Spanish journalist, writer, translator and women's rights activist
Carmen de Burgos y Seguí (pseudonyms, Colombine, Gabriel Luna, Perico el de los Palotes, Raquel, Honorine and Marianela; Almería, December 10, 1867 – Madrid, October 9, 1932) was a Spanish journalist, writer, translator and women's rights activist. Johnson describes her as a "modern" if not "modernist" writer.[1]
^Johnson, Roberta (2001). "Carmen de Burgos and Spanish Modernism". South Central Review. Spain Modern and Postmodern at the Millenium. 18 (1/2): 66–77. doi:10.2307/3190302. JSTOR 3190302.
later. These women included Marisa Roësset, Victoria Kent, CarmendeBurgos, Irene Polo, Carmen Conde, Matilde Ras and Elena Fortún who were all part of...
got in touch with influential feminine figures of the time, such as CarmendeBurgos and Eva Nelken. These acquaintances led Clara Campoamor to join and...
VIII Premio de Divulgación Feminista CarmendeBurgos, for the article Mujer y Ciencia desde la Europa del Sur granted by the Asociación de Estudios Históricos...
Martínez Sierra and CarmendeBurgos were all important pre-Republic writers who influenced feminist thinking inside Spain. CarmendeBurgos was not primarily...
Sierra and CarmendeBurgos were all important pre-Republic writers who influenced feminist thinking inside Spain. The dictatorship of Primo de Rivera provided...
regions. Early on the league was led by Paulina Luisi of Uruguay, while CarmendeBurgos of Madrid served as its first president, and Elena Arizmendi Mejia...
Jose Antonio de Sangróniz, Franco's chief diplomat, was forced to cancel a reception before the Junta deBurgos ("Military Junta of Burgos", named after...
Spanish roads. CarmendeBurgos (Colombine), (1919), Los Negociantes de la Puerta del Sol, La novela corta, Año IV, Nº 195 "Real Casa de Correos". Retrieved...
Generation of '36 CarmendeBurgos (1867-1932), writer and journalist Fernán Caballero (1796-1877), writer and novelist Pedro Calderón de la Barca (1600–1681)...
of several notable people including Maria de Maeztu Whitney, Claudio Sánchez-Albornoz and CarmendeBurgos. The study of the Spanish language for foreigners...
Rodríguez 2001, pp. 341–342. "CarmendeBurgos, Colombine (1867-1932) en el periodismo y la literatura" (PDF). Instituto de la Mujer. 2010. Lavaud J.-M...
Quesada's statue of El Cid in Burgos Statue of El Cid included in the 14th- to 15th-century "Santa María" gateway, Burgos 1344 medieval miniature showing...
Timnit Gebru, or Meredith Whittaker. In March 2024, she was awarded the CarmendeBurgos Feminist Outreach Award by the Association of Historical Studies on...
world accepted them in dribs and drabs (Rosalía de Castro, Emilia Pardo Bazán, Concha Espina, CarmendeBurgos). Their incorporation of the lower classes into...
María del Carmen Sallés y Barangueras (9 April 1848 – 25 July 1911), also known by her religious name Carmen of Jesus, was a Spanish Roman Catholic professed...