Castillo De Santa Catalina (Málaga)
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Castillo De Santa Catalina (Málaga)
Santa Catalina may refer to: *Catalina Thomás (1533–1574), Spanish saint and patron saint of Mallorca Places Argentina * Santa Catalina Department, a department of Argentina **Santa Catalina, Jujuy, capital of the department *Santa Catalina, Córdoba, a settlement in Río Cuarto Department Colombia *Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina **Providencia and Santa Catalina Islands, a municipality **Santa Catalina Island (Colombia) *Santa Catalina, Bolívar Dominican Republic *Catalina Island (Dominican Republic), south of La Romana Guatemala *Santa Catalina la Tinta, Alta Verapaz Mexico *Isla Santa Catalina, Gulf of California, Baja California Sur *Santa Catalina Quieri, Oaxaca Panama *Santa Catalina, Panama, Pacific coast of Veraguas Peru *Santa Catalina de Mossa District, Morropon Province, Piura *Santa Catalina District, Luya Province, Amazonas *Santa Catalina, Lima, a neighborhood in La Victoria District, Lima *Santa Catalina, a traditional neighbourho ...
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Catalina Thomás
Catherine of Palma (1531–1574, born Caterina Tomàs i Gallard) was a Spanish cleric regular, canon and Mysticism, mystic from Mallorca. She is venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church and her feast day is commonly celebrated on 5 April although in her home town of Valldemossa she is remembered on the 27 and 28 of July. Life Catalina was born 1 May 1531 at Valldemossa, Mallorca, Spain, in a peasant family as the sixth of seven children. She was named after her maternal grandmother and the saint Catherine of Alexandria who was especially venerated by the family. As Catalina's parents died while she was still a young child, she spent her early formative years with her grandparents close to the Valldemossa Charterhouse before, at the age of ten, moving in with relatives who were owners of the estate of Son Gallard in 1541. Here she helped the workers on the fields and tended to the flock which is why she is also often depicted as a young farmer. Catalina's spirituality ...
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La Victoria District, Lima
La Victoria is one of the forty-three districts that make up the province of Lima, located in Peru. It borders to the north and northeast with the district of Lima, to the east with the district of San Luis, to the southeast with the district of San Borja, to the south with the district of San Isidro, and to the west with the district of Lince and again with the Lima district. La Victoria is a historical and very busy public district located in downtown Lima. The current mayor of La Victoria is Rubén Dioscorides Andrés Cano Altez. From the hierarchical point of view of the Catholic Church, it is part of the Episcopal Vicariate V of the Archdiocese of Lima. Overview La Victoria has several sections: *La Victoria proper extends from Miguel Grau avenue in the north to Mexico avenue in the south and from Paseo de la República Expressway in the west to San Pablo avenue in the east. It is the most populous sector and it is filled with mom and pop stores, although Iquitos ...
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Gulf Of Santa Catalina
The Gulf of Santa Catalina, also the Gulf of Catalina, is a gulf in the Pacific Ocean on the West Coast of the United States. The eastern coast of the gulf belongs to the states of California, United States, and Baja California, Mexico. The largest town on the shore of the gulf is San Diego. The islands in the gulf include Santa Catalina Island. The gulf covers an area of more than and borders the east coast of Catalina and the beaches of Orange, Los Angeles, and San Diego counties. The gulf is located in a seismically active area. History The gulf was first navigated by European discoverers in 1542, when Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo (; 1497 – January 3, 1543) was a Portuguese maritime explorer best known for investigations of the west coast of North America, undertaken on behalf of the Spanish Empire. He was the first European to explore presen ... sailed there from Navidad on the ''San Salvador'' and two other ships.Kelsey, Harry (1986). ''Juan ...
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University Of Santa Catalina
The Pontifical and Royal University of St. Catherine or University of Osma (Spanish ''Pontificia y Real Universidad de Santa Catalina'' or ''Universidad de Osma'') was founded in 1550 by the Portuguese bishop Pedro Alvarez de Acosta in El Burgo de Osma in Spain. It was closed in 1841. The building that housed the university is now a hotel. History 1st stage: Greatness (1541 - 1751) The university was founded in 1541 by the Bishop of Osma, Pedro Alvarez de Acosta (1539-1563), with faculties of arts, canon law, medicine and theology; it was authorised on 5 August 1550 by a canonical bull of Pope Julius III, and dedicated to St. Catherine of Alexandria. Philip II of Spain took it under his protection by a royal decree of 31 January 1562. Thus it obtained the double title of a pontifical and a royal university. 2nd stage: Decay (1751 - 1807) Political and educational changes, as well as the lack of economic resources it fell into decline from 1751. Examinations were suspended ...
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Botanical Garden Of Santa Catalina
The Santa Catalina Botanical Garden (, ) is located in the municipality of Iruña de Oca, province of Álava, Basque Country (autonomous community), Basque Country, Spain. The garden is centered around the ruins of the Santa Catalina convent, located between the Zadorra river and the Badaia Range, close to Trespuentes. History The origins of the botanical garden The Iruña family, probably the most powerful family of Iruña de Oca, were the ones that built the tower house in the thirteenth century, a century of feudal revolts. A century and a half later when there was peace in the area, the Iruña decided to change their place of residence and built a new building in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Vitoria (now Doña Otxanda tower), and gave their former residence to the order of Hieronymites. A few years later it was passed to the Augustinians, Augustinian monks, who built the monastery of Santa Catalina, and kept the old tower. In the old tower they attached a church which had its own clois ...
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