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Wikipedia articles created

 * Florence Earle Coates (29 May 2009)
 * American poet from Philadelphia.
 * George Howard Earle Jr. (3 May 2010)
 * Philadelphia lawyer and "financial diplomat" who was highly sought after to save ailing corporations from financial ruin. Brother of poet Florence Earle Coates.
 * Pro Patria (Coates) (11 March 2016)
 * Pamphlet of poems written by Florence Earle Coates privately printed in support of American involvement during World War I.
 * George Hussey Earle Sr. (8 July 2017)
 * Philadelphia lawyer and abolitionist who voluntarily represented many fugitive slaves. Father of poet Florence Earle Coates.
 * Sarah Blake Sturgis Shaw (8 February 2018)
 * Abolitionist, women's rights supporter, anti-imperialist and philanthropist. Mother of Robert Gould Shaw and Josephine Shaw Lowell.
 * Helen Hull Law (8 March 2018)
 * Professor of Latin and Greek.
 * Broa de mel (28 March 2019)
 * Traditional Portuguese dessert.
 * Exiles Memorial Center (12 January 2020)
 * Memorial center in Estoril, Portugal.

on copyright

 * CC-by-sa (Creative Commons) requires attribution,
 * CC0 (public domain license): "EU versus US only matters if you died 1949 to 1989 affecting the public domain status"

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Ana Filomena Leite Amaral or Ana Filomena Amaral (born 4 September 1961) is a Portuguese novelist, historian, and translator.

Career
She holds a master's degree in Contemporary Economic and Social History from the Faculty of Letters at the University of Coimbra, a postgraduate course in Documentary Science/Library Science, and has extensive experience as an interpreter and translator of several European languages, maintaining particular contact with the German language.

She was a professor and senior technician of the Ministry of Education and author of several cultural projects, namely Góisarte, which she created in 1997 and which became a hallmark of the municipality of Góis. She has lived for more than 20 years in Lousã, where she founded and directs the cultural cooperative Arte-Via. In 2014 she celebrated 25 years of literary writing with the novel "O Cassador de Muros"—a "warning to the walls that exist and have robbed the future of generations". [1]

She was curator of the International Literary Festival of the Interior (Portugal)—Words of Fire, and participated in various international literary festivals: Mundo de Sal, Cabo Verde [14]; Goa Arts and Literature Festival (GALF), India [15]; Bookworm Literary Festival, Beijing; Flipoços, Brazil. [16]

Writing
Her body of work is diverse, having authored several books ranging from fiction to historical research.

In 2009 she wrote, "Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo. Os anos da Juventude Universitária Católica Feminina (1952-1956)", which was the first investigative work on the former Portuguese Prime Minister published since her death. [5]

In August 2015 Amaral won the International Prize "Cidade de Araçatuba"[6] in São Paulo, Brazil with the short story, "Mulheres de Água".

She presented her work at the Russian National Library in Moscow and St. Petersburg, as well as at the Lithuanian National Library in Vilnius in June 2017, and in São Paulo, Brazil [11] in March 2018.

"O Diretor", published in 2018, is the first volume of the trilogy "Mãe Nossa", dedicated to the earth, with subsequent volumes of the trilogy being titled "Gelos" and "Desertos". [13] "Gelos", the second volume of the trilogy, was released in 2020 at the Book Fair in Lisbon. Her literary work was further presented at Casa de Portugal in São Paulo with a particular focus on the Brazilian edition of the novel "O Diretor".

Chasing Walls", the English version of "O Cassador de Muros", was presented at the Bookworm Literary Festival in Beijing in 2019 [9] [10] and will soon be translated into Russian. [12].