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San Juan Ihualtepec
San Juan Ihualtepec is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico. The municipality covers an area of 146.72 km. It is part of the Silacayoapam District in the Mixteca Region. As of 2005, the municipality had a total population of 717.
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Iglesia de San Juan Bautista (Maricao, Puerto Rico)
The Iglesia de San Juan Bautista (English: Church of Saint John the Baptist) in Maricao, Puerto Rico is a church built during 1890-c.1898. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. Its facade, facing onto the plaza of Maricao, is dominated by a three-level square bell tower, whose first level is a portico and which is capped by a pyramidal concrete roof. Its exterior has Gothic-style pointed arches; its interior has more traditional rounded arches. It has a nave and two aisles. The church's original roof was replaced in 1965 by a metal joist structure supporting corrugated asbestos sheets. It was designed by engineer Jeronimo Jiminez Coranado. It is one of 31 churches reviewed for listing on the National Register in 1984.
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San Juan River (Vancouver Island)
The San Juan River is a river that flows from east to west through southern Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada. The river originates in the Seymour Range, flows westward through the San Juan Valley to Port San Juan at Port Renfrew.
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Monacillo Urbano, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Monacillo Urbano is one of 18 barrios in the municipality of San Juan, Puerto Rico. It was originally part of Barrio Monacillo. In 2010, it had a population of 22,342 living in a land area of 3. 35 square miles (8. 68 km). Monacillo Urbano is surrounded by Gobernador Piero Barrio to the north, El Cinco Barrio to the east, Monacillo Barrio to the south, and the municipality of Guaynabo to the west.
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South San Juan Wilderness
The South San Juan Wilderness is a U.S. Wilderness Area located in the San Juan National Forest, east of Pagosa Springs, in southern Colorado . The last known grizzly bear in Colorado was killed in the wilderness in 1979. Some believe that it is still home to a few grizzlies, but there is no sufficient evidence yet to prove this.
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San Juan Unified School District
San Juan Unified School District is a school district in Sacramento County, California, that serves Arden-Arcade, Carmichael, Orangevale, Citrus Heights, Fair Oaks, parts of Rancho Cordova and parts of Sacramento. San Juan Unified includes numerous elementary schools, eight K-8 schools, eight middle schools, and nine high schools. There are also a number of alternative schools, early childhood centers, and adult education centers.
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San Juan Bautista Tlacoatzintepec
San Juan Bautista Tlacoatzintepec is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico. The municipality covers an area of 183.7 km. It is part of Cuicatln District in the north of the Caada Region. As of 2005, the municipality had a total population of 2241.
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Basilica of the National Shrine of Our Lady of San Juan del Valle
The Basilica of the National Shrine of Our Lady of San Juan del Valle is a Minor Basilica of the Catholic Church located in San Juan, Texas, United States. It is also a National shrine under the direction of the Diocese of Brownsville
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Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano
Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano is a Catholic parish in the Diocese of Orange in California. The parish church is located just northwest of Mission San Juan Capistrano in the city of San Juan Capistrano, California, United States. Completed in 1986, it was designated a minor basilica in 2000 and a national shrine in 2003. The parish sponsors a number of ministries, notably "Serra's Pantry", a registered food agency distributing food and hygiene supplies to several hundred local families, and the Mission Basilica School, a parochial school for children in grades pre-K through 8.
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Chronicle of San Juan de la Peña
The Chronicle of San Juan de la Pea (or Crnica pinatense) is an Aragonese chronicle written in Latin around before 1359 in the monastery of San Juan de la Pea at the behest of Peter IV of Aragon. It was the first general history of Aragon and was probably designed both to justify the royal prerogatives of the Crown of Aragon against the baronage and to match the comparable Castilian work of a century earlier, the Estoria de Espaa. Between 1369 and 1372, Navarro-Aragonese and Catalan translations were produced. The Chronicle is a compilation from various sources, some more historically solid than others. Though named after the monastery of San Juan, it was only partially compiled there. As early as 1345 Peter IV had asked the monasteries of San Juan and Ripoll to begin compiling material for a general history of the realm. Ripoll's only contribution was a version of the 1162 Gesta comitum Barchinonensium updated to 1310. Only those sections (approximate a third) dealing with events specific to the monastery were probably written in it. The monks of San Juan relied heavily for the history of Spain up to 1137 on De rebus Hispaniae, the work of the Navarrese Rodrigo Jimnez de Rada. The materials compiled at Ripoll and San Juan were eventually sent to Barcelona to be worked together. A finished copy of the work was sent by the king to the Cathedral of Valencia in 1372 and this original still resides in the cathedral library. A modern Spanish translation by Antonio Ubieto Arteta appeared in 1964, an English translation by Lynn H. Nelson in 1991.