PATRONESS - significado y definición. Qué es PATRONESS
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Qué (quién) es PATRONESS - definición

SUPPORT THAT ONE ORGANIZATION OR INDIVIDUAL BESTOWS TO ANOTHER
Patron; Patronage in the Gilded Age; Patrons; Political patronage; Patroness; Patrons of the arts; Patron and Patronage; Arts funding; Mecenate; Feast of the Patronage of Our Lady; Patronage of Our Lady; Queen of All Saints, of Mercy, Mother of Graces; Patron of art; Royal Patronage; Painting & Patronage; Painting and Patronage; Patron system; Patrón system; Patronage of Our Lady, Feast of the; Patron of the arts; Painting and patronage; Patronages; Patronage politics; Arts patron; Patron (charity); Art patron; Art patronage; Arts patronage; Music patronage; Patron Cardinal; Patronage appointment; Patron (UK); Patronage of the arts; Patronal politics
  • A "Thank you for your patronage" message (in the sense "Thank you for being our customer") from Orologio Restaurant in the Alphabet City area of the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City
  • 19th-century Japanese vase bearing the [[Imperial chrysanthemum]], showing that it was commissioned by the Imperial family

patroness         
(patronesses)
A woman who is a patron of something can be described as a patroness.
= sponsor
N-COUNT: usu with supp
Patroness         
·noun A female patron or helper.
patronage         
n. political patronage

Wikipedia

Patronage

Patronage is the support, encouragement, privilege, or financial aid that an organization or individual bestows on another. In the history of art, arts patronage refers to the support that kings, popes, and the wealthy have provided to artists such as musicians, painters, and sculptors. It can also refer to the right of bestowing offices or church benefices, the business given to a store by a regular customer, and the guardianship of saints. The word "patron" derives from the Latin: patronus ("patron"), one who gives benefits to his clients (see Patronage in ancient Rome).

In some countries the term is used to describe political patronage or patronal politics, which is the use of state resources to reward individuals for their electoral support. Some patronage systems are legal, as in the Canadian tradition of the prime minister to appoint senators and the heads of a number of commissions and agencies; in many cases, these appointments go to people who have supported the political party of the prime minister. As well, the term may refer to a type of corruption or favoritism in which a party in power rewards groups, families, or ethnicities for their electoral support using illegal gifts or fraudulently awarded appointments or government contracts.

In many Latin American countries, patronage developed as a means of population control, concentrating economic and political power in a small minority which held privileges that the majority of the population did not. In this system, the patrón holds authority and influence over a less powerful person, whom he protects by granting favors in exchange for loyalty and allegiance. With roots in feudalism, the system was designed to maintain an inexpensive, subservient labor force, which could be utilized to limit production costs and allow wealth and its privileges to be monopolized by a small elite. Long after slavery, and other forms of bondage like the encomienda and repartimiento systems were abolished, patronage was used to maintain rigid class structures. With the rise of a labor class, traditional patronage changed in the 20th century to allow some participation in power structures, but many systems still favor a small powerful elite, who distribute economic and political favors in exchange for benefits to the lower classes.

Ejemplos de uso de PATRONESS
1. By papal decree, the Virgin of Guadalupe is patroness of all the Americas, particularly of Latin America.
2. Mexico‘s Catholic patroness, the Virgin of Guadalupe, appeared to the faithful only a few years after the 1521 Spanish conquest, on a hillside where Aztecs worshipped Tonantzin, their mother of the gods.
3. Benedict, 7', was welcomed by German President Horst Koehler and Chancellor Angela Merkel before his ride to the city‘s central Marienplatz square where he prayed at the 17th century statue of the Virgin Mary, the patroness of Bavaria – Germany‘s Roman Catholic heartland.
4. On the road up to the Convento de la Popa, the Catholic festival of the Virgin of the Candelaria (the patroness of the city) is advertised in an Aguila beer tent next to a massive poster of the pneumatic and bikinied Aguila girls; outside the city walls, a saddled horse stands patiently tethered between some goalposts on a deserted football pitch; boys sell time on street corners, their hands full of mobiles, placards about their necks advertising "300 pesos for 5 minutes, 500 pesos for 10"; the narrow streets are suddenly filled with a procession of young people wearing gigantic letters of the alphabet; at two in the morning, a painting apparently floats across an empty piazza, until we see the bare–footed legs beneath.