Contexto historico de miguel de cervantes biography
•
Miguel de Cervantes
Spanish writer (1547–1616)
"Cervantes" redirects here. For other uses, see Cervantes (disambiguation).
"Miguel Cervantes" redirects here. For the American actor and singer, see Miguel Cervantes (actor).
Miguel de Cervantes | |
---|---|
This portrait, attributed to Juan de Jáuregui,[a] is unauthenticated. No authenticated image of Cervantes exists.[1][2] | |
Born | (1547-09-29)29 September 1547 Alcalá de Henares, Spain |
Died | 22 April 1616(1616-04-22) (aged 68)[3] Madrid, Spain |
Resting place | Convent of the Barefoot Trinitarians, Madrid |
Occupation | Soldier, tax collector, accountant, purchasing agent for Navy (writing was an avocation which did not produce much income) |
Language | Early Modern Spanish |
Literary movement | Renaissance literature, Mannerism, Baroque |
Notable works | Don Quixote Entremeses Novelas ejemplares |
Spouse | Catalina de Salazar y Palacios |
Children | Isabel c. 1584 (ille • The Influence of Historical Context on Cervantes' Work1. IntroductionDon Quixote, Cervantes' masterpiece, is a stand-alone work that emerged from the author's transcending creative talents. But creative facts are the product of a determined and modifying reality. As we survey its pages, we perceive how Cervantes dives into the era, taking from it the men that will later serve as models to be reflected by his immortal pen. This is absolute bevis that Cervantes pulls real life from his well-stocked memory to bring his uniquely created personages to life. No one will doubt that Don Quixote and Sancho Panza were jaded from the sorriest life that existed in Cervantes' era. It's preposterous to think that half-donkey Sancho Panza would have frightened us just as much if, instead of the squire to Don Quixote, he had been the postman of the small towns in the province of Alcalá. For the design of all possible things that have served as material for Cervantes' creative talent, a • Miguel de Cervantes(1547-1616) Who Was Miguel de Cervantes?Miguel de Cervantes was born near Madrid in 1547. He became a soldier in 1570 and was badly wounded in the Battle of Lepanto. Captured by the Turks in 1575, Cervantes spent five years in prison. before he was ransomed and returned home. After less successful earlier efforts, Cervantes finally achieved literary success in his later years, publishing the first part of Don Quixote in 1605. He died in 1616. Early LifeThe fourth of seven children, Miguel de Cervantes struggled financially for almost his entire life. His father, Rodrigo, deaf from birth, worked as a surgeon—a lowly trade at the time—and the family moved around often in Cervantes youth as his father searched for better prospects. Whatever his family's financial conditions, Cervantes was an avid reader as a child—a skill he was reportedly taught by a relative. But whether he had much in the way of formal education has been a subject of debate among sc |