Maria Olga de Moraes Sarmento da Silveira explained

Olga Moraes Sarmento da Silveira
Birth Name:Maria Olga de Moraes Sarmento da Silveira
Birth Date:26 May 1881
Birth Place:Setúbal, Portugal
Death Place:Lisbon, Portugal
Occupation:writer, feminist
Nationality:Portuguese
Partner:Baroness Hélène van Zuylen (companion)

Olga Moraes Sarmento da Silveira (née Maria Olga de Moraes Sarmento da Silveira; known also as, Olga Morais Sarmento; 26 May 1881 – 17 October 1948) was a Portuguese writer and feminist.

Early years

Maria Olga de Moraes Sarmento da Silveira was born in Setúbal, 26 May 1881. She was a daughter and granddaughter of military men, spending part of her childhood in Elvas, where she became a friend of Virgínia Quaresma.[1] She married a Navy physician when she was 16,[2] who died shortly afterwards in combat, in Cuamato, Angola.

Career

Sarmento associated with a group of Portuguese intellectuals, who at the beginning of the 20th century, fought for civil rights, as well as women's legal and political rights. She succeeded Ana de Castro Osório as editor-in-chief of Sociedade Futura (founded 1902). She was affiliated with Liga Portuguesa da Paz (Portuguese League of Peace), co-founding the organization and serving as president of its Feminist Section in 1906.

On May 18, 1906, Sarmento delivered a lecture on "Problema Feminista" (Feminist Problem) at the Sociedad de Geografia de Lisboa.[3] She also traveled as a lecturer to South America, visiting Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina. In Brazil, she met and became friends with the writer Júlia Lopes de Almeida.[4]

Personal life

Sarmento lived in Paris during the First World War. For more than thirty years, she was a companion and partner of Baroness Hélène van Zuylen, of the Rothschild banking family of France, whom she saved from the Holocaust by taking her to Lisbon and then to New York City.[5] She also devoted herself to writing the Baroness' memoirs.

Sarmento was closely linked to her city of birth, Setúbal, leaving all her assets to the municipality, including her personal library and a vast collection of autographs of personalities from art, music and literature in postcards, letters, and books. This legacy is part of the collection of the Museu de Setúbal/Convento de Jesus.[6] She died in Lisbon, 17 October 1948.

Selected works

Honors

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. "Maria Olga de Morais Sarmento da Silveira". En: Dicionário no Feminino (séculos XIX-XX), dirección de Zília Osório de Castro y João Esteves, coord. António Ferreira de Sousa, Ilda Soares de Abreu e Maria Emília Stone (Lisboa: Livros Horizonte, 2005), pp. 736-37.
  2. Web site: Olga de Morais Sarmento [da Silveira] (1881–1948) ]. Associação Portuguesa de Mulheres Cientistas . 3 August 2019.
  3. SARMENTO, Olga Moraes. As Minhas Memórias (Lisboa: Portugália, 1948), pp. 189.
  4. SARMENTO, Olga Moraes.
  5. As Minhas Memórias, pp. 312-13.
  6. Web site: Olga Moraes Sarmento (1881-1948). Municipal de Setúbal. 6 June 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20130414210555/http://www.mun-setubal.pt/pt/pagina/olga-moraes-sarmento-1881-1948/129. 14 April 2013. dead.