Theme atlas

Themes

The Themes section turns recurring motifs from House of Herrera and Banvelca into stable editorial entry points. Instead of leaving heraldry, distinctions, finance, art, social responsibility, and bridge figures scattered across source pages, the portal reads them through named people, places, and institutions that already exist elsewhere in the site.

HeraldryDistinctionsPrivate BankingFinanceArtSocial ResponsibilityBridge Figures
Browse by band

Choose a motif first, then move into the people, places, and institutions behind it.

Each band below organizes a different editorial mode. Herrera pages explain symbolic memory. Banvelca pages explain stewardship vocabulary. The bridge page keeps the family connection visible without flattening either side.

Herrera memory

Symbols, lineage marks, and titled memory

This side of the atlas is strongest when read through heraldic signs, marquisates, branch identity, and the places that keep those distinctions legible.

Capital language

Private banking and portfolio continuity

These pages interpret Banvelca's vocabulary as internal stewardship rather than public retail banking or generalized corporate promotion.

Cultural remit

Custodianship beyond capital alone

The Banvelca record becomes more intelligible when art and social responsibility are treated as parallel stewardship practices, not side notes.

Family bridge

The women who connect the atlas

The bridge page keeps Belén María, Clementina, and Belén Clarisa in view as the figures who make the two family records feel connected rather than adjacent. It is the best route for readers who arrive with the modern surname and need the portal's family logic explained quickly.

Diagram connecting heraldry, distinctions, private banking, finance, art, social responsibility, and women of the families.
The theme layer turns recurring motifs from the two family domains into a durable subject map.
Related sections

Move from motifs into the wider knowledge base