Juan Rodríguez de la Cámara

Juan Rodríguez de la Cámara (1390–1450), also known as Juan Rodríguez del Padrón, was a Galician writer and poet, considered the last poet of the Galician school.[1]

Born in Padrón, he was born to a hidalgo family. He may have served as a page to Juan II of Castile,[2] and may have attended the Council of Florence in 1434 as secretary to the cardinal Juan de Cervantes, a respected jurist and a friend of Pero Tafur.[3]

He was exiled for reasons not completely known, but may have been connected with an illicit romance at court; Rodríguez's indiscreet revelations to a talkative friend apparently led to a romantic breach of some kind with a noble lady.[4] James Fitzmaurice-Kelly writes that "the conjectures that make Rodríguez the lover of Juan II's wife, Isabel, or of Enrique IV's wife, Juana, are destroyed by chronology. None the less it is certain that the writer was concerned in some mysterious, dangerous love-affair which led to his exile, and some believe, to his profession as a Franciscan friar.”[1] He became a Franciscan at Jerusalem in 1441 and gave up many of his profitable and numerous benefices. He returned to Spain and entered into the Franciscan monastery of San Antonio de Herbón, situated in a village near Padrón. He died at San Antonio de Herbón.[5] A probably apocryphal tale of Rodríguez's life, by an anonymous writer of the 16th century, states that the poet went to France, became the lover of the French queen, and was killed near Calais after trying to escape to England.[4]

Coat of Arms

Works

"Muy triste será mi vida / los días que non vos viere; / y mi persona vencida / del dolor de la partida, / morirá quando muriere."

— Canción XII[6]

His works include a sentimental, semi-chivalresque romance called Siervo libre de amor (1439), the moralistic treatise Cadira de Honor (1440), and another sentimental romance called Triunfo de las donas (1445), the latter of which includes 40 feminist arguments meant to counter the misogyny of the work known as the Corbacho, by Alfonso Martinez de Toledo. Rodríguez's work presents arguments for the superiority of women to men.[7]

Some additional romances are attributed to him; these include Conde Arnaldos and Rosa florida. Also attributed to him is the Bursario, a partial translation of Ovid's Heroides.[8]

Rodríguez is best known for his poems. He is represented in the Cancionero de Baena by a single cántica.[1] Of the seventeen of his surviving songs, sixteen are erotically-themed, like those written by his countryman Macías. One, however, the "Flama del divino Rayo", concerns his spiritual conversion.[1]

Notable family members

See also

References

  1. James Fitzmaurice-Kelly, A History of Spanish Literature (D. Appleton and Company, 1898), 97.
  2. Biografia de Juan Rodríguez de la Cámara
  3. Juan Rodriguez del Padron
  4. James Fitzmaurice-Kelly, Chapters on Spanish Literature (A. Constable and Company, ltd., 1908), 74.
  5. Páxina de S. de Currinho - Convento de Herbón
  6. Poesías - Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes
  7. Declamation on the Nobility and Preeminence of the Female Sex by Henricus Cornelius Agrippa, 1529 Archived 2009-07-24 at the Portuguese Web Archive
  8. Biografia de Juan Rodríguez de la Cámara
  9. Archivo General de Indies- Mexico 971-Pag. 381-Anexo G-1.
  10. Book of Lorenzo Suárez de Mendoza, 4th conde de la Coruña and 5th Viceroy of the New Spain -October 20, 1581-Mexico

Sources

  • Obras Ed. Antonio Paz y Meliá. Madrid, 1884.
  • Obras, ed. de César Hernández Alonso. Madrid: Ed. Nacional, 1982.
  • Siervo libre de amor; edición introducción y notas de Antonio Prieto. Madrid: Castalia, 1976.
  • Vicente Beltrán Pepió, "Los Gozos de amor de Juan Rodríguez del Padrón: edición crítica" en Studia in honoren Germán Orduna, 2001.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.