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Domingo del Monte
Born
Domingo del Monte y Aponte

Nov, 04th, 1853
DiedError: Death date (first date) must be later in time than the birth date (second date)
NationalityCuba
Known forLiterary critic


Domingo del Monte (August 4th, 1804 — November 4th, 1853) was a writer, lawyer, arts patron, and literary critic, known primarily for contributing to Cuban literature and advocating for public education throughout the country. [1][2]


Life

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Born in Maracaibo, Venezuela from a wealthy family, his parents were Leonardo del Monte y Medrano, an assistant and Lieutenant for the Governor in that city, and Rosa Aponte y Sánchez, the daughter and heir of a known and influential planter. [2] [3]


Del Monte attended preschool while living in Venezuela, before his parents moved to Dominican Republic first, and thereafter to Cuba in 1810. A few years later, when Del Monte was a twelve-year old, his parents enrolled him into the Seminary of San Carlos, a catholic alma mater of Leonardo Gamboa in the city of Havana. [4]He completed studies at the University of Havana and right after graduation, around the 1820's, he had a notable influence as an associate for a prominent lawyer in Havana, who shortly after, financed a trip throughout Europe and the United States for the young Del Monte. [4] [2]



In April of 1834, Del Monte married Rosa Aldama, the daughter of a wealthy planter named Miguel de Aldama.[3] He proposed marriage to her on the Philharmonic Society salon. Rosa's father was Domingo de Aldama y Arechaga, ranked as the twelfth richest in an 1836 survey of the most wealthiest Cubans. [4]


Career

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On his return to Cuba, Del Monte was the founder for several literary magazines. He also joined prestigious congregations like the Economic Society of the Country's Friends, an intellectual inner circle for the wealthy elite and one in which members, planters themselves were also the publishers for the first significant newspaper in Cuba, El papel periódico de La Habana.


With a vast education that had been successfully completed at the University of Havana, he began mentoring and promoting young Cuban writers.


As a patron of letters, Del Monte helped and supported most of the writers during that period. He promoted literature tirelessly by donating books to institutions and loaning books to friends. As an advocate for the promulgation of Cuban culture, he organized meetings which would be held at his house, and where important figures, like José Jacinto Milanés, Anselmo Suárez y Romero, and Cirilo Villaverde would later attend, to discuss topics like literature, and other issues related to social reform, and the autonomy of the country. [5][1][2]


The period between 1830-1840 has been considered as the Golden Age of literature in Cuba. No other intellectual of the period was as influential as Del Monte. He was in the middle of the flourishing of the Romanticism movement throughout Cuba, which included the best exponents of the epoch.

He auspices, among other writers, Juan Francisco Manzano, whom he meets in 1830. Still a slave, and whose freedom was attainable only later, in July 23rd of 1836 through the funds that were raised by Del Monte's group.

Manzano's talent was impressive. Del Monte helped him and promoted all his works. [6][7][8]In 1831 Del Monte publishes Manzano's first poem Al nacimiento de la Infanta María Isabel de Luisa de Borbón [On the birth of the Infanta María Isabel de Luisa de Borbón] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help) in the literary magazine La Moda, followed by other poems in Diario de la Habana, and also in other periodicals like El Aguinaldo Habanero and El album. [8]

Del Monte promoted Manzano's literary career, and in 1839 the masterpiece Autobiography of a slave (1839) [Autobiografía de un esclavo] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help) was published in England, through a British official by the name of Richard Madden, who also wanted to include it in an antislavery tract he was preparing. [7][8]


During his career, Del Monte wrote some poetry, but most of his works were written in a prose style that differed from most of the popular writers of the epoch. He was known though, as the founding voice for pamphlet writing and short circulations, especially those that consisted and were based on political discourse arguments, in which his authorial presence had an influential impact. In the year 1836 for example, he wrote a critique titled La Isla de Cuba tal cual está, against the administration of Miguel Tacón. The critique was a refute to a pamphlet written by Guerra Bethancourt, (former professor of Milanés), who had praised the government. The response by Del Monte paved the way for other political tracts to denounce the decisions taken by the government.[9] In 1837, José Antonio Saco, another writer, wrote a tract about the English colonies and the republic of Cuba. His main argument consisted of the advantages of Cuba with Britain or the United States. [1][9]


Del Monte, as well as other contemporary writers, like Félix Varela, José Antonio Saco, and José de la Luz y Caballero, among others, identified themselves as autonomous nationalists. Most of them envisioned a Cuba without black or mixed Cuban races. In that sense they all had patriarchal beliefs. For them being Cuban implied being a Catholic, as well as an exclusive descendant from white Spaniards, since the rest of the peoples, those of mixed and black races were just uncultured. [10]


For Del Monte though, the solution for economic advancement lied in suppressing slavery, by either repatriating African blacks or by gradually ceasing the black slave trade that was in effect at the time. On October 17th, 1848, he wrote a letter stating his opinions where he said:

… that the purpose of every Cuban should be in terminate the slave trade, and then, insensibly, the slavery, without upheaval or violence; and finally,… cleanse Cuba of the African race.

[11][10][12]


For Del Monte, the development of Cuba as an autonomous country had to come from within, but only through the direct involvement of white Cubans in the affairs of the country. That is, Del Monte was neither in favor of yielding Cuba's autonomy under Spanish rule, nor in favor of annexation under the United States. In both cases, in his opinion, the black race would become the majority group, and as a result, would run the country either under Spanish or Anglo-american authority. For Del Monte white Cubans' involvement was tantamount to the autonomy of Cuba. [10][11]. On October 18th, 1848, he wrote a letter from Spain, wherein he clearly stated that:

I am not for the annexation to the United States. To do so, Cuba must become a war field: on one side the combatants would be criollos and Anglo-americans, on the other, Spaniards and Englishmen, and in the background, lingering, the Blacks. Result: the Spaniards lose their colony, and the Cubans lose their land. Cuba then would be declared an independent black republic, under the protectorate of England and the United States.

Yo no estoy por el plan de agregación a los Estados Unidos. Para realizarlo, sería preciso hacer a Cuba campo de batalla: los combatientes serían por un lado criollos y anglo-americanos, por otro españoles é ingleses. Al fondo, en expectativa, negros. Resultado: los españoles se quedan sin su Colonia: los Cubanos sin su tierra: Cuba sería declarado república negra independiente, bajo el protectorado de Inglaterra y los Estados Unidose.

[11]



In 1838, Del Monte ideals about black slave trade was that of an annexationist[13]. He seemed to admire both governments of the United States and England. In a letter he wrote in that year, he was quoted as saying that:

It is an irrefutable fact that the United States of America has, since its founding, enjoyed the greatest political liberty, and they still have slaves.

[14] [13] [annex 1] [annex 2] [11]

But in 1838, while Del Monte lived in Spain and with the help of some of the friends from Cuba, he looked forward to establish an anti-annexationist newspaper that should be:

monarchichal-religious-constitutional; moderate, but bordering on absolutism.

[15]

And also in 1838, José Zacarías González del Valle [16], a philosopher, professor, and a member of the literary salon group Spanish: (tertulias) which Del Monte founded, and also a close friend of Del Monte who would correspond later with him during the years when Del Monte lived in Spain, said that the group, of which he also was part of: "consisted of young men imbued with the principles of liberty, equality, and fraternity, who exchanged books and ideas in a clandestine manner, and who dedicated their noble and generous hearts to end the slave trade and slavery." [6][17]




Conspiracy of La Escalera

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Del Monte was in the center of the the conspiracy of La Escalera (1844)English: Ladder Conspiracy. He was accused, along with José de la Luz y Caballero, and Félix Tanco, of conspiring with black slaves to revolt against the colonial government. The conspiracy was an uprising among black slaves to denounce the injustices by the government, and against the sanctions imposed upon them by the colonial authorities. Many of the slaves were savagely tortured, while others, like "Plácido", were killed.


1844 was known as the "Year of the Lash", or "Year of the whip". Spanish: Año del Cuero. The conspiracy acquired its name from a wooden ladder where slaves would be strap into, and henceforth punished by whipping. [18] [19]


Although there is speculation whether the revolt was indeed a conspiracy or just an excuse from the government to inflict despotism onto the black population, it is a fact that the rebellion, which started in 1843, erupted in Cárdenas in March of that year, and in Matanzas, in November, throughout different sugar mills Spanish: ingenios. [19][paquette 1]


According to some sources, in December 1843, a white planter in Matanzas, discovered the plot that aimed to overthrow the Spanish government. [18]The serving captain-general Leopoldo O'Donnell was informed in January of 1844 about the impeding conspiracy that involved not only slaves, but also free people of color, foreigners, and white criollos. [19][18] He [O'Donnell] ordered extensive interrogation and torture by tying those who were believed to be suspects until they would confess. The procedures were conducted not only in Matanzas, but across the country. [18]In that year, Del Monte was forced into exile to avoid being arrested. Others, like the writer Félix Tanco, were imprisoned. [19]


