Antonio Tovar

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Real Academia Española
In office
31 March 1968 – 13 December 1985
Preceded byLuis Ceballos y Fernández de Córdoba
Succeeded byFrancisco Nieva

Antonio Tovar Llorente (17 May 1911 – 13 December 1985) was a Spanish

.

Biography

Born in Valladolid, the son of a notary, he grew up in Elorrio (Vizcaya), Morella (Castellón) and Villena (Alicante) where as a child he learned to speak Basque and Valencian. He studied law at the Universidad María Cristina de El Escorial, History at the University of Valladolid, and Classical Philology in Madrid, Paris and Berlin. He had as teachers, among others, Cayetano de Mergelina, Manuel Gómez-Moreno, Ramón Menéndez Pidal and Eduard Schwyzer.

He was president of the University Student Federation (FUE) in Valladolid, a republican-leaning organisation, but in September 1936 after beginning the civil war, he adopted a

Falangist attitude influenced by his intimate friend Dionisio Ridruejo, and became one of those responsible for the propaganda of the nationalist government in Burgos, though his disillusionment with the Nationalist faction
started.

During the Spanish coup of July 1936 he was in Berlin visiting a Hitler Youth camp.[1] He returned to the nationalist zone.[2] During the Spanish Civil War, Ridruejo as National Chief of Propaganda entrusted the radio department to Tovar and he was made responsible for Radio Nacional de España when it was being broadcast from Salamanca (1938). He also worked with the Falangist newspaper Arriba España in Pamplona,[3] edited by Fermín Yzurdiaga.

Following his relationship with Ridruejo and in the orbit of

Mussolini[6] and with Hitler.[7]

Leaving political life, he obtained the Latin lectureship at the University of Salamanca in 1942 and from then on devoted himself to teaching and research. He married Consuelo Larrucea the same year. He was member of the early Francoist legislatures.

In 1947 he started in Salamanca a class on Basque language, embryo for the Manuel de Larramendi chair eventually created in 1953, the first chair of "Basque language and literature" in Spain; its first holder was Koldo Mitxelena.[8]

During the ministry of Ruiz-Giménez (1951–1956), Tovar was appointed rector of the university. As rector, he organized the celebrations of its seventh centenary.[9] This was attended by the rectors of the main universities of the world, who made a memorable parade through the streets of Salamanca with their traditional costumes.

As a result of the centennial celebration of the centennial in 1954, Salamanca restarted awarding doctoral degrees (which the Moyano Law had reserved exclusively to the

Central University of Madrid). A large amount of bibliographic materials, which had been taken by French troops leaving Spain in 1813 and kept in the Palais-Royal
library, were returned to the university library.

Officially Tovar remained rector of Salamanca until 1963, even though he had previously left Spain.

He was a professor at the University of Buenos Aires (1948–1949) and the National University of Tucumán (1958–1959), where he studied the indigenous languages of northern Argentina and tried to create a school that would continue his work in this field.

At the

University of Illinois, he was first named 'Miller Visiting Professor of Classics' (1960–1961), and then 'Professor of Classics' (1963–1967). In 1965 he gained the Latin chair at the University of Madrid, which allowed him to return to Spain. Soon after arriving, there was a student protest, culminating in a demonstration led by Tierno Galván, Aranguren, García Calvo and Montero Díaz. When they were expelled from the university of these (the first three permanently and Montero Diaz temporarily), Tovar resigned in solidarity and returned to the United States until 1967, when he was called to occupy the chair of comparative linguistics in the University of Tübingen
(Germany), where he taught until his retirement in 1979. He died in Madrid.

He devoted his studies to classical philology and to a large number of languages, including Basque (a Basque-language etymological dictionary is now being published, in collaboration with Manuel Agud and Koldo Mitxelena), proto-Indo-European languages, other indigenous languages of the peninsula such as Iberian, and Amerindian languages. (At the University of Salamanca, a chair in Amerindian languages bears his name.) He spoke a dozen languages and knew 150 others.

He was editor of the magazine Emerita (1939-1944), Minos (1951–1968, along with E. Peruzzi and MS Ruipérez ) and Acta Salamantisencia (1944-1951). He wrote literary criticism in the magazine Gaceta Ilustrada.

Awards

Selected publications

References

Sources

External links