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  2. Flag of Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Puerto_Rico

    The light blue flag of Puerto Rico has become increasingly popular in recent years. Today, most representations of the flag feature a light sky blue color shade, matching the light blue color shade of one of only two original renditions of the first revolutionary flag of Puerto Rico, the Lares flag .

  3. List of Puerto Rican flags - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Puerto_Rican_flags

    Use: Civil and state flag, civil and state ensign: Proportion: 2:3: Adopted: December 22, 1895; 128 years ago () by pro-independence members of the Revolutionary Committee of Puerto Rico exiled in New York City; members identified colors as red, white, and blue but did not specify color shades; some historians have presumed members adopted light blue shade based on the light blue flag of the ...

  4. Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puerto_Rico

    Reforma de Salud de Puerto Rico (Puerto Rico Health Reform) – locally referred to as La Reforma ('The Reform') – is a government-run program which provides medical and health care services to the indigent and impoverished, by means of contracting private health insurance companies, rather than employing government-owned hospitals and ...

  5. Puerto Ricans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puerto_Ricans

    t. e. Puerto Ricans ( Spanish: Puertorriqueños ), most commonly known as Boricuas, but also occasionally referred to as Borinqueños, Borincanos, [a] [12] or Puertorros, [b] [13] are an ethnic group native to the Caribbean archipelago of Puerto Rico, and a nation identified with the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico through ancestry, culture, or ...

  6. Afro-Puerto Ricans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Puerto_Ricans

    First Africans in Puerto Rico. Slave transport in Africa, depicted in a 19th-century engraving. When Ponce de León and the Spaniards arrived on the island of Borinquen (Puerto Rico), they were greeted by the Cacique Agüeybaná, the supreme leader of the peaceful Taíno tribes on the island. Agüeybaná helped to maintain the peace between the ...

  7. History of Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Puerto_Rico

    The territory organized under the name Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico – adjusted, in English, to "Commonwealth of Puerto Rico", as the archipelago was not a full state (Estado). That same year marked the first time that the Flag of Puerto Rico could be publicly displayed, rather than being subject to the 10-year prison sentence that had ...

  8. White Puerto Ricans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Puerto_Ricans

    White Puerto Ricans (Spanish: puertorriqueños blancos) are Puerto Ricans who self-identify as white due to a rubric of laws like the Regla del Sacar or Gracias al Sacar dating back to the 1700's where a person of mixed ancestry could be considered legally white so long as they could prove that at least one person per generation in the last four generations had also been legally white.

  9. Ponce, Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponce,_Puerto_Rico

    Ponce (US: / ˈ p ɔː n s eɪ, ˈ p oʊ n-/, UK: / ˈ p ɒ n s eɪ /, Spanish pronunciation: ⓘ) is a city and a municipality on the southern coast of Puerto Rico. The most populated city outside the San Juan metropolitan area, was founded on August 12, 1692 and is named after Juan Ponce de León y Loayza, the great-grandson of Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de León.