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Ricardo Wall

Richard Wall y Devereux (5 November 1694 – 26 December 1777) was a Spanish-Irish cavalry officer, diplomat and minister who rose in Spanish royal service to become Chief Minister. He is usually referred to as Ricardo Wall.

Ricardo Wall
Portrait by Louis-Michel van Loo (1753)
Chief Minister of Spain
In office
15 May 1754 – 9 October 1763
MonarchsFerdinand VI
Charles III
Preceded byFernando de Silva, 12th Duke of Alba
Succeeded byJerónimo Grimaldi, 1st Duke of Grimaldi
Personal details
Born5 November 1694
Nantes, France
Died26 December 1777 (aged 83)

Early life edit

Wall belonged to a family settled in Kilmallock, one of whom was Bishop of Limerick.[1] Richard "Ricardo" Wall y Devereux was born at Nantes to a family of Irish Jacobite refugees, supporters of the Catholic James II, deposed King of England, Scotland and Ireland. He was baptized two days after his birth at the Cathedral Church of Saint Nicholas in unfavourable circumstances: his father, Matthew "Matías" Wall of Killmallock, County Limerick, a long-serving officer in King James II's cavalry, was absent. His family then lived in the "pit of the well of the silver" supported by a relative, probably Gilbert Wall, the clockmaker.

Nothing much is known about his early years. Around 1710, he was introduced as page to the Bavarian Princess Marie Anne de Bourbon, Duchess of Vendôme who was Duchess d'Étampes in her own right (her father was Henry III Jules de Bourbon, prince de Condé). In 1716, he left France and joined the Royal House of Spain following a letter of request from the Prime Minister, Cardinal Alberoni, signed by the 38-year-old Dowager Duchess of Vendôme, Marie-Anne de Borbón-Condé.

Military career edit

Wall entered the Colegio Real de Guardiamarinas, founded at Cadiz by José Patiño in 1717, graduating in the second year of its foundation. In the War of the Quadruple Alliance he was then commissioned in the Spanish Navy serving on Real San Felipe (74 guns), under the command of Admiral Gaztañeta, which participated in the campaign of Sicily (1718) until the defeat of the Spanish fleet at the Battle of Cape Passaro. Wall was then seconded to the Spanish Regiment of Hibernia, commanded by the Marquess of Lede taking part in land battles such as Milazzo and Francavilla. During the subsequent defence of Ceuta (1720–21), Wall was appointed the Marquis' Aide-de-Camp before being promoted captain in the Regiment of Batavia.

In 1727, Wall accompanied his compatriot James Fitz-James Stuart, 2nd Duke of Berwick (1696–1738) during his ambassadorial visit to the Tsar of Russia; the Scottish Duke was also Duke of Liria and Jérica, heir of the 1st Duke of Berwick, an illegitimate son of James II of England.

Wall was posted on other missions by the Duke of Líria y Jérica, such as to the King of Prussia, who decorated him as a Knight de la Générosité.[2] While a Stuart ambassadorship to Berlin did not materialise, Wall took the opportunity to cultivate numerous contacts throughout Europe, in Parma, Vienna, Dresden as well as in Saint Petersburg and Moscow.

He returned to Spain in 1729. Between 1732 and 1734, he served in the expedition to Tuscany which placed Prince Carlos on the throne of Parma. Shortly after, he took part in the War of Naples (1734–35), seeing action at Capua, Messina and Syracuse.

In 1737 he was appointed a Knight of the Military Order of Santiago and in 1741, was created Commander of the Commandery of Peñausende, which in addition to Peñausende included Peralejos de Abajo, Saucelle, Saldeana and Barrueco Pardo (now in the provinces of Zamora and Salamanca).

In 1740 he was appointed Colonel of Dragoons, which while under his command displayed his livery colours and family motto : Aut Caesar aut nullus.[3]

Appointed Captain-General in 1744, he participated in the Lombardy campaign in the War of the Austrian Succession, being deployed by Infante Felipe de Borbón "in the boldest attacks". Promoted Brigadier in 1747, he formed a useful friendship with one of the most influential courtiers of the era, the Duke of Huéscar (later Duke of Alba).

