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・ Carlos Guerra (volleyball)
・ Carlos Guerrero
・ Carlos Guerrero (sport shooter)
・ Carlos Guerrero de Lizardi
・ Carlos Guerrico
・ Carlos Guevara
・ Carlos Guevara (disambiguation)
・ Carlos Guevara (footballer)
・ Carlos Guichandut
・ Carlos Guillermo Haydon
・ Carlos Guillén
・ Carlos Guimard
・ Carlos Guimarães
・ Carlos Floriano Corrales
・ Carlos Fondacaro
Carlos Fonseca
・ Carlos Fonseca (boxer)
・ Carlos Fonseca (footballer)
・ Carlos Fortes
・ Carlos Fowler
・ Carlos Frade
・ Carlos Francis
・ Carlos Francisco
・ Carlos Francisco Chang Marín
・ Carlos Francisco de Croix, marqués de Croix
・ Carlos Francisco Jovel Navas
・ Carlos Francisco Martins Pinheiro
・ Carlos Franco
・ Carlos Franco Invitational
・ Carlos Franqui


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Carlos Fonseca : ウィキペディア英語版
Carlos Fonseca

Carlos Fonseca Amador (June 23, 1936 – November 8, 1976) was a Nicaraguan teacher and librarian who founded the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN). Fonseca was later killed in the mountains of Nicaragua, three years before the FSLN took power.
==Early years==
Born in Matagalpa, a town in northwestern Nicaragua, Fonseca was the son of Augustina Fonseca Úbeda, "an unmarried twenty-six-year-old washerwoman from the countryside". His father, Fausto Amador Alemán, a member of the prominent coffee-growing Amador family, did not acknowledge Fonseca until his elementary school years. Fonseca's father was part of a rich family, while his mother was a peasant. His father helped him later on to go to school and educate himself, but he always admired his mother more, because of her work ethic and strength. Because of this, Fonseca would repeatedly use her last name first, and was consequently known as Carlos Fonseca Amador.
In 1950, Fonseca entered secondary school and slowly became involved with political groups. In the early 1950s, he attended meetings for a Conservative Party youth group and joined the Unión Nacional de Acción Popular (UNAP, National Union of Popular Action). Fonseca became increasingly interested in Marxism and joined the Partido Socialista Nicaragüense (PSN, Nicaraguan Socialist Party). He left the UNAP in 1953 or 1954, complaining they were too "bourgeoisified" on social issues (the poor, the student movement, etc.) and that it "did not take on the Somoza government. In 1954, he and several school friends founded and began to publish a "cultural journal" called ''Segovia''."

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