Saturday, February 14, 2009

What Does Measels Look Like



happened in the love life of this man without political fortune,
without effusion and without sympathy for his tough character that was the figure
less romantic our history



This soldier that historians claim the greatest theorist of war in the country, did not start young arms race, but instead, had a general culture that lacked perhaps all [1]

was an orthodox Catholic principles entrenched moral earned him the antipathy of his colleagues.

Your natural sensitivity was dominated by his iron will. But there was a space in which overflowed its tenderness: the family. José María Paz dearly loved his mother, Mrs. Tiburcia Haedo, courageous woman who traveled all the way to relieve the prison of his son.

began his military career by joining the revolutionary armies in 1810, had then twenty years. He fought in Upper Peru in the north near Belgrano, in the war against Brazil in the defense of Montevideo.

In 1831 he joined the ranks unit.

defeated Facundo Quiroga in La Tablada and Oncativo, and was named Military Commander in Chief. The Federal Pact confronts him with none other than Juan Manuel de Rosas and Estanislao López.

The May 10, 1831, "when night", was captured by chance. Lopez was a game of bowls the horse in the Alvarez, two miles from Santa Rosa [2]

His imprisonment lasted eight years, four in Santa Fe, and the rest in Luján, often thought to During that time he had reached the time of his death, passed through distressing times, but paradoxically, this time it was his love.

in his memoirs that three years after being arrested and confined in the office of Santa Fe, being the day of Pentecost, April 6, 1834, arrived at the scene accompanied by his devoted mother, Margarita Wield, niece of José María because she was the daughter of his sister Rosario and Andrew Wield Scottish surgeon. Doña Tiburcia had long ago driven from the marriage of his granddaughter with her son. This happened after a time treated in the prison visiting, asked the Episcopal distances and March 31, 1835, married in prison in Santa Fe.

Margarita had at the time twenty-one years, forty-four. The young lady Peace, lived with her husband in captivity, and was in jail that the first two children were born. The eldest, a boy whom they named Joseph, and later, as in Lujan, a little girl, Catherine, who died shortly after.

Rozas in 1839 ordered his transfer, which must remain with the city of Buenos Aires as a prison. Then lived in San Martin street, called at that time the Cathedral Street. On the night of April 3, 1840, José María Paz fled, pursued by sea with other funds in a shack overlooking the river, off the street Balcarce.

His Margarita stayed in Buenos Aires without consolation, and terrified, until he began to reach her husband's letters, full of love and artfully signed with a pseudonym, "Ciriaco Durán for his dear friend Agustina Valdez."

"Do you remember what day is today? I have it well in mind and write these lines my heart swells to believe that six years ago today that our destinies are joined ... "
" Your cries penetrate my heart, do not you break a time in my memory ... " [ 3]

Pass the short time between meetings and long separations product of war.
Corrientes After the campaign, you must go into exile, spent ten months in Paraguay. Arrives in Brazil where the family finally gets together.

In Rio de Janeiro was established with a small farm, selling eggs, chickens, milk and groceries. The desired quiet joins a pitiful poverty. And then the almost unbearable pain when, in June 1848, Margaret dies giving birth to her son Rafael. Sesis survived her years.



far from home, surrounded by poverty, went out the hours of that sad love, born fourteen years before, in prison in Santa Fe


Tomb where the remains of Jose Maria and Margarita, Cordoba, Argentina

________________________________________





[1] Juan. B. Terán. Works. Volume XI, p. 29.

[2] Lopez and Reinafe Parties in The Commercial Gazette, May 21, 1834. This version Peace does not show that he was imprisoned in "Uncle."
[3] Paz, José María. Posthumous Memoirs, Volume XI, p. 215-219







© Peña History of the South. Ana di Cesare, Geronimo Rombolá, Beatriz Clavenna

Internet version article published in August 1993 to close

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