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Enriqueta Lozano

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Enriqueta Lozano
B&W portrait image of a seated woman, short hair parted down the middle, wearing earrings and a dark shirt with a white lace collar.
BornEnriqueta Lozano y Velázquez
18 August 1829/30
Granada, Spain
Died5 May 1895
Granada
Pen name
  • Enriqueta Lozano
  • Enriqueta Lozano de Vilchez
Occupationwriter, novelist, poet, dramatic author, and publicist
Alma materBeguinage of Santo Domingo (Granada)
Literary movementlate Romanticism
Spouse
Antonio Vílchez
(m. 1859)
Children12

Enriqueta Lozano y Velázquez de Vilchez (Granada, 18 August 1829/30 – Granada, 5 May 1895)[1] was a Spanish writer, novelist, poet, dramatic author, and publicist of the late Romanticism period, with traditional features. Deeply religious, Lozano's writing stemmed from a conservative, traditional, moralizing, and sensibility point of view. Writing more than two hundred works, she published as "Enriqueta Lozano" before marriage and as "Enriqueta Lozano de Vilchez" afterward.

Early life and education

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Enriqueta Lozano y Velázquez was born on 18 August 1829 in Granada, Spain. She was the daughter of Infantry Lieutenant Francisco de Paula Lozano and María Rosario Velázquez. Enriqueta's mother died when the child was six years old, and after her father's remarriage, the stepmother when Enriqueta was eight. Her father was disabled by war wounds in 1836. At the age of seven, she entered the Beguinage of Santo Domingo in Granada, the center where the Empress Eugénie de Montijo was educated,[2] where the child learned to read, write, and do domestic work. Until she was thirteen, she received classes from a private teacher who taught her Grammar, Geography, History, Arithmetic and Natural Sciences.[3]

Career

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Gifted with prodigious talent and unbreakable will, she continued to learn throughout her life by being self-taught.

In 1846, she published her first poem entitled "In my mother's grave" in the newspaper El Capricho. The following year, 1847, she premiered, playing the leading role herself, and published the play Una actriz por amor (An Actress for Love). That same year, she was named Academic-Professor of Sciences and Literature, and member of merit of the "Liceo Artístico y Literario de Granada". She also became a member of the Sociedad Económica de los Amigos del País of the same city.[4]

Known in her time as Granada's Sappho, she was a writer of extraordinary production. She wrote more than two hundred works, all with a religious and Catholic moral background, covering almost all literary genres: novels, stories, legends, moral studies, poetry, dramas and comedies, biographies of famous women, devotional books, lives of saints, essays, epistles, doctrinal and customs articles, and opera and zarzuela librettos. She is credited with the versification of the texts of the Moorish and Christian festivals of Válor[5] and Benínar.[6] Despite the ease she showed in the use of language, the scope of her literary work is limited.[7] In poetry, se always used octosyllabic and hendecasyllabic verses. All of her dramatic works are written in verse and, despite the underlying theatrical instinct in all of them, they can seem artificial and closer to lyric than theater. The narrative, developed in environments typical of Romanticism, has characteristics of a serial novel, with a marked dualistic character, moralistic purposes, pronounced sentimentalism, and happy endings.[3] She was a pro-Catholic author in contrast to the strong anticlericalism of her time.[3]

She frequently collaborated in local, regional, and national periodical publications such as El Guadalbullón (Jaén), El Museo Literario (Seville), Ecos del Guadalevín (Ronda), El ángel del hogar (Madrid), Revista Compostelana (Santiago de Compostela), La Ilustración Artística (Barcelona), El Correo (Manila), and locally, Revista Literaria Granadina, El Defensor de Granada, El Eco de Occidente and especially in the magazines La Aurora de María (1868) and La Madre de Familia (1875-1895), founded, directed and financially supported by Lozano. Her complete works were published in Granada between 1865 and 1867, in three volumes that included a portrait and a biography written by María del Pilar Sinués.[8]

She had the support and friendship of important personalities and institutions of local and national culture, such as Carolina Coronado, Fernán Caballero, the Liceo itself, the Ayuntamiento de Granada, and especially the Granada poet, José Salvador de Salvador.

Personal life

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She maintained a romantic relationship with Pedro Antonio de Alarcón, which end due to incompatibility between her religiosity and the then militant atheism of the Accitan author.[9]

She married Antonio Vílchez in 1859, signing her works since then as "Enriqueta Lozano de Vílchez." She had twelve children,[10] of whom only three survived her.