Wounded in action at Piacenza (1746), he transferred to diplomatic service and, in May 1747, was posted to Genoa on a temporary mission "concerning solely military matters"; soon after afterwards, he was posted to London by the new Spanish Minister of State, José de Carvajal, a friend of Huescar.

 
Oil on Canvas of Ricardo Wall.

Ambassador in London edit

Wall's diplomatic mission to London was for negotiating peace between the Bourbons and Great Britain, but it soon ran into difficulties not least because of reservations in British ministerial quarters about his Irish and Jacobite roots, but also from infighting on the Spanish side by the Marquess of Tabuérniga later de La Ensenada who had coveted his position.

The Marqués de La Ensenada was recalled to Madrid, leaving General Wall to enjoy the trappings of ambassadorial residence at Soho Square. Wall is depicted in a portrait by Van Loo (now at the National Gallery, Dublín), and he sponsored the Arts in general, commissioning a "Santiago" by Tiépolo for his private chapel (now hanging at the Szépmüvészeti Múzeum in Budapest), as well as written works such as those by Smollett, including the translation of Don Quixote (1755) which is dedicated to him.

Prime Minister of Spain edit

In 1754 Wall was recalled from London to Madrid becoming Minister of Foreign Affairs, after the death of José de Carvajal. A few months later he played a part in driving Carvajal's successor the Marquess de La Ensenada from office, thereby also helping Huescar and the British Ambassador, Sir Benjamin Keene. Wall served as Chief Minister until 1763, when the Duke of Grimaldi succeeded him.

The despatches of the British Minister, Sir Benjamin Keene, and those of his successor, George Hervey, 2nd Earl of Bristol, contain many references to General Wall. They are creditable to him. Though a constant partisan of peace and good relations with Britain, Wall was firm in asserting the rights of the government he served. During the early stages of the Seven Years' War (1756–63) he insisted on claiming compensation for the excesses of British privateers in Spanish waters. He frequently complained to British officials about the difficulties which these adventurers' violence was causing. As an expatriate, despite having previously represented the French Crown, he was often taunted by various French factions.

Wall himself was more concerned that Britain's colonial acquisitions from France could mean that Spain's South American Empire was threatened. The new King Charles III (1759–88) retained Wall as Prime Minister. When Spain declared War in 1761, Wall as Prime Minister naturally carried out his King's decree, although he later confessed to Lord Bristol, the British Ambassador, some regret with the benefit of hindsight that he could see the failure of his efforts in preserving the peace. The close relations between Charles III and the French Bourbon Kings later made General Wall's position as Prime Minister very trying. Yet King Charles, who detested changing his ministers, refused all Wall's requests to retire, till Wall exhorted himself in 1763 by elaborately affecting an imaginary eye disease.

Throughout his Spanish government service Wall built a network of relationships which survived his tenure for several decades perhaps even helping Spain during the following reign of King Charles IV. Among the relationships he developed were those with: the Duke of Grimaldi, the Count of Aranda, the Count of Campomanes, Manuel de Roda, Cayetano Pignatelli, Marquess of Rubí as well as with various ambassadors from around Europe such as the Counts of Fuentes, and also with commissioners from the colonies, like Ambrosio de Funes Villalpando, Count of Ricla.

Among his committed Irish supporters were the engineer William Bowles (1720–84) who studied the geology of Spain, Pedro Fitz-James Stuart, the de Lacy family, Alejandro O'Reilly, Arnold later Lord Mahoney, Carlos McCarthy, Francis Nangle, Ambrosio O'Higgins and Bernard Ward.

Wall extended friendship and knowledge with others such as Francisco Pérez Bayer, Jose Clavijo y Fajardo, Benito Bails, Celestino Mutis, Jose Agustín de Llano y de la Cuadra (Spanish Ambassador to Vienna under Emperor Joseph II & nephew of one of Spain's First Secretaries of State), Sebastián de la Cuadra, 1st Marquis of Villarías, numerous members of Juan de Iriarte's family, Bernardino del Campo, Ambassador José Nicolás de Azara (a follower of William Bowles' work) and Juan de Chindulza.[4]

 
General Wall's coat of arms

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1753.[5]

