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Miguel Álvarez Castro

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Salvadoran politician and poet In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Álvarez and the second or maternal family name is Castro.
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Miguel Álvarez Castro (1795–1856) was a Salvadoran politician and poet. He is considered the first Salvadoran national poet.

Álvarez Castro was born on a hacienda near the city of San Miguel, El Salvador. In his youth, he studied in the Colegio de Infantes in Antigua Guatemala, but he was forced to abandon his studies after the death of his parents.

He was a member of the 1822 constituent assembly in the First Mexican Empire. During the era of the Federal Republic of Central America under Francisco Morazán, he became a Minister of Foreign Relations. A loyal follower of Morazán, Álvarez Castro followed Morazán into exile in Costa Rica until Morazán's execution.

In El Salvador, Álvarez Castro participated in the attempted overthrow of Francisco Malespín, after which he exiled himself in Nicaragua. After Malespín's fall from power, Álvarez Castro returned to his country where he retired from public life. His poetry is collected in anthologies like Guirnalda Salvadoreña (1884) by Román Mayorga Rivas and Galería poética centroamericana (1888) by Ramón Uriarte.

Álvarez Castro was known for his neoclassical poetical works, with subjects from the pastoral to the patriotic. Some of his most famous poems included "A la meurte del Coronel Pierzon" and "Al ciudadano Jose del Valle" .

He died in poverty in 1856.

Bibliography

  • Cañas Dinarte, Carlos (2000). Diccionario escolar de autores salvadoreños. San Salvador: Dirección de publicaciones e impresos.
  • Escobar Galindo, David (1995). Índice antológico de la poesía salvadoreña. San Salvador : UCA Editores. ISBN 8484050548.

References

  1. ^ Greene R, Cushman S, eds. (2017). The Princeton Handbook of World Poetries. Princeton University Press. p. 153. ISBN 9780691170510.
  2. ^ Smith, Verity, ed. (2000). Concise Encyclopedia of Latin American Literature. Routledge. pp. 214–219. ISBN 978-1-579-58252-4.
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