Eduardo Blanco | |
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Venezuela | |
Term Start: | 30 July 1900 |
Term End: | 8 November 1901 |
Predecessor: | Raimundo Andueza Palacio |
Successor: | Jacinto Regino Pachano |
Profession: | Writer, historian, military |
President: | Cipriano Castro |
Birth Date: | 1838 12, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Caracas, Venezuela |
Death Place: | Caracas, Venezuela |
Signature: | Eduardo Blanco signature.jpg |
Eduardo Blanco (1838–1912) was a Venezuelan writer and politician, as well as an aide-de-camp to General José Antonio Páez, independence hero and first president of Venezuela after the breakup of Gran Colombia in 1830.[1]
His main work is Venezuela Heroica (1881), a classic romantic view of history as an epic. Venezuela heroica is structured in five vignettes that depict the main battles and heroes of the Venezuelan War of Independence. It was from General Páez himself that Blanco heard the stories of the Battle of Carabobo, during an encounter with Marshal Juan Crisóstomo Falcón to end the Federal War (1859–1863) near the site of the battle. Páez was so moved from his memories of youth, the anecdote goes, that he could not stop telling his aide the details of the battle. It was Falcón who then told Blanco "you are listening to the Iliad from the very lips of Achilles".
Blanco is also the author of Zárate (1882), a historical novel that attempts to make sense of national reality; Zárate marks the beginning of the "criollista" movement in Venezuelan literature.[2]
Eduado Blanco was minister of foreign affairs for the government of Cipriano Castro (1899–1908).
He is an uncle of Rufino Blanco-Fombona and great-great-grandfather of María Corina Machado.