-
Roberto Mangabeira Unger (/ˈʌŋɡər/;
Brazilian Portuguese: [ˈũɡɛʁ]; born 24
March 1947) is a
Brazilian philosopher and politician. His work is in the tradition...
-
Francisco Cavalcanti Mangabeira (Salvador, 1879–1904) was a
Brazilian medical doctor and writer,
brother of João
Mangabeira and Otávio
Mangabeira. He was volunteer...
- Otávio
Mangabeira (27
August 1886 – 29
November 1960) was a
Brazilian politician, professor, and engineer. He
served as
governor of Bahia, represented...
-
Gabriel Semain Vasconcellos Mangabeira (born 31
January 1982) is a
Brazilian competition swimmer who
qualified for the men's 100-metre
butterfly at both...
- 2015 (Burmese amber, Cenomanian)
Deanemyia Galati, 1995
Evandromyia Mangabeira, 1941
Edentomyia Galati, Andrade-Filho, da
Silva & Falcão, 2003 (Brazil)...
- João
Mangabeira (26 June 1880 – 27
April 1964) was a
Brazilian jurist,
politician and writer.
Mangabeira was the
brother of
medical doctor and poet Francisco...
- Dina
Mangabeira (20
August 1923 – 11
February 2000) was a
Brazilian poet and
literary critic. She was born in Bocaiúva on a farm
called Morro Agudo, into...
- al.2015 (Burmese amber, Cenomanian)
Deanemyia Galati, 1995
Evandromyia Mangabeira, 1941
Edentomyia Galati, Andrade-Filho, da
Silva & Falcão, 2003 (Brazil)...
-
Fonte Nova, also
known as
Complexo Esportivo Cultural Professor Octávio
Mangabeira, is a football-specific
stadium located in Salvador, Bahia,
Brazil with...
- Act V
scene 1, from line 1841 In 2004,
Brazilian philosopher Roberto Mangabeira Unger appropriated Keats' term in
order to
explain resistance to rigid...