As a white criollo, Domingo del Monte undoubtedly was the most influential intellectual in Cuba at the time. In 1840 he met Alexander Everett in Havana. Everett headed an investigation brought against Nicholas Trist, then U.S. consul in Havana, for being part of the transatlantic slave trade. [20]They corresponded with each other thereafter, and in 1842 Del Monte wrote a letter to Everett, warning him of a conspiracy by slaves to undertake control of the country and possibly to end slavery, with the supposed backing of British abolitionists, and especially of David Turnbull, British consul in Havana from 1841-1843, who at the time was living in Jamaica, a safe haven from Spanish forces in Cuba. His assistant, Francis Ross Cocking, was supposedly implicated in the conspiracy, although he was never accused of any wrongdoing. [21] In 1843, Everett forwarded a copy of the letter that Del Monte wrote, to Robert Campbell, U.S. consul in Havana, and to Washington Irving, the U.S. minister in Spain. Irving replied that the Spanish authorities were not concerned, since the forces counted with the capabilities and henceforth were fully prepared to face any uprising. Webster also passed on the information to John Calhoun, who assured him that President Tyler had been informed on the matter.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Johnson, Willis Fletcher. (1920). The history of Cuba, Volume 3. B. F. Buck and Company. pp. 323.
  2. ^ a b c d Calcaño, Julio. (1892) Parnaso Venezolano: colección de poesías de autores venezolanos, Volume 1. Tip. de "El cojo". pp. 47
  3. ^ a b Lezama Lima, José (2002). Angel Esteban; Alvaro Salvador (eds.). Antología de la poesía cubana en el siglo XIX. Verbum Editorial. ISBN 9788479622336.
  4. ^ a b c Cluster, Dick; Hernández, Rafael. (2008). The History of Havana. Macmillan. ISBN 0230603971 pp.77
  5. ^ Echevarría González, Roberto. (2010). Cuban Fiestas. Yale University Press. ISBN 0300167067. p. 82
  6. ^ a b Branche, Jerome (2006). Colonialism and race in Luso-Hispanic Literature. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 9780826216137.
  7. ^ a b Arnold, Albert James. (1994) A history of literature in the Caribbean: Hispanic and francophone regions. John Benjamins Publishing Company. p. 144
  8. ^ a b c Manzano, Juan Francisco (1996). The autobiography of a slave/Autobiografía de un esclavo. ISBN 9780814325384.
  9. ^ a b Coester, Alfred. (1916). The literary history of Spanish America. The Macmillan company. pp. 381.
  10. ^ a b c Pancrazio, James J. (2010) The logic of fetishism: Alejo Carpentier and the Cuban tradition.
  11. ^ a b c d Revista cubana: periódico de ciencias, filosofía, literatura, y bellas artes, volume 11. Cartas de Domingo del Monte. (1899). Retrieved on December 1st, 2011.
  12. ^ Alonso, Carlos J. (1998) The burden of modernity: the rhetoric of cultural discourse in Spanish America. Oxford University Press pp. 72
  13. ^ a b Pérez, Louis A. (2003). Cuba and the United States: ties of singular intimacy. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820324838.
  14. ^ Portell Vilá, Herminio (1969). Historia de Cuba con sus relaciones con los Estados Unidos y España, volume 4. Mnemosyne.
  15. ^ Martínez-Fernández, Luis (2003). Protestantism and political conflict in nineteenth-century Hispanic Caribbean. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813529943.
  16. ^ Antonio López Prieto, ed. (1881). Parnaso cubano. Volume 1. M. de. Villa. p. 370.
  17. ^ González del Valle, José Zacarías. La vida literaria en Cuba. Letter from José Zacarías González del Valle to Anselmo Suárez y Romero (1836-1840).
  18. ^ a b c d Francis, John Michael (2006). Iberia and the Americas: culture, politics, and history, a multidisciplinary encyclopedia. ISBN 9781851094219.
  19. ^ a b c d Rodriguez, Junius P.; Welch, Kimberly (2007). Encyclopedia of slave resistance and rebellion, volume 1. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 748. ISBN 9780313332722.
  20. ^ Rugemer, Edward Barlett. (2007) The problem of emancipation: the Caribbean roots of the American Civil War. p. 211
  21. ^ Johnson, Walter; Lehrman, Gilder. (2001). The chattel principle: internal slave trades in the Americas. Yale University Press. p. 287

Notes

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  1. ^ But other sources have conceded otherwise. Many of the available sources point out that Del Monte was against an annexation by either Spain or the United States, as stated in his own letters. See for example Cartas de Domingo del Monte. Also around the same year, Del Monte looked forward to establish an anti-annexationist newspaper. See for example Martínez-Fernández, p. 17
  2. ^ It is not so clear, however, his annexationist thoughts with regards to Great Britain, since in a letter written on March, 1845 he praised the advancements by that country and did not discard the possibility of annexation.
  1. ^ The number of sources that discuss the Escalera Conspiracy is limited. The facts remain unclear. Most of the works reference the book by Robert L. Paquette Sugar is made with blood: The Conspiracy of La Escalera and the conflict between empires over slavery in Cuba. Published in 1990 by Wesleyan Press.



Citations

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