Aller au contenu principal

Acosta


Acosta


Acosta is a Spanish and Portuguese surname. Originally it was used to refer to a person who lived by the seashore or was from the mountains (encostas). It comes from the Portuguese da Costa (cognate of English "coast", literally translates as "of the coast"), which in Spanish became de Acosta; the exact Spanish counterpart of da Costa is "de la Costa". Notable people with the surname include:

  • Agustín Acosta (baseball), Cuban baseball player
  • Alberto Acosta (born 1966), Argentine footballer
  • Rene Alexander Acosta (born 1969), American attorney and United States Secretary of Labor 2017–2019
  • Alda Ribiero Acosta (contemporary), American terrorist in Uruguay
  • Allan Acosta, American engineer
  • Armando Acosta (contemporary), doom metal drummer, former member of the band Saint Vitus
  • Bertrand Blanchard Acosta (1895–1954), American aviator who flew in the Spanish Civil War
  • Beto Acosta (born 1977), Uruguayan footballer
  • Carlos Acosta (contemporary), Cuban ballet dancer
  • Cecilio Acosta (1818–1881), Venezuelan writer
  • Cristóbal Acosta (1515–1580), Portuguese physician and natural historian
  • Ed Acosta (born 1944), Panamanian Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Eliades Acosta (born 1959), Cuban politician
  • Iván Acosta (born 1964), Nicaraguan politician
  • Gael Acosta (born 1992), Mexican footballer
  • Jim Acosta (born 1971), CNN senior White House correspondent
  • Joaquín Acosta (1800s), Colombian explorer and author
  • Joe Acosta (1950–2020), Puerto Rican salsa piano player
  • José de Acosta (1540–1600), Spanish Jesuit missionary and historian to Latin America
  • José Julián Acosta (1825–1891), Puerto Rican journalist and abolitionist
  • Josephine Acosta Pasricha (1945–), Filipino Indologist and translator
  • Juan F. Acosta (1890–1968), Puerto Rican composer and music teacher
  • Julio Acosta García (1872–1954), President of Costa Rica 1920–1924
  • Lautaro Acosta (born 1988), Argentine footballer
  • Leopoldo Acosta (born 1962), Ecuadorian track and field athlete
  • Luciano Acosta (born 1994), Argentine footballer
  • Mae Acosta , Filipino singer and SexBomb Girls member.
  • Mathieu d'Acosta (Born in 1589) - Translator & Explorer, First recorded black person in Canada
  • Manuel Gregorio Acosta (1921–1989), Mexican-American painter
  • Manuel da Costa (1541–1604), Portuguese Jesuit priest, teacher, and missionary
  • Manny Acosta (born 1981) Panamian baseball player
  • Marta Acosta, American fiction writer
  • Martha Acosta (contemporary), Peruvian politician and congresswoman
  • Mercedes de Acosta (1893–1968), Spanish-American poet, playwright, and designer
  • Nelson Acosta (1944–), Uruguayan football player and coach
  • Óscar Acosta (1933–2014), Honduran writer, critic, politician and diplomat
  • Oscar Zeta Acosta (1935–1974), American attorney, author, politician, and activist
  • Pablo Acosta Villarreal, Mexican drug lord
  • Pedro Acosta (born 1959), Venezuelan football (soccer) defender
  • Pedro Acosta (born 2004), Spanish motorcycle racer
  • Persida Acosta, Filipino attorney.
  • Raúl Acosta (born 1962), Colombian road cyclist
  • Rodolfo Acosta (1920–1974), Mexican character actor
  • Santiago Acosta (born 1979), Argentine flyweight boxer
  • Santos Acosta (1828–1901), President of Colombia 1867–1868
  • St. Elmo W. Acosta (1900s), American politician from Jacksonville, Florida
  • Teolindo Acosta (1937–2004), Venezuelan professional baseball player
  • Tomás Diez Acosta (born 1946), Cuban revolutionary, teacher, and author
  • Uriel da Costa (1585–1640), Portuguese philosopher and skeptic

Other

  • Acosta (crater), lunar crater named after Cristóbal Acosta
  • Acosta Bridge, bridge in Jacksonville, Florida named after St. Elmo W. Acosta
  • Acosta (canton)
  • Acosta Inc., Sales & Marketing company in Jacksonville, Florida
  • Acosta (manufacturer), German catering equipment and coffee machine factory
  • Acosta (plant), taxonomic synonym for the genus Centaurea

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Acosta by Wikipedia (Historical)



INVESTIGATION