Juan Crisostomo Ibarra

Juan Crisostomo Ibarra y Magsalin, commonly referred to the novel as Ibarra or Crisóstomo, is the protagonist in the story. Son of a Filipino business man, Don Rafael Ibarra, he studied in Europe for seven years. Ibarra is also María Clara's fiancé. Several sources claim that Ibarra is also Rizal's reflection: both studied for Europe and both person invest the same idea. Upon his return, Ibarra requested the local government of San Diego to construct a public school to promote education in the town.

In the sequel of Noli, El filibusterismo, Ibarra returned with different character and name: he called himself as Simoun, the English mestizo.

Other Uses of Noli Me Tangere

Noli-me-tangere is a historical term for facial ulceration.
The plants known as touch me not are also sometimes called noli-me-tangere.
Noli Me Tangere is the title of a novel written by Filipino writer and national hero José Rizal in the 19th century.
Sir Thomas Wyatt mentions this phrase in one of his sonnets, 'Whoso list to hunt', which is thought to be about Anne Boleyn, though the reference here is thought to be to the motto "Noli me tangere, quia Cæsaris sum" (i.e. "Touch me not, for I am Caesar's"), supposedly inscribed on the collars of Caesar's deer.
Pablo Picasso used a painting by Correggio titled Noli me tangere as a source for the enigmatic gesture in the centre of his famous painting La Vie.[3] Picasso must have seen Correggio's painting in the Prado when he was studying art in Madrid.
"Noli Me Tangere" is the motto of various military units, including US 3rd Infantry Regiment, the United States' oldest active infantry regiment and the US Army second battalion, second infantry regiment, as well as the 321st Airborne Field Artillery Regiment, part of the 82D Airborne Division. Amongst the British Armed Forces, it is the motto of No. 103 Squadron Royal Air Force.
Noli me Tangere is the Motto of the Tobin Family and the Wormald Family of Yorkshire.
The phrase is used in an episode of The X-files, "Hollywood A.D.," featuring a legendary Lazarus Bowl which was able to raise the dead.
Is the title of the last track of Wim Mertens's 1986 album "A man of no fortune, and with a name to come".
The phrase is written on a civil war era flag used by the state of Alabama.