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missing merges, data that are not in the profil
Gumersinda del Campo Pagola MP
Familia inmediata:
Ocultar
Daughter of Juan' Francisco del Campo y Isolina' Pagola Miranda
Wife of Enrique Muñoz Vidal y Enrique Muñoz Vidal
Mother of Alberto Muñoz del Campo; Gumersinda Muñoz del Campo; Mario Muñoz Del Campo; Enrique Muñoz del Campo; Alberto Muñoz del Campo y otros 8
Sister of Alberto Félix del Campo Pagola
Agregado por: Gastón Camio Irazoqui el 29 de enero de 2009
Gestionado por: Gastón Camio Irazoqui, Julio Andrés Muñoz Ibarra, Josefina (Fina) Sánchez Abal, Ann Vermeulen (Ramsey) y Enrique (Henri V) Raúl Angenscheidt Baridon, Cr. ( J.) «menos
Conservado por: Ann Vermeulen
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Ann Vermeulen said Mirta 'del Campo Vidal Munoz, Mario' Field Muñoz, Enrique 'del Campo Vidal Muñoz, Rafael' del Campo Vidal Muñoz and another 2 to the tree.
this is wrong. the first surname is Muñoz an is not Muñoz Vidal , that is the surname of her father.
PLEASE TO MAKE CORRECTIONS IN GENEALOGY SPANISH TO KNOW THE RULES.
WOMEN IN OUR COUNTRY IS FREE ON HER RIGHTS, DO NOT USE THE NAME OF HER HUSBAND
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THIS IS A VERY IMPORTANT WOMAN IN URUGUAY
Juana Fernández Morales
Place of burial: Montevideo, Uruguay
Born: March 8, 1892
Melo, Uruguay
Death: July 15, 1979 (87)
Montevideo, Uruguay
Juana Fernández Morales, universally known as Juana de America (Melo, March 8, 1892 - Montevideo, July 15, 1979) was a Uruguayan poet.
Born in 1892, although she claimed to have been born in 1895. His name was Juana Fernández Morales, but became known as Joan of Ibarbourou, taking the surname of her husband, Captain Lucas Ibarbourou, whom he married at twenty. His father was Spanish, Galician, born in Lourenzá (Lugo)-whose public library named after the poet, and his mother belonged to one of the oldest Spanish families in Uruguay.
Achieved great popularity in speaking for his first collections of poems. He was elected to the Academia Uruguay in 1947 and in 1959 he was awarded the National Prize for Literature, awarded this year for the first time. His works are marked by modernism and, thematically, exalt motherhood, physical beauty, eroticism and
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Alina Armand-Ugon Rivoir, Pharmacist.
Place of burial: CEMETERY Waldensian, La Paz, Colonia, Uruguay
Birth: circa August 23, 1885
Death: circa 1976 (91)
Montevideo, Uruguay
WAS THE FIRST WOMAN OF URUGUAY, RECEIVED IN COLLEGE
WAS IN THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AS PHARMACEUTICAL WITH GOLD MEDAL
SHE WAS MY GRANDMOTHER, DESCENDANT OF WALDENSES
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The first state to offer universal suffrage (and also allow women to stand for election to parliament) was South Australia in 1902 (according to others in 1894) and Tasmania in 1903.
The first South American country to adopt women's suffrage was Uruguay. Women's suffrage was first issued in 1927, in the Plebiscite of Cerro Chato. Thus, the first country in Latin America to allow women the right to vote.
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Paulina Luisi Janicki (Columbus, province of Entre Rios, Argentina, 1875 - Montevideo, Uruguay, 1949), medical and Uruguayan female activist. The father, Angel Luisi Pisano, Italian, brought to America Masonic ideas of freedom, the mother, Maria Teresa Josefina Janicki daughter of Polish exiles in France, recently married, in 1872 come to Entre Rios, Argentina and in 1878 to Paysandu, Uruguay . In 1887 they settled in Montevideo. The Luisi - Janicki were a family of workers and educators in an atmosphere of resistance and rebellion, thought too liberal for the time. All teaching daughters studied and some university continued to be among the first professional women. Paulina was the first woman doctor of medicine received in Uruguay was also a gynecologist, teacher, advocate and tireless fighter for the values of women, including women's suffrage. His ideas and his work has spread universal values for the rights of women in the world. Was active in politics, being a founding member of the Socialist Party of Uruguay Paulina Luisi Janicki is your brother's ex-wife's brother's ex-wife's first cousin twice removed's wife's sister.