Retirement edit

The King of Spain gave General Wall y Devereux a handsome reward for his service. Wall received a grant for life of crown land known as the Soto de Roma, near Granada, later conferred upon Manuel Godoy, before being awarded to the Duke of Wellington.[citation needed]

General Wall spent the rest of his life, until 1777, between homes in Alhama de Almeria and near Granada, welcoming all visitors and particularly English travelers exploring Spain's culture. He left a reputation as being a very able minister as well as a most witty conversationalist.[citation needed]

He died on 26 December 1777, imparting a few words to his friend and confessor, Juan Miguel Kayser. A subsequent lawsuit between his natural heirs – namely, his cousin Eduardo Wall and family – and those of his confessor, somewhat clouded his memory for a while.[citation needed]

General Wall y Devereux did not marry and left no children. His closest relative, Eduardo Wall, married María condesa de Armildez de Toledo,[6] whose remaining descendants include the Condes de Fuentes and de Floridablanca.

NB: some clarifications on General Wall's life: contrary to Coxe's writings he was never sent on a mission to Spanish America nor did he lay plans for retaking Jamaica from the British. Coxe confuses one John Savy, nicknamed Miguel Wall, with Richard Wall, nor was Wall ever Ambassador to The Netherlands.[7]

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Coxe's Memoirs of the Kings of Spain of the House of Bourbon (London, 1815).
  • Diario del viaje a Moscovia, 1727–1730, of the duke of Liria (vol. xciii. of the Documentos inéditos para la historia de España), (Madrid, 1842, et seq.).
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., "La misión secreta de D. Ricardo Wall en Londres (1747–1748)" in Brocar, 24, 2000, pp. 49–71.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., "Guerra y regalismo a comienzos del reinado de Carlos III. El final del ministerio Wall" in Hispania, 209, 2001, pp. 1051–90.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., "L’exil jacobite irlandais et l’Ouest de la France (1691–1716)" in DENÉCHÈRE, Y. y MARAIS, J. L. (dirs.), Les étrangers dans l’Ouest de la France (XVIIIe–XXe siècle). Annales de Bretagne et des Pays de l’Ouest, 109, 2002, pp. 25–40.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., "La supuesta anglofilia de D. Ricardo Wall. Filias y fobias políticas durante el reinado de Fernando VI" in Revista de Historia Moderna. Anales de la Universidad de Alicante, 21, 2003, pp. 501–36.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., "Richard Wall: light and shade of an Irish minister in Spain (1694–1777)" in Irish Studies Review, 11.2, August 2003, pp. 123–36.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., "El grupo irlandés bajo el ministerio Wall (1754–63)" in *VILLAR GARCÍA, M. B. y PEZZI CRISTÓBAL, P. (eds.), Los Extranjeros en la España Moderna: Actas del I Coloquio Internacional. Málaga 28–30 de noviembre de 2002, 2 tomos, Málaga, 2003, Tomo II, pp. 737–50.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., "Anson, Wall y el cambio de rol del 'Lago español' en el enfrentamiento colonial Hispano-británico (1740–1762)", in Tiempos Modernos, 11, 2004, pp. 1–8.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., "El joven Campomanes y el ministro Wall (1754–63)" in MATEOS DORADO, D. (ed.), Campomanes doscientos años después, Oviedo, 2003, pp. 417–31.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., D. Ricardo Wall. Aut Caesar aut nullus, Madrid, 2008.
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., Absolutismo e Ilustración en la España del s. XVIII. El Despotismo Ilustrado de D. Ricardo Wall, Madrid, 2010
  • Téllez Alarcia, D., El ministerio Wall. La "España Discreta" del "Ministro Olvidado", Madrid, 2012.

References edit

  1. ^ Collegiate Church of Killmallock
  2. ^ "Ricardo Wall y Devreux | Real Academia de la Historia". dbe.rah.es. Retrieved 22 December 2022.
  3. ^ www.nrdc-sp.nato.int 16 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ www.hathitrust.org
  5. ^ "Fellows details". Royal Society. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  6. ^ Palacio Armildez de Toledo[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ The National Archives (Kew), State Papers, 94/126.

