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Talavera is a Spanish toponymic surname which comes from Talavera de la Reina in the Toledo province of Spain. [1] This surname is occasionally borne as a Sephardic Jewish surname. [2]
Pérez or Perez, as most commonly written in English, is a Castilian Spanish surname. Peretz or Perets is also common among people of Sephardi Jewish descent, and is the 4th most common surname in Israel, most common surname not of Hebrew language origin, and most common surname exclusive to a single Jewish ethnoreligious subgroup.
Ibáñez may refer to:
Ugarte or uharte is a Basque word meaning "island". It can also be spelt Huarte or Hugarte in Spanish. Notable people with the surname include:
Góngora is a Spanish surname of Navarran origin. People bearing the surname include:
Torres is a surname in the Catalan, Portuguese, and Spanish languages, meaning "towers".
Urrutia, meaning "distant, far away" in Basque is the name of a family that originated in Zumárraga in the province of Gipuzkoa, and then spread out throughout the Basque country, and eventually throughout the Americas and the Philippines.
Alarcón is a historic municipality in Castile-La Mancha, Spain
Sánchez is a Spanish family name.
Miranda is a Spanish, Portuguese, Sephardic Jewish, Italian and Maltese surname of Latin origin, meaning "worthy of admiration".
Parra is a Spanish, Portuguese, and also Jewish surname, meaning grapevine or trellis, for example, a pergola. It is taken from the word meaning latticework and the vines raised on it. In Hebrew context the surname is used for Jewish people whose ancestors were wine makers as "Parra" is the Hebrew word in Spanish for vitis.
Erraez and Herraez are variations of the same Sephardi surname. This pedigree belong to a sub-group known as Spanish and Portuguese Jews, whose families remained in Spain and Portugal as ostensible Christians and later reverted to Judaism in France and Italy, some of whom emigrated to the New World in the 18th century as conversos, particularly to Mexico, the Caribbean and South America.
Villalobos is a Spanish surname and common in Spain, Portugal, Latin America, and Italy
Mena is a Spanish surname that originates as both a Basque and Spanish Sephardic surname.
Correa is a Spanish surname. Correa is found throughout the Iberian Peninsula. Correa means 'leather strap', 'belt', 'rein', 'shoelace', plural correas. Correa is from the Latin corrigia 'fastening', from corrigere 'to straighten', 'to correct'), applied as a metonymic occupational name for a maker or seller of such articles. Correa is spelt Correia in Portuguese and Galician.
Gamboa is a surname of Basque origin. Notable people with the surname include:
Zúñiga is a Spanish surname originally from the Basque region of the country. Notable people with the surname include:
Jara is a Spanish surname, popular in various places in southern Spain, meaning rockrose or cistus.
Reinoso is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Antúnez is a Spanish patronymic surname derived from the Antonius root name, widely spread in all Latin America countries as a consequence of Spanish colonization. Its Portuguese variant is Antunes. Notable people with this name include the following:
Rubio is a Spanish surname. Notable people with the surname include: