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Delfina de la Cruz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Delfina de la Cruz
First Lady of Chile
In role
18 September 1876 – 18 September 1881
Preceded byEulogia Echaurren
Succeeded byEmilia Márquez de la Plata Guzmán
Personal details
Born(1837-02-24)24 February 1837
Concepción, Chile
Died8 May 1905(1905-05-08) (aged 68)
Concepción, Chile
Spouse
(m. 1855)
Parents

Delfina de la Cruz Zañartu (24 February 1837 Concepción, Chile – 8 May 1905 Concepción, Chile) was a Chilean pianist[1] and First Lady of Chile. She was the only child of General José María de la Cruz and his wife Josefa Zañartu, and granddaughter of Chilean revolutionary Luis de la Cruz.

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Transcription

First Lady of Chile

De la Cruz became engaged to Aníbal Pinto after he returned from a long trip in Europe, and they married on 24 November 1855 in Concepción. The marriage had political undertones; Pinto's father, Francisco Antonio Pinto, former President of Chile, felt that the marriage would help to heal the relationship between the cities of Concepción and Santiago. Animosity had arisen between the cities as a result of the 1851 Chilean Revolution, during which uprisings had taken place in Concepción against the central government based in Santiago. The marriage would create a familial link between de la Cruz's father, José Maria de la Cruz and Pinto's brother-in-law, Manuel Bulnes, who had fought against each other in the Battle of Loncomilla.

Pinto was elected President of Chile in 1876, and de la Cruz accompanied him to all government ceremonies, even inspecting the troops in his company during the War of the Pacific.

De la Cruz was related by marriage to two other First Ladies of Chile: Enriqueta Pinto, Pinto's sister and wife of Manuel Bulnes, and Luisa Garmendia, Pinto's mother and wife of Fransico Antonio Pinto.

Musical Composition

De la Cruz was an accomplished pianist and composer. Under the pseudonym Delfina Perez, de la Cruz published 12 works throughout the 19th century, surpassed in volume only by Isidora Zegers. Her work was praised by local press in Valparaíso and Santiago, where she sometimes performed benefit concerts. Several of her pieces also attained international recognition, including The Star of Night (Spanish: La estrella de la tarde), a polka for piano which was played in Paris, as well as Armando the Gondolier (Spanish: Armando el gondolero), a waltz for piano later performed in Germany.[2] She is also the first Chilean woman to venture into the composition of choral music, at the time a male-dominated sphere.[3][4]

References

  1. ^ "En la biblioteca nacional se lanza libro sobre la compositora Delfina de la Cruz" (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile.
  2. ^ Luco, Caterine. "Biblioteca Nacional celebra a las compositoras femeninas del siglo XIX". Cultura y Entretención (in Spanish). Santiago, Chile: Latercera. p. 34. Archived from the original on 2018-11-09. Retrieved 2018-11-08. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  3. ^ Merino Montero, Luis (June 2010). "Los inicios de la circulación pública de la creación musical escrita por mujeres en Chile" [The Beginnings of Public Circulation of Music Written by Women in Chile]. Revista musical chilena (in Spanish). Vol. 64, no. 213. Santiago, Chile: Facultad de Artes, Universidad de Chile. pp. 53–76. doi:10.4067/S0716-27902010000100005. ISSN 0716-2790.
  4. ^ Arce Vidal, Leonardo (26 April 2015). "Mujeres compositoras: Una historia recortada" [Women Composers: A History Reduced]. Compositoras en Chile: Una Historia Recortada / Women Composers of Chile: A Missed History (in Spanish). Chile.
Honorary titles
Preceded by First Lady of Chile
1876–1881
Succeeded by
Emilia Márquez de la Plata Guzmán
This page was last edited on 24 January 2024, at 23:36
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