Manuel Tinio - Descendants & Relatives

Descendants & Relatives

Children

  • Judge Mariano Quijano Tinio
  • Maj. Manuel "Manolo" Quijano Tinio - 2nd Son, and World War II Veteran, Bataan Death March. Manolo took over the management of Tinio Hacienda in 1924 after the death of Governor Manuel Tinio. The Tinio Hacienda was later divided among the 12 children of Governor Manuel Tinio.
  • Martin Huerta Tinio
  • Vivencio Huerta Tinio
  • Silveria Tinio Hermoso
  • Dolores "Lolita" Tinio Nable

Grandchildren

  • Governor Oscar Tinio
  • Isabelo Tinio Crisostomo, was president of the Philippine College of Commerce and is a prominent Filipino author, biographer, and historian. His biographies include those of former Philippine Presidents Ferdinand Marcos (Marcos, the Revolutionary), Corazon Aquino (Aquino, Profile of a President) and Fidel Ramos (Fidel Valdez Ramos: Builder, Reformer, Peacemaker), and of former First Lady Imelda Marcos (Heart of the Revolution). Additionally, his Modern Advertising for Filipinos and Advertising: Background, Theory, and Practice are well-respected university textbooks.
  • Martin "Sonny" Imperial Tinio, a historian.
  • Norma G. Tinio.

Great Grand Children

  • Beatriz Lucero Lhuillier, an athlete, television personality and commercial model also known as Bea Lucero. Represented the Philippines in gymnastics and taekwondo.

Others

  • Rolando Santos Tinio, nephew, was a Filipino male poet, dramatist, director, actor, critic, essayist, and educator named as a National Artist of the Philippines.
  • John Paul Tinio

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Famous quotes containing the words descendants and/or relatives:

    Your descendants shall gather your fruits.
    Virgil [Publius Vergilius Maro] (70–19 B.C.)

    Every milestone of a firstborn is scrutinized, photographed, recorded, replayed, and retold by doting parents to admiring relatives and disinterested friends. . . . While subsequent children will strive to keep pace with siblings a few years their senior, the firstborn will always have a seemingly Herculean task of emulating his adult parents.
    Marianne E. Neifert (20th century)