Cecilio Acosta Revete | |
Birth Date: | 1818 2, df=yes |
Birth Place: | San Diego de Los Altos, Miranda, Viceroyalty of New Granada |
Death Place: | Caracas, Venezuela |
Resting Place: | National Pantheon of Venezuela |
Nationality: | Venezuela |
Known For: | Writer, journalist, lawyer, professor |
Party: | Liberal |
Signature: | Cecilio Acosta signature.svg |
Cecilio Juan Ramón del Carmen Acosta Revete (1 February 1818 – 8 July 1881), was a Venezuelan writer, journalist, lawyer, philosopher and humanist.
Acosta was born in 1818 in a small village known as San Diego de los Altos. Acosta is the son of Ignacio Acosta and Juana Margarita Revete Martínez. He was baptized by the priest Mariano Fernández Fortique, later Bishop of Guayana and one of Acosta's main mentors. His early education comes from this priest. In 1831 he entered the seminary Tridentino of Santa Rosa in Caracas and began his training to become a priest. In 1840, he leaves the seminary and enters the Academy of Mathematics, where he became a surveyor.[1] Later on, Acosta studied philosophy and law at the Central University of Venezuela, receiving his law degree.[2] Around 1846 and 1847, he began publishing essays in newspapers, such as, La Epoca and El Centinela de la Patria.
Between 1908 and 1909, Acosta published five volumes of complete works, that showed his political, economic, social and educational ideas. He also wrote poetry.[3]
Cecilio Acosta has become, in Venezuela, one of the most remembered characters and intellectuals of the 19th century. This is due to the solidity of his intellectual work in different areas of knowledge (such as law, sociology, history and lexicography) and his deeply ethical and stoic attitude towards the continuous abuses of authoritarianism and personalism, as styles of politics during the consolidation phase of the Venezuelan national state and even afterwards.[4]
Was a liberal politician, he spent years in internal exile under the dictatorship of the military Antonio Guzmán Blanco. He later died on 8 July 1881.Since 1937 his remains are at the National Pantheon of Venezuela.
Mourning his death, José Martí, who had met him personally shortly before, wrote an elegy. He expresses referring to Acosta "His hands, made to handle the times, were capable of creating them. For him the Universe was home; his homeland, room; history, mother; and the men, brothers, and their pains family things, that ask him to cry. He gave it to seas. Everyone who has too much of an extraordinary quality hurts those who don't have it, and he felt bad that he loved so much. In matters of affection, his fault was the excess. One of his phrases gives an idea of his way of loving: “to oppress with treats”. He, who thought like a prophet, loved like a woman. Whoever gives himself to men is devoured by them, and he gave himself whole; but it is a wonderful law of nature that only what is given is complete; and one does not begin to possess life until we empty our own without hesitation and without charge for the good of others. He denied many times his defense to the powerful: not to the sad. In his eyes, the weakest was the kindest. And the needy, was the owner of him. When he had to give, he gave everything: and when he no longer had anything, he gave love and books. How many famous memories of high-ranking bodies of the State pass as from another, and it is their memory! How many elegant letters, in cool Latin, to the Pontiff of Rome, and they are his letters! How small an article, a gift for the eyes, bread for the mind, that appear as if from the hands of students, in the newspapers that these give to the wind, and are from that long-suffering man, who dictated them smiling, without violence or fatigue, hiding to do good, and the greatest of goods, in the shade! What colossus understanding! What a feather of gold and silk! and what a soul of a dove!”[5]
It is important to note the relevance of the character in Venezuela. For example, the celebration of the bicentennials of Andrés Bello in 1981 and of Simón Bolívar in 1983, including the commemoration of the centenary of the death of Acosta in 1981.
Honors
Acosta wrote about politics, jurisprudence, economics, history, obituaries, literature, philology, poetry and epistolary.
He maintained the idea of modernizing the education system from a decentralizing vision, that incorporated new disciplines of knowledge that should be accompanied by the practice of the workshop as a key word for the progress of the country and that Acosta calls him the 'true lord of a new civilization'.[6]
http://www.saber.ula.ve/bitstream/handle/123456789/46116/art2.pdf?sequence=5