Pedro de Oña

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Pedro de Oña

Pedro de Oña (1570–1643) is considered the first known poet born in Chile,[1] and is best remembered for his verse epic poem Primera parte de Arauco domado (“First Part of the Araucan Conquest”).[2] Born in Angol, he was the son of a military captain, Gregorio de Oña, who had perished during the conquest of Chile by Spain. Pedro de Oña grew up amid this ongoing conflict; he was born in what was then a small military post, in a territory largely controlled by Chile's indigenous peoples.[1]

His mother remarried with a man of considerable influence, thus allowing Pedro de Oña to study in

viceroy García Hurtado de Mendoza, 5th Marquis of Cañete, and in 1596 received his bachelor's degree in Lima. He studied various baroque and classical writers, and worked at various jobs in Peru.[3]

In 1596 he published Arauco domado. This epic poem, written in rhymed

couplets
, praises the military deeds of Hurtado de Mendoza. It appears that Hurtado de Mendoza, dissatisfied with how he was portrayed in
Mapuches as savage and terrifying. Nevertheless, he provides information on their rites and customs, and those of other indigenous peoples.[4]

When his patron Hurtado de Mendoza departed from Peru, the viceroy’s enemies decided to harm Pedro de Oña’s career by banning Arauco domado and denouncing the writer for various writings that the

archbishop of Lima, Pedro Muñiz, considered defamatory.[1]

De Oña also wrote the Temblor de Lima de 1609 (Lima, 1609), El Vasauro (Cuzco, 1635), and a sacred epic, the Ignacio de Cantabria (Seville, 1639).[5] In his Apologético en favor de Don Luis de Góngora, Príncipe de los poetas lyricos de España: contra Manuel de Faria y Sousa, Cavallero portugués (1662), Juan de Espinosa Medrano refers to Pedro de Oña, among others, in his defense of Góngora.[6]

When De Oña’s wife died, the poet was left with five children in his care and lived in poverty for the rest of his life.

References

  1. ^ a b c Biografia de Pedro de Oña
  2. ^ De Oña did not end up writing a Second Part
  3. ^ Pedro De Oña
  4. ^ a b c Memoria Chilena - Pedro de Oña: Arauco Domado - Presentación Archived 2007-12-27 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Roberto González Echevarría, Enrique Pupo-Walker, The Cambridge History of Latin American Literature (Cambridge University Press, 1996), 139.
  6. ^ El Lunarejo: Identidad mestiza y crítica literaria Archived 2007-12-23 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading

  • Chang-Rodriguez, Raquel (1989). "Pedro de Oña". In Solé, Carlos A. (ed.). Latin American Writers. Macmillan Publishing House. pp. 59–63. .

External links