Enriqueta Lozano died of pulomonary tuberculosis at the age of 65, in a precarious economic situation.[3]

Awards and honours

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She received numerous awards in literary competitions and games, among others: Granada City Council (1859 and 1863); Bibliographic-marine academy (1865); Gold pomegranate from the Lyceum (1880); Floral Games of Carcagente (1882); Malacitana Poetry Board (1886); Oratory Circle (Granada) (1886, 1887 and 1889); Floral Games of Gerona (1892); Zaragoza Floral Games (1894); Poetic contest to Santa Teresa (Ávila, 1894); Poetic contest, (Jaén, 1894).[3]

Selected works[a]

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Theatre

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  • Una actriz por amor (1847)
  • Dios es el rey de reyes (1852)
  • Don Juan de Austria (1854)
  • La ruina del hogar (1873)
  • El cáncer social (1876)

Poetry collections

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  • Poesías de la señorita doña Enriqueta Lozano (1848)
  • La lira cristiana (1857)
  • El ramo de violetas (1861)

Novels

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  • Juan, hermano de los pobres (1848)
  • El secreto de una muerta (1860)
  • Consuelo (1860)
  • Juicio de Dios (1860)
  • Lágrimas del corazón (1861)
  • La misión de una madre (1865)[11]
  • La paloma de los cielos (1865)[12]
  • Un mar sin puerto (1883-1891)[3]
  • Emma Delaunay (1893)

Notes

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  1. ^ Extensive catalogs with the work of Enriqueta Lozano are included in Rodríguez Titos (2010: 115-126) and Simón Palmer (1991: 396-404). For this list, Ortega, José. Op. cit. p. 143 has been used, except when another source is indicated.

References

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  1. ^ "Enriqueta Lozano y Velázquez". dbe.rah.es (in Spanish). Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
  2. ^ Moral, A. García del; Campo, Urbano Alonso del (1993). Fray Luis de Granada: su obra y su tiempo : actas del congreso internacional, Granada, 27-30 septiembre 1988 [Fray Luis de Granada: his work and his time : proceedings of the international congress, Granada, 27-30 September 1988] (in Spanish). Universidad de Granada. p. 49. ISBN 978-84-338-1765-5. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Rodríguez Titos, Juan (2010). "Enriqueta Lozano". juanrodrigueztitos.webnode.es (in Spanish). pp. 25, 55–56, 92, 136–37. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
  4. ^ Jábega: revista de la Diputación Provincial de Málaga [Jábega: magazine of the Provincial Council of Malaga] (in Spanish). La Diputación. 1991. p. 85. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
  5. ^ Lozano de Víchez, Enriqueta (1972). Válor: festejos de moros y cristianos. Granada: Aula de Cultura de la Jefatura Provincial del Movimiento. (in Spanish)
  6. ^ Ruiz-Baños, Rosario; Maldonado Calvache, Francisco; Bailón Moreno, Rafael (2011). «Los Moros y Cristianos de Benínar de 1860». Farua: revista del Centro Virgitano de Estudios Históricos (14): 59-80. ISSN 1138-4263. (in Spanish)
  7. ^ Ortega, José (1991). Diccionario de escritores ganadinos: (siglos VIII-XX). Granada: Universidad. p. 143. (in Spanish)
  8. ^ Sinués, María del Pilar (1859). El Angel del hogar: obra moral y recreativa dedicada á la mujer [The Angel of the Home: moral and recreational work dedicated to women] (in Spanish). Impr. y Estereotipia Española de Nieto y Compañía. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
  9. ^ De Quijada, Luis (31 December 1919). "Recuerdos de Enriqueta Lozano". La ALhambra: 410-412. (in Spanish)
  10. ^ Según Hidalgo (1928) and García Ortiz de Villajos (1931). Rodríguez Titos (2010) ha documentado siete. (in Spanish)
  11. ^ Rodríguez Titos, Juan (December 2013). «Enriqueta Lozano: novia de Pedro Antonio de Alarcón y mucho más». Ferrán (33): 102. ISSN 1135-2736. (in Spanish)
  12. ^ Cejador y Frauca, Julio (1917). Historia de la lengua y literatura castellana VII. Madrid: Tipografía de la Revista de Archivos, Bibliotecas y Museos. p. 443. (in Spanish)