Juan Bautista Alberdi

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Alberdi's daguerreotype taken in Chile, dated between 1850 and 1853.
Alberdi's daguerreotype taken in Chile, dated between 1850 and 1853.
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Juan Bautista Alberdi (29 August 181019 June 1884) was an Argentine political theorist and diplomat. Although he lived most of his life in exile in Montevideo and Chile, he was one of the most influential Argentine liberals of his age.

Alberdi studied law in Buenos Aires. He fled from Argentina in fear of his powerful opponent, the caudillo Juan Manuel de Rosas. This did not prevent him from writing many books opposing Rosas. After Rosas was overthrown in 1852, Alberdi decided not to return to Argentina but instead to remain in Chile.

When it was decided to write a constitution for Argentina, Alberdi sent copies of a paper he had written, entitled "Bases and Starting Points for the Political Organization of the Argentine Republic", to the Constitutional Assembly delegates. Many of the suggestions contained in it were incorporated into the Argentine Constitution of 1853. He later became an Argentine diplomat in Europe.

Juan Bautista Alberdi was born in San Miguel de Tucumán, province of Tucumán, Argentina, in the year of the May Revolution, the beginning of Argentine emancipation from the motherland, Spain. His father, Salvador Alberdi, was a Spanish merchant; his mother, Josefa Aráoz y Balderrama, had been born into an Argentine family of Spanish descent. She died as a result of Juan Bautista's birth.

His family had supported the Argentine Revolution from the beginning. His father was close to Belgrano, an important revolutionary, who had a decisive influence on the life and work of Alberdi.

At a young age, Juan Bautista Alberdi moved to Buenos Aires. There he studied in the "Colegio de Ciencias Morales" (roughly, a secondary school for study of social sciences). Nevertheless, in 1824 he abandoned his studies prematurely, due to his love of music.

He soon resumed his studies, getting prepared in Buenos Aires to be a lawyer. Alberdi continued those studies in Córdoba and in 1840 finished them in Montevideo. During this process, his ability to teach himself stands out, besides his formal studies.

Owing to Alberdi's participation in the so-called "Generation of '37", a group of young and liberal intellectuals heavily influenced by the Enlightenment and liberal thought traditions in which also stood out other argentinian thinkers such as Esteban Echeverría and Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, and his refusal to swear allegiance to the Federal regime of Juan Manuel de Rosas, Alberdi in 1838 began a voluntary exile: first, in Montevideo; then, in Europe and, afterwards, in Chile. He returned to Argentina after the victory of Justo José de Urquiza over the Federal forces in the decisive battle of Caseros in 1852.

Under the new regime, Alberdi assumed diplomatic duties in Europe. These were interrupted since the re-organization of the Argentine Republic in 1862. He again established himself in Argentina in 1878, but a strong disagreement with Bartolomé Mitre pushed Alberdi to leave for France, where, at the age of seventy-three, he died on July 19, 1884, in a suburb of Paris. His body was returned to Argentina and was interred in La Recoleta Cemetery in Buenos Aires.

[edit] Bibliography and sources

[edit] Alberdi's work

This is a partial list of Alberdi's writings. See also Juan Bautista Alberdi at Wikisource (Spanish).

[edit] Books about Alberdi

  • Alberdi y su tiempo, Jorge M. Mayer, Buenos Aires, Eudeba, 1963.
  • Historia Argentina, José Luis Busaniche, Buenos Aires, Solar-Hachette, 1973.
  • Historia de la Argentina, John Lynch et al, Buenos Aires, Crítica, 2002.
  • Las ideas políticas en la Argentina, José Luis Romero, Buenos Aires, Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1975.
  • Vida de un Ausente, José Ignacio Garcia Hamilton, Buenos Aires, Editorial Sudamericana, 1993.

[edit] Other sources

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