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Leonardo López Muñoz is an author driven by deep thought and a persistent question about origins. His interest does not arise from a desire to glorify the past, but to understand it: to observe how small decisions, repeated over time, can sustain a family line for centuries. From an early age, he showed a natural inclination toward reflection, memory, and history-not as a succession of great deeds, but as a silent fabric woven from ordinary lives. This perspective led him to study the history of the places where his family put down roots: Emerita Augusta, the Roman city founded for veterans of the Empire, and Ourense, heir to Aquis Auriense, shaped more by continuity than by rupture. In The Legionary and the Grandson, the author brings together two realms that rarely meet: documented history and possible history. Drawing on archives, family records, and verifiable historical data-especially from the eighteenth century onward-Leonardo López Muñoz builds a narrative bridge backward, linking those facts with a plausible historical fiction that spans from the second century through the early modern era. The result is not a closed genealogy nor an absolute claim, but a fictional yet deeply probable transition, in which the novel becomes a tool to explore what documentation cannot state, but historical context allows us to imagine. The Roman legionary, his grandson who walks north, and the generations that remain are not documentary certainties, but an honest narrative hypothesis, constructed with respect, coherence, and long memory. Ultimately, this book is a reflection on permanence: on how families do not always survive by standing out, but by staying, adapting, and continuing. And on how history belongs not only to those who conquered, but also to those who, century after century, chose not to break the chain.
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