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Veraguas and was
After the region of Veraguas was conquered, the two regions settled for a mutual dislike of each other.
To the inhabitants of Azuero, their region was symbolic of the power of the people, while Veraguas represented an old, oppressive order.
Diametrically, to the inhabitants of Veraguas, their region was a bastion of loyalty and morality, while Azuero was a hotbed for vice and treason.
In both Veraguas and the capital this act was met with disdain, although on differing levels of said emotion.
Every region in Panama attended the assembly, including the former loyalist region of Veraguas, which was eventually convinced to join the revolution, out of the sheer fact that nothing more could be done for the royalist presence in Panama.
Torrijos was born in Santiago in the province of Veraguas, the sixth of twelve children.
In Panama, the Escuela Normal Juan Demóstenes Arosemena was founded in Santiago de Veraguas, Panama in 1938.
In colonial times, Bocas del Toro was part of Veraguas.
Veraguas was explored by Christopher Columbus on his fourth voyage.
Its capital, Santiago de Veraguas, was founded about 1636.
After gaining independence from Spain in 1821, the isthmus of Panama was divided into two provinces, Panamá and Veraguas.
After historical fighting it was formed in 1997 with lands from the provinces of Bocas del Toro, Chiriquí, and Veraguas.
Upon termination definitely the Court of the Audiencia of Panama by the Royal Decree of June 20, 1751, the country was ruled by a military government under the name of General Command of the mainland, which included the province of Veraguas.
On November 28, 1821 was proclaimed in Panama City, Panama Independence from Spain, on 4 December of that same year in the city of Santiago was proclaimed the Independence of the Veraguas province of Spanish power.
Born seventh of nine siblings in Santiago, the capital city of the Panamanian province of Veraguas, Roberto Díaz was raised by his parents Anastacio Díaz Jiménez, who was a teacher, and Gregoria Herrera, who worked as a housewife and at a local store selling bread and desserts.

Veraguas and capital
The capital is the city of Santiago de Veraguas.
The territory is made up of land previously belonging to the provinces of Bocas del Toro, Chiriquí, and Veraguas, and divided into seven districts ( listed above with capitals ); the capital of the entire comarca is Chichica, located in the Müna district.
Santiago is the capital of the province of Veraguas, in the Republic of Panama, and the district or municipality of the same name.

Veraguas and .
As the isthmus ' central interoceanic traffic zone, as well as the City of Panama had been of great historical importance to the Spanish Empire and subject of direct influence, so, the differences in social and economic status between the more liberal region of Azuero, and the much more royalist and conservative area of Veraguas displayed contrasting loyalties.
When the Grito de la Villa de Los Santos independence motion occurred, Veraguas firmly opposed it.
The end of the encomienda system in Azuero, however, sparked the conquest of Veraguas in that same year.
Under the leadership of Francisco Vázquez, the region of Veraguas passed into Castillan rule in 1558.
In Veraguas, however, there remained a strict sense of submission to the Spanish Crown.
Farther east it becomes the Serranía de Tabasará, and the portion of it closer to the lower saddle of the isthmus, where the canal is located, is often called the Sierra de Veraguas.
Thus, Bolívar entered the military academy of the Milicias de Veraguas, which his father had directed as colonel years earlier.
The population is mostly indigenous Afro-descendants and settlers who migrated from other provinces ( mainly chiricanos Santeña Herrerano and Veraguas ) in search of good land and better opportunities.
It is bordered to the north by the provinces Bocas del Toro and Ngobe-Buglé, to the west by Costa Rica, to the east by the province of Veraguas, and to the south by the Pacific Ocean, specifically the Gulf of Chiriquí.
Veraguas is a province of Panama, located in the centre-west of the country.
Veraguas has many groups of inhabitants, mainly of Spanish-Indian origin named campesinos.
Veraguas has various national parks.
Herrera is bordered on the north by the provinces Veraguas and Coclé, on the south by Los Santos, on the east by Golfo de Parita and Los Santos, and on the west by Veraguas.

was and ultimate
Commanding the Continental Army for six long years of the Revolution, he was the indispensable factor in the ultimate victory.
The basic difficulty, I suppose, was in my ultimate inability to feel a burden of sin from which I sought relief.
Our comment was that this was `` featherbedding '' in its ultimate form and that sympathy for the railroad was misplaced since it had entered into such an agreement.
We said there that it was necessary `` that a registrant be given an opportunity to rebut ( the Department's ) recommendation when it comes to the Appeal Board, the agency with the ultimate responsibility for classification ''.
For what concerns all scientific disciplines is precisely that which can be captured for the rational, i.e., for the scientific determination of what in past ages was considered ultimate and irrational.
An early hope that irradiation might be the ultimate answer to practically all food preservation problems was soon dispelled.
For in a world as yet unacquainted with the horrors of the mushroom cloud, poison gas was still regarded as the ultimate in hideous weapons.
If not, he was willing to accede to William's wishes in any way that did not block his ultimate aim.
The sound of his head striking the solid wood was an ultimate, sudden-end sound.
There was in the Brahms none of the mysterious and marvelous alchemy by which a great conductor can bring soloist, orchestra and music to ultimate fusion.
The `` belaboring '' is of course jocular, yet James was not lacking in fundamental seriousness -- unless we measure him by that ultimate seriousness of the great religious leader or thinker who stakes all on his vision of God.
However, there is no evidence that his son and ultimate successor, Constantius II, who was an Arian Christian, was exiled.
Alfred's ultimate responsibility was the pastoral care of his people.
The creation of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in 1910 was regarded as a milestone on the road to the ultimate goal of abolition of war.
Their ultimate solution was to sell Corsica to France and French troops of the ancien régime replaced Genoese ones in the citadels, including Ajaccio's.
The Oki 900 was the ultimate tool of cell phone hackers because it could listen in to AMPS phone calls right out of the box with no hardware modifications.
Probably the ultimate development of graphic presentations was the Dynamic page implementation of the University of Southern California BBS ( USCBBS ) by Susan Biddlecomb, which predated the implementation of the HTML Dynamic web page.
The paradox of the early Bauhaus was that, although its manifesto proclaimed that the ultimate aim of all creative activity was building, the school did not offer classes in architecture until 1927.
In these sutras the perfection of the wisdom of not-self is stated to be the true self ; the ultimate goal of the path is then characterized using a range of positive language that had been used previously in Indian philosophy by essentialist philosophers, but which was now transmuted into a new Buddhist vocabulary to describe a being who has successfully completed the Buddhist path.
Bonaparte had sought to invade Egypt, as the first step in a campaign against British India whose ultimate aim was to drive Britain out of the French Revolutionary Wars.
The most notable attempt to use deep penetration operations in Normandy was at Mortain, which exacerbated the German position in the already-forming Falaise Pocket and assisted in the ultimate destruction of German forces in Normandy.

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