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・ Jaime Bateman Cayón
・ Jaime Battiste
・ Jaime Bayly
・ Jaime Belmonte
・ Jaime Benítez Rexach
・ Jaime Bergman
・ Jaime Bermúdez
・ Jaime Bladas
・ Jaime Blanco García
・ Jaime Bluma
・ Jaime Bonilla Valdez
・ Jaime Bosch
・ Jaime Botín
・ Jaime Bragança
・ Jaime Bravo
Jaime Brocal Remohí
・ Jaime Brockett
・ Jaime Bruinier
・ Jaime Bubela
・ Jaime Bustamante
・ Jaime Báez
・ Jaime C. de Veyra
・ Jaime C. Laya
・ Jaime Caetano Braun
・ Jaime Camara
・ Jaime Camil
・ Jaime Camino
・ Jaime Carbonell
・ Jaime Cardona
・ Jaime Cardozo


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Jaime Brocal Remohí : ウィキペディア英語版
Jaime Brocal Remohí

Jaime Brocal Remohí (1936 - June 29, 2002; usually known in America as just ''Jaime Brocal'') was a Spanish comic book artist.
== Career ==

Born in Valencia, southern Spain, Brocal began his comic career at the age of 20, working of various adventure comics including Leslie Chartiers' The Saint and an adaption of Jules Verne's "From Earth to Moon". In 1960 at the age of 24 Brocal created the adventure series ''Katan'' and ''Ogan''. Ten years later he would create the characters Kronan, Arcane and Ta-ar. He also worked on various hard cover books such as ''Gandhi'', ''Lawrence of Arabia'', ''The Jewish People'' and ''The History of Islam''. He would later produce illustrations for Planeta de Agostini. He would also work for Japanese company Kodansha, drawing the series 'Kami no Ude', as well as stories with Leslie Charteris' 'The Saint' for the Swedish market and 'Tarzan' for the German publishers Ehapa.
Due to his connections with Seleciones Illustrada, Brocal joined American company Warren Publishing, as one of the first Spanish artists to work their magazines, premiering in ''Eerie'' 34 in July 1971. Brocal drew 16 stories for Warren from 1971 through 1974. While at Warren he drew multiple recurring characters including 'Targos' and 'The Mummy', one of the first continuing series published in Eerie. In 1991, together with Antonio Segura, he created the series ''El otro Necronomicón'' ("The Other Necronomicon") for the Spanish version of ''Creepy''; it included seven short horror stories inspired by H. P. Lovecraft's world of creations.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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