- Francisco de Paula Martinez de la Rosa
Infobox_Prime Minister
name = Francisco Martínez de la Rosa
office1 = Secretary of State
term_start = 1920
term_end = 1923
monarch =Ferdinand VII
office2 =Prime Minister of Spain
term_start2 = 1834
term_end2 = 1835
monarch =Isabella II
successor2 =José María Queipo de Llano Ruiz de Saravia, Count of Toreno
birth_date = Bda|1789|03|10|df=y
birth_place =Granada ,Spain
death_date = 1862
death_place =
party =Realista Moderado
religion =Catholic Francisco de Paula Martinez de la Rosa (1789–1862), Spanish statesman and dramatist, was born on the 10th of March 1789 at
Granada , and educated at the university there.He won popularity with a series of
epigram s on local celebrities published under the title of "El Cementerio de momo". During the struggle against Napoleon he took the patriotic side, was elected deputy, and atCadiz produced his first play, "Lo que puede un empleo", a prosecomedy in the manner of the younger Moratin. "La Viuda de Padilia" (1814), atragedy modelled uponAlfieri , was less acceptable to the Spanish public.Meanwhile the author became more and more engulfed in politics, and in 1814 was banished to
Africa , where he remained until 1820, when he was suddenly recalled and appointed prime minister. During the next three years he was the most unpopular man in Spain; denounced as a revolutionist by the Conservatives and as a reactionary by the Liberals, he alienated the sympathies of all parties, and hisrhetoric earned for him the contemptuous nickname of Rosita la Pastelera (Rosie the compromiser/cake maker).Exiled in 1823, he took refuge in Paris, where he issued his "Obras literarias" (1827), including his "Arte poética", in which he exaggerated the literary theories already promulgated by
Luzn .Returning to Spain in 1831, he became prime minister on the death of
Ferdinand VII , but proved incapable of coping with the insurrectionary movement and resigned in 1834. He was ambassador at Paris in 1839-1840 and atRome in 1842-1843, joined the Conservative party, held many important offices, and was president of congress and director of the Spanish academy at the time of his death, which took place atMadrid on the 7th of February 1862.As a statesman, Martinez de la Rosa never rose above mediocrity. It was his misfortune to be in place without real power, to struggle against a turbulent pseudo-democratic movement promoted by unscrupulous soldiers, and to contend with the intrigues of the king, the court camarilla and the clergy. But circumstances which hampered him in politics favoured his career in literature. He was not a great natural force; his early plays and poems are influenced by
Moratin or byMelndez Valds ; his "Espíritu del siglo" (1835) is an elegant summary of all the commonplaces concerning the philosophy of history; his "Doña Isabel de Solís" (1837–1846) is a weak imitation ofWalter Scott 's historical novels. Still his place in the history of Spanish literature is secure, if not eminent.Through the happy accident of his exile at Paris he was thrown into relations with the leaders of the French Romantic Movement, and was so far impressed with the innovations of the new school as to write in French a romantic piece entitled "Abén Humeya" (1830), which was played at the Porte Saint-Martin. The experiment was not unsuccessful, and on his return to Madrid Martinez de la Rosa produced "La Conjuracíon de Venecia" (April 23, 1834), which entitles him to be called the pioneer of the romantic drama in Spain. The play is more reminiscent of
Casimir Delavigne than ofVictor Hugo ; but it was unquestionably effective, and smoothed the way for the bolder essays ofRivas ,Garcia Gutirrez andHartzenbusch .References
*1911
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