Zuazo may refer to: Alonso de Zuazo (1466–1539), Spanish lawyer and colonial judge, that was governor in New Spain and in Santo Domingo Hernán Siles Zuazo...
Puente zuazo Puente Zuazo is a bridge located in San Fernando in the Province of Cádiz, Andalusia, Spain. The original bridge was built in 1411. This historic...
Club Balonmano Zuazo Femenino, also known as Prosetecnisa Zuazo or Hotel Gran Bilbao–Prosetecnisa Zuazo Barakaldo for sponsorship reasons, is a women's...
Secundino Zuazo Ugalde (1887–1971) was a Spanish architect and city planner. Born in Bilbao, he graduated from Madrid's architecture school in 1913, and...
Alonso de Zuazo (also spelled Suazo) (1466 – March 1539) was a Spanish lawyer and colonial judge and governor in New Spain and in Santo Domingo. He served...
de Albornoz, Alonso de Zuazo 29 December 1524 – 17 February 1525: Gonzalo de Salazar, Pedro Almíndez Chirino, Alonso de Zuazo 17 February 1525 – 20 April...
giving birth to his only son. Complications arise with Esteban's boss Pilar Zuazo at the end of the fifth season, and the family is forced into living on...
Severino Zuazo Ugalde (19 May 1889 - 20 July 1980) was a Spanish footballer who played as a forward for Athletic Club. He spent his whole career at Athletic...
Koldo Zuazo (born 1956) is a Basque linguist, professor at the University of the Basque Country and specialist in Basque language dialectology and sociolinguistics...
Archived from the original on February 22, 2020. Retrieved February 22, 2020. Zuazo, Eñaut (January 10, 2022). "El modelo Lucky Blue Smith, de 23 años, se convierte...
dialect was proposed by the foremost living Basque dialectologist, Koldo Zuazo, in a new classification of Basque dialects published in 2004. Later on...
Vitoria-Gasteiz: Gobierno Vasco. Retrieved 4 November 2019. Zuazo 2010, p. 16 Zuazo 2010, p. 17. Zuazo, Koldo (2012). Arabako euskara. Andoain (Gipuzkoa): Elkar...
begun in 1941 by future presidents Víctor Paz Estenssoro and Hernán Siles Zuazo. It soon attracted some of the brightest members of the Bolivian intelligentsia...
standardised Basque on the central dialect, the Gipuzkoan, according to Koldo Zuazo: Linguistic: the central dialect is the meeting point of all Basque speakers...
leaders were the former presidents Víctor Paz Estenssoro and Hernán Siles Zuazo. The MNR government after this Revolution lasted from 9 April 1952 until...
there from other parts of the Basque Country. In 1997, Professor Koldo Zuazo published research carried out on scattered recorded evidence and papers...
allow it to choose a new chief executive. In October 1982, Hernán Siles Zuazo again became president, 22 years after the end of his first term of office...
the government in charge of Estrada, Rodrigo de Albornoz and Alonso de Zuazo. Zuazo (or Suazo) held the additional office of Justicia Mayor. The transfer...
Bautista Lázaro de Diego, Ricardo Velázquez Bosco, Antonio Palacios, Secundino Zuazo, Luis Gutiérrez Soto, Luis Moya Blanco [es] and Alejandro de la Sota. From...
Cruz square. The original project was the work of the architect Secundino Zuazo Ugalde and was soon sponsored by the then Minister of Public Works, Indalecio...
philosopher Iñaki Williams (born 1994), professional footballer Secundino Zuazo (1887–1970), architect and urbanist Gorka Márquez (born 1990), Strictly...
Partido Liberal de facto disappeared as a political party Hernán Siles Zuazo History of Bolivia Politics of Bolivia List of political parties in Bolivia...
Albornoz as auditor, Pedro Almíndez Chirino as inspector, and Lic. Alonso de Zuazo as justicia mayor or assessor. They arrived in New Spain in 1524 and formed...