Ángel de Saavedra, Duke of Rivas

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Ángel de Saavedra, Duke of Rivas
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Ángel de Saavedra, Duke of Rivas

Don Ángel de Saavedra y Ramírez de Baquedano, Duke of Rivas (Spanish: Ángel de Saavedra y Ramírez de Baquedano, Duque de Rivas) (March 19, 1791 - June 22, 1865), was a Spanish poet, dramatist and politician born in Córdoba. He is best known for his play Don Álvaro; o, La fuerza del sino (1835), the first romantic success in the Spanish theater.

He fought in the war of independence, was a prominent member of the advanced Liberal party from 1820 to 1823. In 1823, Rivas was condemned to death for his liberal views and fled to England. He lived successively in Italy, Malta and France, until the death of Ferdinand VII in 1833 and the amnesty of 1834, when he returned to Spain. Shortly afterwards succeeding his brother as duke of Rivas.

In 1835 he became minister of the interior under Isturiz, and along with his chief had again to leave the country. Returning in 1837, he joined the moderate party, became prime minister, and was subsequently ambassador at Paris and Naples and president of the Real Academia Española.

In 1813 he published Ensayos poéticos, and between that date and his first exile several of his tragedies (the most notable being Alatar, 1814, and Lanuza, 1822) were put upon the stage. Traces of foreign influence are observable in El Moro expósito (1833), a narrative poem dedicated to John Hookham Frere; these are still more marked in Don Alvaro o La Fuerza del sino (first played on March 22, 1835 in Madrid), a drama which emerged from heated literary controversy.

Don Álvaro is of historical importance inasmuch as it established the new French romanticism in Spain. The play was used as the basis of Francesco Maria Piave's libretto for Verdi's opera La forza del destino (1862). As a poet, Rivas's best-known work is Romances históricos (1841), adaptions of popular legends in ballad form.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Duque de Rivas, Obras completas (Madrid 1956).
  • R Cardwell, "Don Alvaro or the Force of Cosmic Injustice" in Studies in Romanticism12 (1973): 559-79.
  • D T Gies The Theater in Nineteenth-Century Spain (Cambridge 1994).
  • G H Lovett, The Duke of Rivas (Boston 1977).
  • W T Pattison, "The secret of Don Alvaro" in Symposium 21 (1967): 67-81.
  • J Valero and S. Zighelboim, "Don Alvaro o la fuerza del signo" in Decimononica 3 (2006): 53-71

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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