Paulina Luisi Janicki (Colón, provincia de Entre Ríos, Argentina, 1875 - Montevideo, Uruguay, 1949) , médica y activista femenina uruguaya. El padre, Ángel Luisi Pisano, italiano, trajo a América sus ideas masónicas de libertad, la madre, María Teresa Josefina Janicki hija de polacos exiliados en Francia, recién casados, llegan en 1872 a Entre Ríos, Argentina y en 1878 a Paysandú, Uruguay. En 1887 se instalaron en Montevideo. Los Luisi - Janicki fueron una familia de trabajadores y educadores que se desarrolló en un ambiente de resistencia y rebeldía, de pensamiento muy liberal para la época. Todas sus hijas estudiaron magisterio y algunas de ellas siguieron carreras universitarias siendo de las primeras mujeres profesionales. Paulina fue la primera mujer en recibirse de Doctora en Medicina en Uruguay; fue además ginecóloga, docente, promotora y luchadora incansable de los valores de la mujer, entre ellos el voto femenino. Sus ideas y su trabajo se ha propagado como valores universales por los derechos de la mujer en el mundo entero. Actuó en política, siendo miembro fundadora del Partido Socialista del Uruguay Paulina Luisi Janicki is your brother's ex-wife's brother's ex-wife's first cousin twice removed's wife's sister.
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Enrique Clemente Armand-Ugon Rivoir, Dr.
Place of burial: Montevideo, Uruguay, Montevideo
Born: August 10, 1893
Waldensian colony, Colonia, Uruguay
Member of the Supreme Court between 1945 and 1952 Member of the High Court of Justice in The Hague 1953
Enrique Armand-Ugon
Enrique Clemente Armand-Ugon (* August 10 1893 in Colonia Valdense , Departamento Colonia , † 1984 in Montevideo ) was a lawyer from Uruguay . He worked from 1945 to 1951 as judge of the Corte Suprema de Justicia de Uruguay, the Supreme Court of his native country, and from 1952 to 1961 at the International Court of Justice . [ edit ] Life
Enrique Armand-Ugon was in 1893 in Colonia Valdense born in 1918 and completed his studies at the Universidad de la República in Montevideo . In the same year he was admitted as a lawyer . After working as a judge in a first instance court (from 1920) and at a Court of Appeal (from 1938) it was 1945 at the Supreme Court appointed Uruguay (Corte Suprema de Justicia de Uruguay), where he served as president from 1949. He also represented as a delegate to the 1931 Uruguay held Twelfth Meeting of the General Assembly of the League of Nations and in the years 1948 and 1950 as head of the delegation from his native country at the third and fifth session of the General Assembly of the United Nations .
In February 1952 he became judge of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague , where he worked for a nine-year term of office as scheduled until 1961. He also worked at the ICJ from 1962 to 1964 in the case of Barcelona Traction, Light and Power Company Limited between Belgium and Spain at Spain's request as an ad hoc judge. He died in 1984 in Montevideo. [ edit ] References
Enrique C. Armand-Ugon In:. Eyffinger Arthur, Arthur Witteveen, Mohammed Bedjaoui : La Cour internationale de Justice 1946-1996 Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, The Hague and London, 1999. ISBN 9-04-110468-2 , p. 264
Armand-Ugon, Enrique C. In: Ronald Hilton (ed.): Who's Who in Latin America. Part V:. Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, third revised and expanded edition. Stanford University Press, Stanford 1962, ISBN 0-80-470741-3 , p. 221
Biographies of Juges "ad hoc". Enrique M. Armand-Ugon. In: overture of audiences dans l'affaire de la Barcelona Traction, Light and Power Company, Limited (c. Belgique Espagne). Press release 69 / 4 of the International Court of Justice of 11 April 1969 (available online through the website of the ICJ as a PDF file, 442KB, approx