Rufino may refer to: Rufino (given name) Rufino Family, Filipino family Rufinus of Assisi, Italian saint sometimes known as Rufino Rufino, Santa Fe, Argentina...
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Rufino is a city in the province of Santa Fe, Argentina. It has 19,211 inhabitants as per the 2022 census [INDEC]. It lies on the southwest of the province...
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Gustavo Daniel Lemos (category Argentine male boxers)
eliminator on 26 March 2022, at the Estadio Luna Park in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He won the fight by a fifth-round technical knockout. Selby was knocked...
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import-export business and in company investments. Clara Hammerl died in Rufino, Argentina, where her daughter lived, on 9 October 1931 at the age of 73. Since...
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Dr. Rufino de Elizalde (August 1822, Buenos Aires – March 1887) was an Argentine politician who was Foreign Affairs Minister of Argentina in 1865. Garlitz...
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This is a list of cities in Argentina. This is a list of the localities of Argentina of 45,000 to 150,000 inhabitants ordered by amount of population according...
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Federico Sturzenegger (category Presidents of the Central Bank of Argentina)
Federico Sturzenegger (born 11 February 1966) is an Argentine economist who is the current Minister of Deregulation and State Transformation [es] under...
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Santiago Chocobares (category Argentina international rugby union players)
31 March 1999) is an Argentine professional rugby union player who plays as a centre for Top 14 club Toulouse and the Argentina national team. On 21 November...
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Pan American-Grace Airways (section Argentina)
Argentina San Salvador de Jujuy, Argentina Rufino, Argentina Junin, Argentina Salta, Argentina Villa Mercedes, San Luis, Argentina Cordoba, Argentina...
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La Mona Jiménez (redirect from Juan Carlos Jiménez Rufino)
of the genre. Juan Carlos Jiménez Rufino was born on 11 January 1951 in Córdoba, Argentina. He is of Afro-Argentine descent. He earned the nickname La...
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Colombia lived in Cali, Colombia Mariana Telleria b. 1979 Rufino, Argentina lives in Rosario, Argentina Güneş Terkol b. 1981 Istanbul lives in Istanbul Eduardo...
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Buenos Aires (redirect from Capital of Argentina)
/-ˈaɪrɪs/; Spanish pronunciation: [ˈbwenos ˈajɾes] ) is the capital city of Argentina, on the western shore of the Río de la Plata on South America's southeastern...
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Amadeo Carrizo (category Argentina men's international footballers)
– 20 March 2020), popularly known by his first name "Amadeo", was an Argentine football goalkeeper and manager. Carrizo is considered a pioneer of the...
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Rufino Ortega (August 22, 1847 - November 20, 1917) was an Argentine military man and politician. Сommanded the 4th Expeditionary Division under Lieutenant...
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The Argentine railway network consisted of a 47,000 km (29,204 mi) network at the end of the Second World War and was, in its time, one of the most extensive...
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(born 3 November 1991) is a retired Argentine football winger. Muñoz made his professional debut in the Argentine Primera División with Newell's Old Boys...
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This list of Argentine cities by population briefly explains the three different population figures given for Argentine cities, and provides rankings for...
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Luciano Gondou (category Olympic footballers for Argentina)
June 2001) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as an attacker for Russian club Zenit Saint Petersburg. Born in Rufino, Santa Fe, Gondou...
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and de facto President of Argentina Walter Owen, translator Miguel Rolando Covian, Argentine physiologist, born in Rufino, Santa Fe province, medical...
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Manuel José Gómez Rufino (c. 1820–1882) was an Argentine politician who was governor of San Juan Province, Argentina between 1857 and 1858 and again between...
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not represent the art. Famous professional wrestler and sportsman Manoel Rufino dos Santos criticized further the Gracie family, so a fight was stipulated...
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Bruno Báez (category Argentine men's footballers)
Retrieved 22 November 2020. "Argentina - B. Báez". Soccerway. Retrieved 22 November 2020. "Matienzo ganó en Amenábar". Rufino Web. 8 October 2017. Retrieved...
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Guillermo Coria (category Pan American Games competitors for Argentina)
13 January 1982), nicknamed El Mago (The Magician in Spanish), is an Argentine retired professional tennis player. He reached a career-high ATP world...
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between Villa María in Córdoba Province, on the Central Argentine Railway (CAR), and Rufino in Santa Fe Province, on the Buenos Aires and Pacific Railway...
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Bernabé Ferreyra (category Argentina men's international footballers)
played. Throughout his career he was known as "El Mortero de Rufino" ("the mortar of Rufino" referring to the tremendous potency of his shot), due to his...
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Ernesto Mastrángelo (category Argentina men's international footballers)
an Argentine football striker who played for both River Plate and Boca Juniors in Argentina. He also played international football for the Argentina national...
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The Ministry of Economy (Spanish: Ministerio de Economía) of Argentina is the country's state treasury and a ministry of the national executive power...
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Argentina participated at the Olympic Games for the first time in 1900. It has participated at all subsequent Summer Olympics except in 1904, 1912, and...
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Challenger Tour in Bogotá. Guillermo Coria (born January 13, 1982, in Rufino, Argentina) joined the pro circuit in 2000, reaching his best singles ranking...
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Manuel Oribe (category Argentine generals)
and Colonel Rufino Bauza, taking with him the Freedmen Battalion and an artillery battalion. The historian Francisco Bauza, son of Rufino Bauza, in his...
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