Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. "Appendix" (p. 47-53): Extracts from treaties between Spain and Portugal, October 1, 1777, March 24, 1778; convention between France and Spain, June 27, 1900.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GuineaGuinea - Wikipedia

    Guinea is named after the Guinea region which lies along the Gulf of Guinea.It stretches north through the forested tropical regions and ends at the Sahel.The English term Guinea comes directly from the Portuguese word Guiné which emerged in the mid-15th century to refer to the lands inhabited by the Guineus, a generic term for the black African peoples south of the Senegal River, in contrast ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MalaboMalabo - Wikipedia

    Malabo (/ m ə ˈ l ɑː b oʊ / mə-LAH-boh, Spanish pronunciation:; formerly Santa Isabel [ˈsantajsaˈβel]) is the capital of Equatorial Guinea and the province of Bioko Norte. It is located on the north coast of the island of Bioko ( Bube : Etulá , and as Fernando Pó by the Europeans).

  4. Spain portal. v. t. e. Spanish Equatoguinean ( Spanish: Hispano-ecuatoguineano) is a person of Spanish descent who are residents born or living in Equatorial Guinea. The population from Spain living in Equatorial Guinea numbers an estimated 17,000. Many Spanish Equatoquineans are of mulatto, or multiracial, ancestry.

  5. Spanish provinces. From 30 July 1959 to 11 October 1968, Fernando Poo and Río Muni were treated as overseas provinces of Spain until they combined to form Equatorial Guinea on 12 October 1968 . Fernando Poo and Río Muni originally used postage stamps of Spanish Guinea until 1960 when the Spanish government decreed the use of separate issues ...

  6. a. Including Equatoguinean Spanish ( Español ecuatoguineano ). The Republic of Equatorial Guinea is a nation in west central Africa, and one of the smallest countries in Africa. It borders Cameroon on the north, Gabon on the south and east, and the Gulf of Guinea on the west. The country's territory is both on the continent and on islands.

  7. A by-election to the Spanish Cortes Españolas was held in Spanish Guinea in 1960. Background [ edit ] Spanish Guinea was transformed from a colony to a province on 30 July 1959; this gave it the right to elect six members (three Africans and three Spaniards) to the Spanish parliament, the Cortes Españolas, a process not extended to Spain until 1967.