Sunday, January 30, 2011

натурист тв

Parquesol Columbus Street


From the streets of Velarde and Don Juan Mambrilla to parish church of the Madeleine had, since ancient times, two streets in the plane Bentura Seco (with B), 1738 are entitled "Wide Magdalena" the westernmost and "Narrow" Oriental. Of which survives today on the sidewalk on the right of the latter.

The streets listed according to the level of 1738 Dry Bentura

As this was very close, as the title betrays, and not too wide the well described as the Magdalene, who was the official name of the Magdalene and the other with the Templar, the City Council, after the corresponding file made in 1886-1889, it was agreed the demolition of houses between both streets and form of the two one-way, more widely and regularly, as an extension of what was called the Duke square.


A Street Magdalena it changed the label for the "street of Columbus," by municipal agreement dated 1 November 1854, for having pointed out a gentleman, very wrong, indeed, that a house of that had passed through the illustrious navigator on May 20, 1506 (where it is now known that the death occurred in the former convent of San Francisco), if more reason that the house had been a man of some significance, Don Diego Columbus, which had no relation with the first Admiral of the Indies, and being really the owner of the property the wife of Don Diego.

Calle Colón now

to be put in front of the house, I think that in 1892, a marble plaque recalling the death of Christopher Columbus.
The initiative of a group of intellectuals and academics prompted the City Council Valladolid to undertake the purchase of a plot and build a museum to remember the figure of the admiral. The Colon Museum is a museum in the center found documents and memories of the figure of the discoverer of America. It is also the headquarters of the Cultural Center and Casa del Americanism of Valladolid, a research and study of the history of Columbian America.

Colon Museum

On these streets had to be situated the convent of the Knights Templar, which would also take part in the street today of Cardinal Mendoza.


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