Camila O'Gorman
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Camila O'Gorman (1828-1848), figure of scandal in post-independence Buenos Aires, was the youngest daughter of Adolfo O'Gorman and his wife, Joaquina Ximénez Pinto (d.1852). In 1847 Camila O'Gorman and the Catholic priest Uladislao Gutiérrez eloped on horseback and found refuge in Corrientes province. They were betrayed by the Irish priest Michael Gannon and on orders of Buenos Aires governor Juan Manuel de Rosas executed by a firing squad on 18 August 1848. Camila O'Gorman was twenty years old and was eight-months pregnant.
[edit] Film
- María Luisa Bemberg, Camila (Buenos Aires, 1984), film with Susú Pecoraro, Imanol Arias and Héctor Alterio (1 hour 45 minutes). Nominated by the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film in 1985.
[edit] Further reading
- Coghlan, Eduardo A., Los Irlandeses en Argentina: su Actuación y Descendencia (Buenos Aires, 1987), p. 420.
- Julianello, Maria Teresa, The Scarlet Trinity: The Doomed Struggle of Camila O'Gorman against Family, Church and State in 19th-Century Buenos Aires (Cork: Irish Centre for Migration Studies, 2000).
- Luna, Félix (ed.), Camila O'Gorman (Buenos Aires: Planeta, 2002).
[edit] External links
- Edmundo Murray [1] "O'Gorman, Camila (1828-1848), figure of scandal"