Andrade is a Portuguese and Spanish (Galician) surname.
Andrade may also refer to:
Serginho is a diminutive form of the given name Sérgio and may refer to:
Conceição may refer to:
Brazilian literature is the literature written in the Portuguese language by Brazilians or in Brazil, including works written prior to the country's independence in 1822. Throughout its early years, literature from Brazil followed the literary trends of Portugal, gradually shifting to a different and authentic writing style in the course of the 19th and 20th centuries, in the search for truly Brazilian themes and use of Brazilian forms.
Henrique may refer to:
Andrade is a surname of Galician origin, which emerged in the 12th century as the family name of the knights and lords of the small parish of San Martiño de Andrade, in the municipality of Pontedeume. The first mention of this small territory is to be found in the documentation of the monastery of San Xoán de Caaveiro, and belong chronologically to the 9th century. It was part of the region of Pruzos, which was created as an administrative and ecclesiastical territory of Kingdom of Galicia in the sixth century by King Teodomiro through a document written in Latin called Parrochiale suevum, Parochiale suevorum or Theodomiri Divisio. From the 12th century Pruzos, and therefore Andrade, were integrated into the county of Trastámara that belonged to the lineage Traba, the most powerful Galician family. By this same time the family group: Fortúnez, begins to unite their names Andrade as surname, since in this parish their family home was located. The knights of Andrade were faithful vassals of their lords the Counts of Trastámara throughout the middle centuries of the Middle Ages.
Faria is a Portuguese and an Italian surname. Notable people with the name include:
Gomes is a common Portuguese and Old Galician surname.
Pires is a common surname in the Portuguese language, namely in Portugal and Brazil. It was originally a patronymic, meaning Son of Pedro or Son of Pero. Its Spanish equivalent is Pérez. It is a variant form of Peres. It may mean different things:
Julinho is the diminutive form of Portuguese Júlio, often used as a nickname. It may also be a given name in its own right. Notable people with the given name or nickname include:
Coelho is a Portuguese-Jewish surname meaning "rabbit". The Coelho’s are a historically known Sephardic family with connection to the Jewish communities of the Iberian peninsula. The families history bears deep ties to the persecution experienced by Jews during the inquisition in Portugal and Spain. Descendants with the surname Coelho are likely of Jewish origin. Notable people with the surname include:
João Paulo is a Portuguese given name, the equivalent of "John Paul" in English. Notable people with the name include:
Pas or PAZ may refer to:
Ricardinho is the Portuguese diminutive of the name Ricardo.
Portuguese surname of Jewish origin (Sephardic) : topographic name for someone who lived by a conspicuous pine tree or by a pine forest, from pinheiro ‘pine’, or habitational name for any of the numerous places named Pinheiro.
Diego Souza or Diego de Souza may refer to:
João Batista or João Baptista is Portuguese for John the Baptist. It may refer to:
Borges is a Portuguese and Spanish surname. Jorge Luis Borges, the most notable person with this name, notes that his family name, like Burgess in English, means "of the town", "bourgeois".
Bruno Andrade may refer to:
Robinho is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a striker.
Francisco Gomes is a Portuguese name which may refer to: