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Don Miguel de Cervantes
Cervantes was born in Alcala de Henares, a town 20 miles from Madrid,
on September 29, 1547. He was named Miguel for Saint Michael, whose
patron day is September 29. Being the son of a barber-surgeon, he
traveled around a lot, moving wherever his father's services were
needed. His family was large; he was only the fourth son out of
what was to become seven children in total. Not much is known about
his educational background. It is supposed that he studied under
the Jesuits as a child and in his late teens and very early twenties,
under the tutelage of the principal of a municipal school in Madrid
named Juan Lopez de Hoyos. Unlike most writers of his time, he apparently
did not go to university.
In 1570, he left Spain for Italy, a move usually done by the Spaniards
of his time to further their careers. Once there he joined the Spanish
infantry in Naples. Around this time, the relations between the
Ottoman Empire and the countries in the Mediterranean were very
much strained. This was due to the fact that the Ottoman Empire
was quickly expanding its power over these countries.
In 1571, a Turkish fleet invaded Cyprus, an island country near
Greece. This move made the confrontation between the Turks and the
Spanish infantries located in nearby Italy inevitable. Cervantes
valiantly fought in the Gulf of Lepanto, an area near Greece. He
was badly wounded in his left hand and thus earned the nickname
"Manco de Lepanto" (Maimed of Lepanto). After that, he
continued fighting in the Mediterranean.
Something incredible happened when he tried to come back home to
Spain in 1575. His ship was captured by pirates and he was taken
as a slave to Algiers, a country in northern Africa. It is believed
that his life as a slave from 1575 to 1580 became the source of
inspiration for some episodes in Don Quixote. In 1580, his family,
with the help of the friars of a Trinitarian monastery, was finally
able to raise the ransom money necessary to free him.
Spain had changed drastically during Cervantes's absence. Prices
had increased dramatically and the standard of living for people
like his middle-class family had fallen. As a sad consequence, Cervantes
would spend the rest of his life employment-hopping and being continually
short of money. But it was his return to Spain which began his career
as a major literary figure. In 1585, he published his first long
work, La Galatea, a prose pastoral romance. Its publication brought
him success with the reading public. After this pastoral romance,
Cervantes decided to try his luck as a dramatist. His plays were
average in comparison to the Don Quixote which he was to write in
1604.
When the First Part of Don Quixote came out in 1605, it was an immediate
success. It was such a success that it was translated into English,
French, and Italian within the next twenty years. In 1615, a year
before his death, the Second Part came out and was just as successful.
It is believed that the Second Part is richer and more profound
than the First.
Unfortunately, all of this success resulted in no profit for Cervantes,
who had sold the publishing rights of his work. The other major
works that he published were 12 Novelas Ejemplares (12 Exemplay
Novels, 1613) and Ocho Comedias y Ocho Entremeses (Eight Comedies
and Eight Interludes, 1615). In the latter, Cervantes poignantly
bids goodbye to the world in the prologue; he obviously foresaw
his imminent death.
The influence of Don Quixote on later literature was astounding.
The work, which is in essence a parody of the time's popular chivalric
romances, had been written in a realistic style. Cervantes' use
of irony came to be admired and Don Quixote came to be seen at times
as a comic hero and at others as a tragic hero driven by impossible
dreams. It is believed that the influence of this work can be seen
in such writers as Sir Walter Scott, Charles Dickens, Benito Perez
Galdos and in painters like William Hogarth and Pablo Picasso.
"Cervantes."
The New Encyclopedia Britannica: Macropedia. Vol. 15. Chicago: U
of Chicago P, 1990. Sieber, Harry. "Cervantes." The World Book Encyclopedia.
Vol. 3. Chicago: World Book, Inc., 1993. Spencer, William. "Ottoman
Empire." The World Book Encyclopedia. Vol. 14. Chicago: World Book,
Inc., 1993.
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