Английская Википедия:Hildegart Rodríguez Carballeira
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Hildegart Rodríguez Carballeira (Шаблон:Date in MadridШаблон:ThinspШаблон:Date in Madrid) was an activist for socialism and sexual revolution, who was raised by her mother, Aurora Rodríguez Carballeira, as a model for the woman of the future. She spoke four languages when she was eight years old, finished law school as a teenager, and was a leader of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) which she abandoned in favor of extreme republicanism, joining the Federal Democratic Republican Party (PRDF).[1]
When she was 18 years old and had become internationally known, her mother shot her to death.[2][3]
Childhood
Conception
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Hildegart was conceived in Ferrol, Spain, by her mother Aurora Rodríguez Carballeira and an undisclosed biological father. Aurora chose the father with eugenic intentions; she wanted to create the perfect child to further her feminist and socialist ideology. She had previously taken care of her sister's son, giving him musical courses until he became a prodigy, but his mother took him to raise him herself.[1]
When Carballeira was certain that she was pregnant, she moved to Madrid, where Hildegart was born. During her pregnancy, Aurora had set a clock to wake herself up every hour, allowing her to change sleep position so blood could flow to the fetus uniformly.
Her father was a brilliant military chaplain, Alberto Pallás.[1][3][4]
Name
Hildegart's birth certificate and baptism act give her name as Hildegart Leocadia Georgina Hermenegilda Maria del Pilar Rodriguez Carballeira but she only used her first name.[5] In spite of Aurora's atheism and opposition to birth registration, she had her daughter baptized, somewhat late, on Шаблон:Date and then registered on Шаблон:Date. Her mother said that Hildegart meant "Garden of Wisdom" in German, but there is no basis for that and the name was either an invention or an alternative spelling of the Nordic/German name Hildegard.[3]
Education
She knew how to read at 2 and typed before 4. At 10, she spoke German, French and English and the following year gave conferences on feminism and sexuality.[3] Her mother had a total control on Hildegart, forbidding her to do anything which could distract her from "her work."[1]
In June 1928, at the age of 13½, Hildegart enrolled in the School of Law of the Complutense University of Madrid. She later gave lessons at its School of Philosophy during the Second Spanish Republic.
Activism
Politics
At 14, she joined the PSOE, like her mother.[3] She was also a member of the Unión General de Trabajadores.
In 1932, she was expelled from the PSOE after publishing an article in Шаблон:Lang criticizing the PSOE for supporting a reactionary candidate; she then joined the Federal Party and started attacking those she termed Шаблон:Lang.Шаблон:Refn[6]
Sexual revolution
Hildegart was one of the most active people in the Spanish movement for sex reformation, writing on subjects such as contraception, prostitution and eugenics.[1]
She was connected to the European vanguard, corresponding with Havelock Ellis, whose work she translated and who nicknamed her "the Red Virgin", and Margaret Sanger. At the foundation of the Spanish League for Sexual Reform on 1932, presided over by Dr Gregorio Marañón, she was chosen as Secretary without opposition.[7][8]
She had correspondence with many other European personalities, and accompanied the author H. G. Wells on a visit he made to Madrid, but rejected his offer to go to London as his secretary. This offer by Wells, who wanted her to develop away from the influence of her mother, may have furthered the persecution ideas held by Aurora.
Death
Murder
Aurora shot her daughter several times while she slept in her bed.
There were several hypotheses about the motive for the murder. Hildegart may have fallen in love. She intended to separate from her mother who, out of paranoia, threatened suicide.[9] Aurora's explanation was, "Шаблон:Lang," "the sculptor, after discovering the most minimal imperfection in his work, destroys it."
Aftermath
Aurora was tried in Madrid. At her trial, she claimed that a Catalan lawyer, Antonio Villena, H. G. Wells, and Havelock Ellis were the agents of an international conspiracy to have her daughter leave Spain and make her serve the Intelligence Service and that, furthermore, Antonio Villena and Hildegart were lovers. She was sentenced to imprisonment for 26 years, 8 months and 10 days, to which she said she won 26 years to live, expressing joy she will not be locked away in an asylum.[1]
She was later transferred to a mental institution in Ciempozuelos, Madrid, on grounds of paranoia and schizophrenia. From 1941, she stopped speaking to her psychiatrists, and the following year, she made ragdolls with prominent genitals, which were destroyed by the orderlies. In 1948, in a letter to the superior mother of the nuns working in the mental institution, she said she spent a long time in prison and that she deserved to be pardoned.[1]
After she died in 1955 of cancer, she was subsequently buried in a mass grave.
Selected works
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Further reading
Works inspired by her life
Novels
Films
References
External links
- Английская Википедия
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- 1914 births
- 1933 deaths
- 20th-century translators
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- Complutense University of Madrid alumni
- Deaths by firearm in Spain
- English–Spanish translators
- Eugenics in Spain
- Filicides
- Incidents of violence against girls
- People murdered in Spain
- Sex educators
- Spanish feminists
- Spanish murder victims
- Spanish socialist feminists
- Spanish Socialist Workers' Party politicians
- Spanish women in politics
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