Ramiro de Maeztu
Ramiro de Maeztu | |
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Ambassador to Argentina | |
In office February 1928 – February 1930 | |
Member of the Cortes | |
In office 1933–1936 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Ramiro de Maeztu y Whitney 4 May 1875 Vitoria, Spain |
Died | 29 October 1936 Madrid, Spain | (aged 61)
Political party | Patriotic Union National Monarchist Union Spanish Renovation |
Ramiro de Maeztu y Whitney (May 4, 1875 – October 29, 1936) was a prolific Spanish essayist, journalist and publicist. His early literary work adscribes him to the Generation of '98. Adept to Nietzschean and Social Darwinist ideas in his youth, he became close to Fabian socialism and later to distributism and social corporatism during his spell as correspondent in London from where he chronicled the Great War. During the years of the Primo de Rivera dictatorship he served as Ambassador to Argentina. A staunch militarist, he became at the end of his ideological path one of the most prominent far-right theorists against the Spanish Republic, leading the reactionary voices calling for a military coup. A member of the cultural group Acción Española, he spread the concept of "Hispanidad" (Spanishness). Imprisoned by Republican authorities after the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, he was killed by leftist militiamen during a saca in the midst of the conflict.
Early life and career[]
Ramiro de Maeztu y Whitney was born on May 4, 1875 in Vitoria, the capital of Alava province. He was the son of Manuel de Maeztu Rodriguez, a Cuban engineer and landowner born in Cienfuegos with ancestry from Navarre. While in Paris, he had met her mother, Juana Whitney, born in Nice and daughter of a British diplomat, when she was 16 years old.
He was among the young Spanish intellectuals deeply affected by their country's humiliating defeat in the Spanish–American War of 1898, along with José Martínez Ruiz ("Azorín"), Pío Baroja and others forming the literary Generation of '98.[1] His first collection of essays was published in 1898 under the name Hacia otra España ("Towards a Different Spain").
An early advocate of socialism,[2] he became disillusioned by the Great War while he was serving as the London correspondent for several Spanish newspapers and travelled in France and Germany.
Move to right[]
After returning to Spain, Maeztu rejected many of his friends and argued that human reason alone was not enough to solve social problems, and he argued for the importance of strong authority and tradition rooted in the Roman Catholic Church. Those ideas were embodied in his 1916 book, Authority, Liberty, and Function in the Light of the War, first published in English and later in Spanish as La Crisis del Humanismo (1919).
Maeztu became one of the most prominent defenders of the regime of Miguel Primo de Rivera and called for Spain to "recover its 16th-century sense of Roman Catholic mission".[3] In 1926, his literary essays were published in Don Quijote, Don Juan y La Celestina, and in 1928, he served as Spanish ambassador to Argentina.
In 1930, he joined the National Monarchist Union, the successor party to Primo de Rivera's Patriotic Union, along other defenders of the dictatorship such as the son of the dictator José Antonio and the former ministers José Calvo Sotelo and Eduardo Callejo de la Cuesta.[4]
Along with Pedro Sainz Rodríguez and others, Maeztu founded the monarchist political movement Acción Española in 1931.[5] In 1934, his final published book was written, Defensa de la hispanidad ("In Defense of Spanishness"), which advocated "a return to pure Spanishness" and strongly condemned liberalism and the French Revolution's slogan "liberty, equality, fraternity", which he countered by his own motto, duty, hierarchy, and humanity. He thought of Spanishness as a spiritual world that united Spain and its former colonies by the [[Spanish language and Catholicism, with rationalism and democracy being supposedly alien to the Hispanic ethos.
Death and legacy[]
On October 29, 1936, Maeztu was murdered by Republican soldiers in the early days of the Spanish Civil War near Madrid.[6] These last words are attributed to him: "You do not know why you kill me, but I know why I'm dying: for your children to be better than you!"[7] His political thoughts had a profound influence on the Chilean historian Jaime Eyzaguirre.[8]
His younger sister was the Spanish educator and feminist, María de Maeztu, who founded the Residencia de Señoritas and the Lyceum Club in Madrid, and his younger brother was the painter Gustavo de Maeztu, who has a museum named after him in the Palace of the Kings of Navarre in Estella, Spain.
The Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset dedicated his book Meditations on Quixote (1914) to Maeztu — "A Ramiro de Maeztu, con un gesto fraternal."[9]
Works[]
- (1899). Hacia otra España
- (1911). La Revolución y los Intelectuales
- (1916). Inglaterra en Armas
- (1919). La Crisis del Humanismo
- (1920). Del Espíritu de los Vascos
- (1926). Don Quijote, Don Juan y La Celestina
- (1934). Defensa de la Hispanidad
- (1935). La Brevedad de la Vida en la Poesía Lírica Española
Works in English translation
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Further reading[]
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Notes[]
- ^ Nozick, Martin (1971). Miguel de Unamuno, Twayne Publishers.
- ^ Comentale, Edward P. (2006). T. E. Hulme and the Question of Modernism, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., p. 88.
- ^ Encyclopædia Britannica: Ramiro de Maeztu
- ^ Porto Ucha, Ángel Serafín; Vázquez Ramil, Raquel (30 April 2015). María de Maeztu. Una antología de textos. Madrid: Editorial Dykinson. p. 99. ISBN 978-84-9085-383-2.
- ^ Boyd, Carolyn P. (1997). Historia Patria: Politics, History, and National Identity in Spain, 1875–1975, Princeton University Press, pp. 225–226.
- ^ Arredondo, Christopher Britt (2005). Quixotism: The Imaginative Denial of Spain's Loss of Empire, SUNY Press, p. 91.
- ^ González Cuevas, Pedro Carlos (2003). Maeztu: Biografía de un Nacionalista Español, Marcial Pons Historia, p. 359.
- ^ "Jaime Eyzaguirre (1908-1968)". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved January 29, 2016.
- ^ Ortega y Gasset, José (1914). Meditaciones del Quijote, Madrid: Publicaciones de la Residencia de Estudiantes.
- ^ Shaw, George Bernard (1916). "The Alleged Confusions of Mr. Bernard Shaw," The New Age, Vol. XIX, No. 7, pp. 197-198.
- ^ Lavrin, Janko (1918). "The Dostoyevsky Problem," The New Age, Vol. XXII, No. 24, pp. 465-466.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ramiro de Maeztu. |
- Works by Ramiro de Maetzu, at Hathi Trust
- Works by Ramiro de Maetzu, at Biblioteca Nacional de España
- Articles by Ramiro de Maetzu, at Acción Española
- Ramiro de Maeztu 1875-1936
- Maeztu y la España del Catolicismo Integral
- 1875 births
- 1936 deaths
- People from Vitoria-Gasteiz
- Spanish Roman Catholics
- Renovación Española politicians
- Members of the Congress of Deputies of the Second Spanish Republic
- Acción Española
- Basque writers
- Spanish people of the Spanish Civil War (National faction)
- Roman Catholic writers
- Spanish male writers
- Members of the Royal Spanish Academy
- Spanish people of English descent
- People killed by the Second Spanish Republic
- Extrajudicial killings
- Executed Spanish people
- Spanish political writers
- Executed writers
- Ambassadors of Spain to Argentina
- Spanish nationalists
- Far-right politicians in Spain