Английская Википедия:Adolfo Clavarana

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Шаблон:Infobox person Adolfo Clavarana y Garriga (9 September 1844 – 14 February 1905) was a Spanish lawyer and Catholic propagandist.

Biography

Adolfo Clavarana was born in a family of small shop owners at Orihuela and graduated from business school in 1863. Contrary to the desires of his relatives, he rejected the administration of the family business and tried to make a living out of art, developing a deep interest for music, painting, caricatures and poetry. He would later start a career in law,[1] and graduated as Licenciate at the University of Salamanca in 1874.[2]

His law profession helped him to earn wide reputation at his home city. Coming from a prominently liberal family, Clavarana started his political activities in the fusionist faction and quickly became a local leader of the Liberal Party. During his youth, however, he became an avid reader of traditionalist Jaime Balmes, who would have a great influence on his later adherence to integralism.[1]

He served as Syndic and Secretary at the city council, standing out at the local elections. He was soonly disappointed by liberal politics, nevertheless, and left the party during Práxedes Mateo Sagasta's leadership.[1]

After taking part in Jesuit spiritual exercises, he made the resolution of committing himself to the defense of Catholic religion. Clavarana was afterwards quoted as saying:

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Desk of Adolfo Clavarana. Some editions of Integralist newspaper El Siglo Futuro can be seen over the table.

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Clavarana started his activities as a journalist at El Segura (1878-1879), while still practising law.[2] In 1879, he took part in the first Council of Administration of the Mutual Savings Bank of Orihuela.[3]

In February 1883, he published a long and highly controversial article at La Voz de Orihuela attacking Freemasonry and vindicating the Jesuits after a violent incident inside a church. Clavarana was particularly close to the Society of Jesus, and used to spend a long time every morning praying at their church before going to work.[4] He founded La Lectura Popular the same year, a Catholic magazine, and stopped working as a lawyer to dedicate more time to journalism, stating that his profession caused him a "perpetual indignation" apart from deep moral conflicts.[1] The magazine published regularly articles of social, political, literary, economic, historical, legal and philosophical themes, still prioritizing those about theology and religion.[5]

He joined the Carlist movement and sided with Ramón Nocedal at the integrist controversy.Шаблон:Clarify Clavarana would later take part in the founding assembly of the party[6] and become one of its most influential authorities.[1]

He also published short stories, among which the most famous were La correspondencia del tío Matraca, Blas Trápala, El Maestro Cerote y La llave del cielo, as well as El terno seco y La moneda del otro mundo, which were described by Francisco Martínez Marín as influencing "half of Spain". Clavarana helped the popularization of moralist cuentos in his age, making it a widespread tactic by political Catholicism.[2]

Soonly after the Spanish–American War, Clavarana became deeply ill. He was quoted as saying on his death bed that "nations that depart from Christ are lost," referring to Spain.[4] After his death, he was praised in obituaries by Félix Sardà y Salvany, Ramón Nocedal, Manuel Senante, father Isla, father Vilariño and many other figures of militant Spanish Catholicism.[2]

He was married to Josefa Bofill, with whom he had many children. His son Julián Clavarana Bofill continued editing La Lectura Popular after Adolfo's death.[2]

Books

References

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External links