Premio Cervantes 2013 posts
TechCrunch Is it dead?
Whatever happened to 3D printing?
social.techcrunch.com
Sam Cervantes is a quiet-seeming guy who speaks earnestly about his line of work. When I visited his Brooklyn 3D printer factory in 2013, workers in an..
113 months ago
The Economist All novelists, whether they like it or not, are creatures of Cervantes; "Don Quixote" is one of the most influential works in the entire canon of literature. Cervantes was born on September 29th 1547
114 months ago
TechCrunch Desktop manufacturing is not dead
Whatever happened to 3D printing?
tcrn.ch
Sam Cervantes is a quiet-seeming guy who speaks earnestly about his line of work. When I visited his Brooklyn 3D printer factory in 2013, workers in an..
116 months ago
Los Angeles Times Books Miguel, meet Will.
119 months ago
VICE News Without a shot being fired.
124 months ago
José Manuel López García @LaRed21: Gran premio para Emilio Lledó — Más en http://www.lr21.com.uy/mundo/1234088-gran-premio-para-emilio-lledo …
Gran premio para Emilio Lledó
lr21.com.uy
Me alegra enormemente que le haya sido otorgado el Premio Princesa de Asturias de Comunicación y Humanidades al filósofo Emilio Lledó. Es muy...
130 months ago
National Geographic Researchers in Spain may have discovered the 400-year-old remains of the great Spanish novelist Miguel de Cervantes—the author of "Don Quixote"—beneath Madrid's Convent of the Barefoot Trinitarians.
132 months ago
MSN The "Don Quixote" author's remains were lost for centuries until a team of researchers found them in a forgotten crypt.
Spain finds tomb of writer Cervantes
msn.com
Forensic scientists say they have found the tomb of Spain's much-loved giant of literature, Miguel de Cervantes, nearly 400 years after his death. They believe they have found the bones of Cervantes, his wife and others recorded as buried with him in
Read more ... Madrid's Convent of the Barefoot Trinitarians. Se…
132 months ago
Antonio Degl'innocenti http://www.lanazione.it/firenze/premio-giannotti-fabiola-1.657467
134 months ago
Los Angeles Times Books Has the quixotic quest for Miguel de Cervantes finally found his grave?
Is the quixotic quest for Miguel de Cervantes' bones almost over?
www.latimes.com
Forensic scientists in Madrid might be close to solving one of Spain's oldest literary mysteries: the location of "Don Quixote" author Miguel de Cervantes' grave. The Associated Press reports that archaeologists have located fragments of a coffin wit
Read more ... h the initials "M.C." written in tacks in a chapel…
134 months ago
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