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No children
Tim Schumann Yepes and the Gómez Salazar family, of Santander and Antioquia origin, appear in this genealogical database: https://www.geni.com/people/Tim-
Schuman-Yepes/6000000000266288761 | Yepes, Tim Schumann (I30)
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Notes are from Mario Yepes
Fue bautizada el 20 de marzo en la parroquia de San Antonio, El Peñol, Antioquia
After Isaías passed away, she lived for 14 years in Alemania with Luis, Aristóbulo, y Ana | Giraldo, María Josefa Cadavid (I8)
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Notes are from Mario Yepes
• Fue bautizado el 28 de septiembre en la parroquia de Don Matías, Antioquia
• His parents were married 14 years later in 1969, which is why his name appears as Berrío
• Was muleteering, amassed a fortune
• Beginning of 20th century: had a house in Medellín, horse drawn carriages, and his own bank: el Banco de Sucre 1905 with associates
• Gold mine & estate in Marmato, Caldas
• Participated in mining
⁃ 1) La Encantada (a gold and silver vein near Ibagué, Tolima)
⁃ 2) El Criadero, Guayabal, and Guayabalito, these last two near Santa Rosa de Osos and the richest alluvial deposits
⁃ 3) in Segovia and eastern Antioquia
• Enjoyed wealthy position to send various children to study in Europe & USA
• Moved from Antioquia to Cundinamarca with his son Luis, where they acquired farms. Him, wife Maria, Luis, and Luis’ brother Aristóbulo | Berrío, Isaías Yepes (I1)
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On May 17, 1631 at 28 years old requested permission to travel to Peru with his wife, María de Sandoval Barrios (possibly from Cartagena), 20 years old, born around 1611; his widowed mother-in-law, Brígida de Sandoval Rodríguez, 40; and his son, Diego de Yepes Sandoval (from Cartagena), two and a half years old. He did not go to Peru and remained in Cartagena de Indias, where he had his second son.
the second of that name, resident of Seville and son of the Spaniards Mateo de Yepes, the first of that name, and Lucía Martín, natives of Osuna, in Andalusia. | Martín, Mateo de Yepes (I164)
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Origin Santander y Boyacá (Piedecuesta Santander) | Pedraza, Nina Mantilla (I37)
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Owned a well-known optician’s shop
This article published in El Tiempo of Bogotá mentions Antonio Belmonte,
founder of the first optical shop in Colombia:
https://www.eltiempo.com/archivo/documento/MAM-330898 | Belmonte, Antonio (I35)
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Padrinos: Defina Jaramillo e Inés Berrío | (1), Isaías Yepes Cadavid (I16)
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parroquia | Family: Isaías Yepes Berrío / María Josefa Cadavid Giraldo (F4)
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Relative of José Marîa Villa Villa, an eminent mathematician and engineer, famous in Colombia for having built the Western Suspension Bridge in Santafé de Antioquia | Villa, Carlos (I115)
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Resides in Dinamarca
Surname Kristensen | (Kristensen), Tatiana Ceballos González (I183)
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Romantic and Bohemian Poet
Studied jurisprudence at la Universidad de Antioquia
Belonged to distinguished Antioquian family
His most famous composition is "Ode to Alcohol," included in the document "The People of Antioquia," published by the University of Antioquia:
http://bibliotecadigital.udea.edu.co/bitstream/10495/244/1/PuebloAntioqueno.pdf | Botero, Manuel Donato Navarro (I70)
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Settled in Manaus, Brasil
Captain of a ship
Dos hijas | Yepes, Gustavo Ceballos (I63)
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siete hijos | Meijía, Juana María Mejía (I5)
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siete hijos | Arango, José Ignacio Yepes (I4)
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Traveled to US 10/04/1940 | Yepes, Magdalena Ceballos (I169)
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Was a painter | Yepes, Carlos Villa (I116)
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We found a book online titled Dominican Republic, by Julián Davis Echandía (director) and Carlos Villa Yepes (art director), published by Editora Barranquilla around 1950. The book is an English translation of volume XII of the Colección América and features numerous black and white and color illustrations. Dominican Republic by Julian Davis Echandía and Carlos Villa Yepes: Hardcover | Le Livre (abebooks.com) | Cadavid, Roberto Emilio Yepes (I21)
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Went to California in 1945 | Yepes, Emilia Ceballos (I186)
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• Baptized in San Roque 03/03/1894
• Fita Yepes Morales de Mejía remebers her aunt with a special sense of humor, putting on cabaré shows for her niece and nephews in Germany
• After her husband died, she returned to Colombia with her son Tim
• Received compensation from the Colombian Government for the destruction of a house she purchased on Oct 19th, 1937
• The house was located at Kilelmannseggaetrasse 84 (formerly Gosslerstrasse 84) in Hamburg: https://tinyurl.com/y5jrw2xc. The house was destroyed by a bombing raid carried out on July 28 and 29, 1943, by Allied forces. See: CE- SCA-1953-05-23 - Colombia (redjurista.com).
• Ana settled in Villavicencio, where she died | Cadavid, Anatolia Yepes (I26)
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