Posadas

Last updated

Posadas may refer to:

Contents

Places

People

Other uses

See also

Related Research Articles

Carlos López or Carlos Lopes may refer to:

Luis is a given name. It is the Spanish form of the originally Germanic name Hludowig or Chlodovech. Other Iberian Romance languages have comparable forms: Luís in Portuguese and Galician, Lluís in Aragonese and Catalan, while Luiz is archaic in Portugal, but common in Brazil.

Miramar is a place name of Portuguese and Spanish origin. It means "sea-view" or "sea sight" from mirar and mar ("sea"). It may refer to:

Candelaria or Candelária may refer to:

Salto, Latin for "to leap/jump", may refer to:

Tito may refer to:

Cuevas or Cueva may refer to:

Soto may refer to:

Benítez is a surname of Spanish origin. It is thought to have originated in Asturias, in the north of Spain.

Vázquez, in non-Spanish-speaking countries often spelled as Vazquez or Vasquez, is an originally Galician surname, in use not only in Galicia but all over the Spanish-speaking world.

Gallardo is a Spanish derivation of the French name "Gaillard" and may refer to:

Ortiz is a Spanish-language patronymic surname meaning "son of Orti". "Orti" seems to be disputed in meaning, deriving from either Basque, Latin fortis meaning "brave, strong", or Latin fortunius meaning "fortunate". Officials of the Spanish Inquisition in Toledo, Spain, wrote in the 1590s that "this surname Ortiz, although they have few sanbenitos, is in this city a very converso lineage and surname".

Ensenada is a Spanish word meaning bay.

Juan Sánchez or Sanchez may refer to:

El Salto may refer to:

Quintana may refer to:

Espino may refer to:

Manuel Posadas

Manuel L. Posadas was a leading Afro-Argentine musician from the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

Patricia Ocampo

Patricia Ocampo is an Argentine activist involved in community development and creation of libraries in Misiones Province. By 2014, she had worked with community organizers and celebrities to found 20 libraries. The organization she co-founded provides basic assistance to those in poverty and with disabilities and attempts to empower people through education and access to books and libraries. She is also involved in trying to stop child labor in Argentina, specifically in the yerba mate regions.

Blanco is a surname of Spanish origin, meaning "white". Notable people with the surname include: