Eduardo Acevedo Díaz

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Eduardo Acevedo Díaz
File:EduardoAcevedoDiaz.jpg
Eduardo Acevedo Díaz, ca. 1900
Born (1851-04-20)20 April 1851
 Uruguay, Montevideo
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 Argentina, Buenos Aires
Occupation writer, political
Nationality Uruguayan

Eduardo Acevedo Díaz (Villa de la Unión, Montevideo, 20 April 1851 – Buenos Aires, Argentina, 18 June 1921[citation needed]a), was a Uruguayan writer,[1] politician and journalist.

Early life

He was the son of Fátima Díaz and Norberto Acevedo (brother of Eduardo Acevedo Maturana, whom Acevedo Díaz named "uncle Eduardo"). His maternal grandfather was General Antonio Díaz, who was a minister of the tenure of Manuel Oribe in the Government of the Cerrito. Between 1866 and 1868, he earned his baccalaureate degree and in the process became friendly with Pablo de Maria and Justino Jiménez de Aréchaga in the Greater University of the Republic.[citation needed]

In 1868, he was associated the University Club in which he first showed his literary genius. He entered the Faculty of Law in 1869. On 18 September 1869, he published, in the Century, his first article, a tribute to his maternal grandfather who had died six days before. In April 1870, he left University to join the revolutionary movement of Timoteo Aparicio against the Colorado government of Lorenzo Batlle.[citation needed]

Politics

He wrote of the aim of the Revolution of Lanzas, in an article entitled "a tomb in the forest" published in the newspaper the Republic in 1872. He signed the manifesto "Profession of a Rationalist Faith" in 1872, which asserted the immortality of the soul and the existence of the Supreme God in opposition to the Pope.[citation needed]

The three-month Revolutionary War was concluded in July 1872, and in Montevideo, Diaz began the militarization of the National Party. He wrote for Democracy in 1873, and started the Uruguayan Magazine in 1875.[citation needed]

From these organs of press, Varela attacked the Pedro government, and he was sent into exile. After the failure of the Tricolor revolution against the government, he settled in Argentina, where he continued his journalistic activities living in Plata and Dolores. He returned to Uruguay, but his critics (Lorenzo Latorre) from the Democracy forced him to flee to Buenos Aires. On his return to Montevideo, he founded the National (important in the history of the Uruguayan media).[citation needed]

He was made a senator by the National Party and took part in the second insurrection led by the nationalist Caudillo Aparicio Saravia, in 1897. He was a member of the Council of State in 1898, but moved away politically from Saravia in later years, deciding to support Jose Batlle and Ordñez. This distanced him from the National Party, which he explained in a Political Letter published in the National. Batlle sent him on diplomatic missions to various countries in Europe and to America, from 1904 to 1914.

Death and remembrance

He did not return to Uruguay but died in Buenos Aires, on 18 June 1921, requesting that his remains not be repatriated to his homeland.[citation needed]

One of the chairs of the National Academy of Letters of Uruguay was named in his honor, in recognition of his work.[citation needed]

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by Uruguayan Minister to the United States
February 1904 – December 1906
Succeeded by
Luis Melián Lafinur

Works

  • Brenda (1886)
  • Ismael (1888)[1]
  • Nativa (1890)[citation needed]b
  • La boca del tigre (1890)
  • La novela histórica (1890)
  • Etnología indígena (1891)
  • Grito de gloria (1893)[1]
  • Soledad (1894)[1]
  • Minés (1907)
  • Lanza y sable (1914)

Stories

  • Un sepulcro en los bosques
  • El primer suplicio
  • El combate de la tapera (1892)
  • Desde el tronco de un ombú (1902)

Plays

  • Carta política
  • La civilización americana. Ensayos históricos
  • La última palabra del proscrito
  • Épocas militares en el Río de la Plata (1911)
  • El libro del pequeño ciudadano

See also

Notes

  • Note a: Sources vary: [1] gives a date of death of 1921 while Garzanti gives 1924[1]
  • Note b: Sources vary: Garzanti gives 1880 for Nativa while [2] shows an 1890 edition (not necessarily the original edition)[1]

Citations

References

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External links

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