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Secretary of State
(Chief Minister)

1754–1763
Succeeded by

ricardo, wall, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, wall, second, maternal, family, name, devereux, richard, wall, devereux, november, 1694, december, 1777, spanish, irish, cavalry, officer, diplomat, minister, rose, spanish, royal, service, become, . In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Wall and the second or maternal family name is Devereux Richard Wall y Devereux 5 November 1694 26 December 1777 was a Spanish Irish cavalry officer diplomat and minister who rose in Spanish royal service to become Chief Minister He is usually referred to as Ricardo Wall The Most ExcellentRicardo WallKOS OSLPortrait by Louis Michel van Loo 1753 Chief Minister of SpainIn office 15 May 1754 9 October 1763MonarchsFerdinand VICharles IIIPreceded byFernando de Silva 12th Duke of AlbaSucceeded byJeronimo Grimaldi 1st Duke of GrimaldiPersonal detailsBorn5 November 1694Nantes FranceDied26 December 1777 aged 83 Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career 3 Ambassador in London 4 Prime Minister of Spain 5 Retirement 6 See also 7 Bibliography 8 References 9 External linksEarly life editWall belonged to a family settled in Kilmallock one of whom was Bishop of Limerick 1 Richard Ricardo Wall y Devereux was born at Nantes to a family of Irish Jacobite refugees supporters of the Catholic James II deposed King of England Scotland and Ireland He was baptized two days after his birth at the Cathedral Church of Saint Nicholas in unfavourable circumstances his father Matthew Matias Wall of Killmallock County Limerick a long serving officer in King James II s cavalry was absent His family then lived in the pit of the well of the silver supported by a relative probably Gilbert Wall the clockmaker Nothing much is known about his early years Around 1710 he was introduced as page to the Bavarian Princess Marie Anne de Bourbon Duchess of Vendome who was Duchess d Etampes in her own right her father was Henry III Jules de Bourbon prince de Conde In 1716 he left France and joined the Royal House of Spain following a letter of request from the Prime Minister Cardinal Alberoni signed by the 38 year old Dowager Duchess of Vendome Marie Anne de Borbon Conde Military career editWall entered the Colegio Real de Guardiamarinas founded at Cadiz by Jose Patino in 1717 graduating in the second year of its foundation In the War of the Quadruple Alliance he was then commissioned in the Spanish Navy serving on Real San Felipe 74 guns under the command of Admiral Gaztaneta which participated in the campaign of Sicily 1718 until the defeat of the Spanish fleet at the Battle of Cape Passaro Wall was then seconded to the Spanish Regiment of Hibernia commanded by the Marquess of Lede taking part in land battles such as Milazzo and Francavilla During the subsequent defence of Ceuta 1720 21 Wall was appointed the Marquis Aide de Camp before being promoted captain in the Regiment of Batavia In 1727 Wall accompanied his compatriot James Fitz James Stuart 2nd Duke of Berwick 1696 1738 during his ambassadorial visit to the Tsar of Russia the Scottish Duke was also Duke of Liria and Jerica heir of the 1st Duke of Berwick an illegitimate son of James II of England Wall was posted on other missions by the Duke of Liria y Jerica such as to the King of Prussia who decorated him as a Knight de la Generosite 2 While a Stuart ambassadorship to Berlin did not materialise Wall took the opportunity to cultivate numerous contacts throughout Europe in Parma Vienna Dresden as well as in Saint Petersburg and Moscow He returned to Spain in 1729 Between 1732 and 1734 he served in the expedition to Tuscany which placed Prince Carlos on the throne of Parma Shortly after he took part in the War of Naples 1734 35 seeing action at Capua Messina and Syracuse In 1737 he was appointed a Knight of the Military Order of Santiago and in 1741 was created Commander of the Commandery of Penausende which in addition to Penausende included Peralejos de Abajo Saucelle Saldeana and Barrueco Pardo now in the provinces of Zamora and Salamanca In 1740 he was appointed Colonel of Dragoons which while under his command displayed his livery colours and family motto Aut Caesar aut nullus 3 Appointed Captain General in 1744 he participated in the Lombardy campaign in the War of the Austrian Succession being deployed