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Joaquín Rubio y Muñoz (1788–1874) was a Spanish lawyer who was a noted antiquarian and numismatist in the city of Cádiz, Spain. He built up a library of manuscripts and rare books and in particular was known for his extensive collection of ancient coins and medals, many of which are now in museums in Spain and Denmark. == Biography == Joaquín Rubio was born on 27 July 1788 in the city of Cádiz, and baptised four days later in the church of San Antonio (). His full baptismal name was ''Joaquín José María Nazario Juan Nepomuceno Rubio y Muñoz''. However he seems rarely to have used the two surnames traditionally used by Spaniards, and to have preferred the simplest form of his name, ''Joaquín Rubio'' (in a few sources he is referred to as ''Joaquín María Rubio''). His parents had married in Cádiz Cathedral :es:Catedral de Cádiz in 1774 but both came originally from other parts of Andalusia. His father, Juan Felipe Rubio Egea, was born in the city of Córdoba, Spain in 1740 and his mother, Ana Ramona Muñoz de Pedros, was born in the small hill town of Villa de Casares, Málaga province, in 1750. By profession, Joaquín was a lawyer. He came from a family of lawyers – his father, brother and son were all also lawyers. The legal posts Joaquín held were as follows: ''Escribano Público de Número de Cádiz'', ''Secretario del Juzgado de Avenencias del Distrito Consular de Cádiz'' and ''Escribano de Cámara Honorario de la Audiencia de Sevilla''. Outside of the legal world of his work, he was also President of the Archaeological Deputation for the Province of Cádiz, Fellow of the () Royal Academy of History (), of the Spanish Academy of Archaeology, Fellow of the Cádiz Academy of Don Alonso the Wise and Knight of the Royal Danish Order of Dannebrog (see below). Joaquín Rubio got married in 1823, in the church of San Lorenzo () in Cádiz, to María Dolores Bosichy Pitaluga. She was a native of Cádiz, but was partly of Greek descent as her grandfather, Rodolfo Bosichi (Μποζίkης or Rodios Bozikis ), had been born in Patras in Greece (he fled when the Turks invaded in 1715, was educated in the Greek college in Venice, and later settled in Cádiz to trade as a merchant). Joaquín and María Dolores had two children, named after their mother and father respectively: María Dolores Rubio Bosichy and Joaquín Rubio Bosichy. The latter married María Josefa de Artecona y de Lafuente, who became ''Marquesa de Casa Rábago'' on the death of her grandmother, María Josefa Fernández de Rábago O'Ryan, a philanthropist who, as President of the Ladies' Council (''Junta de Damas'') in Cádiz for over thirty years, had devoted much energy to establishing free education for girls in that city (). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Joaquín Rubio y Muñoz」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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