants. A significant portion of Cora speakers have formed an expatriate community along the southwestern part of Colorado in the United States. Cora is a Mesoamerican language and shows many of the traits defining the Mesoamerican Linguistic Area. Under the General Law of Linguistic Rights of the Indigenous Peoples, it is recognized as a "national language", along with 62 other indigenous languages and Spanish which have the same "validity" in Mexico. Geographic distribution Ethnologue distinguishes two main variants of Cora. One is called ''Cora del Nayar'' or ''Cora Meseño'' and is spoken mainly in and around the medium-altitude settlements ...
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Misión Santiago De Los Coras
Mission Santiago was founded by the Italian Jesuit Ignacio María Nápoli in 1724 and financed by the Marqués de Villapuente de la Peña and his wife the Marquesa de las Torres de Rada, at the native settlement of Aiñiní, about 40 kilometers north of San José del Cabo in the Cape Region of Baja California Sur, Mexico. The mission took part of its name from the "Coras," the native people of the region. William C. Massey (1949) interpreted the Jesuit historical sources as indicating that the Coras were a Guaycura-speaking group, but a reexamination of the evidence favors the view that the name was a synonym for " Pericú" (Laylander 1997). Mission Santiago was the first target of the Pericú Revolt in 1734. Its missionary, Lorenzo José Carranco, was killed, and the buildings were sacked. Rebuilding was begun in 1734, but the mission was ultimately abandoned during the Dominican period in 1795, and its remaining neophytes were relocated to San José del Cabo. See also * ...
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Coras F
Coras may refer to: People * Jean de Coras (1515–1572), French jurist * Jacques de Coras (1630–1677), French poet * Marcel Coraş (born 1959), Romanian footballer Biology * ''Coras'' (spider), a genus of spiders Other * The Cora people, a native people of Mexico; see also: ** Cora language ** Misión Santiago de Los Coras * Coras F.C., a Mexican association football club based in Tepic, Nayarit, Mexico * Coras F.C. B, the official reserve team of Coras F.C. * Córas na Poblachta Córas na Poblachta (; en, Republican System) was a minor Irish republican political party founded in 1940. Origins The idea for a new party was discussed at a meeting in Dublin on 21 February 1940 attended by 104 former officers of the pro ..., a minor Irish political party founded in 1940 * Córas Iompair Éireann, a public transport authority in Ireland {{disambiguation, surname Language and nationality disambiguation pages ...
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Córas Na Poblachta
Córas na Poblachta (; en, Republican System) was a minor Irish republican political party founded in 1940. Origins The idea for a new party was discussed at a meeting in Dublin on 21 February 1940 attended by 104 former officers of the pro- and anti-Treaty wings of the Irish Republican Army. The inaugural meeting of the new party took place on 2 March 1940. Simon Donnelly, who had fought in Boland's Mill under Éamon de Valera in 1916, the former leader of the Dublin section of the IRA, and former chief of the Irish Republican Police, was elected as president of a central committee of fifteen members. Other leaders were Seán Fitzpatrick, another Irish War of Independence veteran; Con Lehane, who had lately left the IRA; Séamus Gibbons; Tom O'Rourke; Seán Dowling, one of Rory O'Connor's principal lieutenants in the Irish Civil War; Colonel Roger McCorley, one of the principal IRA leaders in Belfast during the War of Independence who had taken the Irish Free State side ...
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