by Infante Felipe de Borbon in the boldest attacks Promoted Brigadier in 1747 he formed a useful friendship with one of the most influential courtiers of the era the Duke of Huescar later Duke of Alba Wounded in action at Piacenza 1746 he transferred to diplomatic service and in May 1747 was posted to Genoa on a temporary mission concerning solely military matters soon after afterwards he was posted to London by the new Spanish Minister of State Jose de Carvajal a friend of Huescar nbsp Oil on Canvas of Ricardo Wall Ambassador in London editWall s diplomatic mission to London was for negotiating peace between the Bourbons and Great Britain but it soon ran into difficulties not least because of reservations in British ministerial quarters about his Irish and Jacobite roots but also from infighting on the Spanish side by the Marquess of Tabuerniga later de La Ensenada who had coveted his position The Marques de La Ensenada was recalled to Madrid leaving General Wall to enjoy the trappings of ambassadorial residence at Soho Square Wall is depicted in a portrait by Van Loo now at the National Gallery Dublin and he sponsored the Arts in general commissioning a Santiago by Tiepolo for his private chapel now hanging at the Szepmuveszeti Muzeum in Budapest as well as written works such as those by Smollett including the translation of Don Quixote 1755 which is dedicated to him Prime Minister of Spain editMain article Wall Ministry In 1754 Wall was recalled from London to Madrid becoming Minister of Foreign Affairs after the death of Jose de Carvajal A few months later he played a part in driving Carvajal s successor the Marquess de La Ensenada from office thereby also helping Huescar and the British Ambassador Sir Benjamin Keene Wall served as Chief Minister until 1763 when the Duke of Grimaldi succeeded him The despatches of the British Minister Sir Benjamin Keene and those of his successor George Hervey 2nd Earl of Bristol contain many references to General Wall They are creditable to him Though a constant partisan of peace and good relations with Britain Wall was firm in asserting the rights of the government he served During the early stages of the Seven Years War 1756 63 he insisted on claiming compensation for the excesses of British privateers in Spanish waters He frequently complained to British officials about the difficulties which these adventurers violence was causing As an expatriate despite having previously represented the French Crown he was often taunted by various French factions Wall himself was more concerned that Britain s colonial acquisitions from France could mean that Spain s South American Empire was threatened The new King Charles III 1759 88 retained Wall as Prime Minister When Spain declared War in 1761 Wall as Prime Minister naturally carried out his King s decree although he later confessed to Lord Bristol the British Ambassador some regret with the benefit of hindsight that he could see the failure of his efforts in preserving the peace The close relations between Charles III and the French Bourbon Kings later made General Wall s position as Prime Minister very trying Yet King Charles who detested changing his ministers refused all Wall s requests to retire till Wall exhorted himself in 1763 by elaborately affecting an imaginary eye disease Throughout his Spanish government service Wall built a network of relationships which survived his tenure for several decades perhaps even helping Spain during the following reign of King Charles IV Among the relationships he developed were those with the Duke of Grimaldi the Count of Aranda the Count of Campomanes Manuel de Roda Cayetano Pignatelli Marquess of Rubi as well as with various ambassadors from around Europe such as the Counts of Fuentes and also with commissioners from the colonies like Ambrosio de Funes Villalpando Count of Ricla Among his committed Irish supporters were the engineer William Bowles 1720 84 who studied the geology of Spain Pedro Fitz James Stuart the de Lacy family Alejandro O Reilly Arnold later Lord Mahoney Carlos McCarthy Francis Nangle Ambrosio O Higgins and Bernard Ward Wall extended friendship and knowledge with others such as Francisco Perez Bayer Jose Clavijo y Fajardo Benito Bails Celestino Mutis Jose Agustin de Llano y de la Cuadra Spanish Ambassador to Vienna under Emperor Joseph II amp nephew of one of Spain s First Secretaries of State Sebastian de la Cuadra 1st Marquis of Villarias numerous members of Juan de Iriarte s family Bernardino del Campo Ambassador Jose Nicolas de Azara a follower of William Bowles work and Juan de Chindulza 4 nbsp General Wall s coat of armsHe was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1753 5 Retirement editThe King of Spain gave General Wall y Devereux a handsome reward for his service Wall received a grant for life of crown land known as the Soto de Roma near Granada later conferred upon Manuel Godoy before being awarded to the Duke of Wellington citation needed General Wall spent the rest of his life until 1777 between homes in Alhama de Almeria and near Granada welcoming all visitors and particularly English travelers exploring Spain s culture He left a reputation as being a very able minister as well as a most witty conversationalist citation needed He died on 26 December 1777 imparting a few words to his friend and confessor Juan Miguel Kayser A subsequent lawsuit between his natural heirs namely his cousin Eduardo Wall and family and those of his confessor somewhat clouded his memory for a while citation needed General Wall y Devereux did not marry and left no children His closest relative Eduardo Wall married Maria condesa de Armildez de Toledo 6 whose remaining descendants include the Condes de Fuentes and de Floridablanca NB some clarifications on General Wall s life contrary to Coxe s writings he was never sent on a mission to Spanish America nor did he lay plans for retaking Jamaica from the British Coxe confuses one John Savy nicknamed Miguel Wall with Richard Wall nor was Wall ever Ambassador to The Netherlands 7 See also editList of prime ministers of Spain Marquesado de La Canada Condado de Sastago Casa de Manrique de LaraBibliography editCoxe s Memoirs of the Kings of Spain of the House of Bourbon London 1815 Diario del viaje a Moscovia 1727 1730 of the duke of Liria vol xciii of the Documentos ineditos para la historia de Espana Madrid 1842 et seq Tellez Alarcia D La mision secreta de D Ricardo Wall en Londres 1747 1748 in Brocar 24 2000 pp 49 71 Tellez Alarcia D Guerra y regalismo a comienzos del reinado de Carlos III El final del ministerio Wall in Hispania 209 2001 pp 1051 90 Tellez Alarcia D L exil jacobite irlandais et l Ouest de la France 1691 1716 in DENECHERE Y y MARAIS J L dirs Les etrangers dans l Ouest de la France XVIIIe XXe siecle Annales de Bretagne et des Pays de l Ouest 109 2002 pp 25 40 Tellez Alarcia D La supuesta anglofilia de D Ricardo Wall Filias y fobias politicas durante el reinado de Fernando VI in Revista de Historia Moderna Anales de la Universidad de Alicante 21 2003 pp 501 36 Tellez Alarcia D Richard Wall light and shade of an Irish minister in Spain 1694 1777 in Irish Studies Review 11 2 August 2003 pp 123 36 Tellez Alarcia D El grupo irlandes bajo el ministerio Wall 1754 63 in VILLAR GARCIA M B y PEZZI CRISToBAL P eds Los Extranjeros en la Espana Moderna Actas del I Coloquio Internacional Malaga 28 30 de noviembre de 2002 2 tomos Malaga 2003 Tomo II pp 737 50 Tellez Alarcia D Anson Wall y el cambio de rol del Lago espanol en el enfrentamiento colonial Hispano britanico 1740 1762 in Tiempos Modernos 11 2004 pp 1 8 Tellez Alarcia D El joven Campomanes y el ministro Wall 1754 63 in MATEOS DORADO D ed Campomanes doscientos anos despues Oviedo 2003 pp 417 31 Tellez Alarcia D D Ricardo Wall Aut Caesar aut nullus Madrid 2008 Tellez Alarcia D Absolutismo e Ilustracion en la Espana del s XVIII El Despotismo Ilustrado de D Ricardo Wall Madrid 2010 Tellez Alarcia D El ministerio Wall La Espana Discreta del Ministro Olvidado Madrid 2012 References edit Collegiate Church of Killmallock Ricardo Wall y Devreux Real Academia de la Historia dbe rah es Retrieved 22 December 2022 www nrdc sp nato int Archived 16 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine www hathitrust org Fellows details Royal Society Retrieved 16 January 2017 Palacio Armildez de Toledo permanent dead link The National Archives Kew State Papers 94 126 External links editDiego Tellez D Ricardo Wall el ministro olvidado Viscount Mountgarret see Sir Nicholas Devereux Devereux genealogyPolitical officesPreceded byDuke of Huescar Secretary of State Chief Minister 1754 1763 Succeeded byDuke of Grimaldi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ricardo Wall amp oldid 1202917360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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