Cipriano Muñoz, 2nd Count of la Viñaza
Cipriano Muñoz y Manzano, 2nd Count of la Viñaza, (Zaragoza, 3 October 1862 – Biarritz, France, 23 November 1, 1933) was a Spanish diplomat and academic who served as a deputy to the Spanish Congress and published notable works on linguistics, philology, and art history.
Biography
He was the son of Cipriano Muñoz y Ostaled, first Conde de La Viñaza, a Spanish countship awarded on 27 November 1871 by the brief-reigning King Amadeo I of Spain. He studied Law and Philosophy at Zaragoza University and earned a Doctoral degree in Philosophy from the University of Madrid.
Muñoz was Congressional deputy for Ejea de los Caballeros, Zaragoza, from 1891 to 1893, 1893 to 1894, and 1894 to 1896. He served later as Spanish Ambassador in Russia and Italy. He became Senator for the province of Huesca and, on 15 November 1910, a grandee of Spain.
He was enrolled a member of the Royal Spanish Academy in 1895, aged 33, lecturing on his appointment reception on the satyrical – political poetry in the Spanish Literature. He was a member also of the Royal Spanish Academy of History, lecturing on his appointment reception on the Chronicles writers on the History of the Kingdom of Aragon. He was awarded the Great Cross with Diamonds of the Russian Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky, and received honors also from Portugal, Italy, Austria, Belgium, Peru, Serbia, Bulgaria, and others.
He died in Biarritz, France, aged 71.[1]
Here is an excerpt from "Movimiento nobiliario para 1934":
Page 8......
El 24-noviembre-1933 falleció en Biarritz don Cipriano Muñoz Manzano, Conde de la Viñaza, Grande de España, Embajador de S. M., Gentilhombre de Cámara de S. M. con ejercicio y servidumbre, Senador del Reino por derecho propio, individuo de número de las Academias Española y de la Historia, Collar de Carlos III, Grandes Cruces de Leopoldo de Bélgica, San Alejandro Nevsky (Rusia), San Mauricio y San Lázaro (Italia), Isabel la Católica, Mérito Militar, Beneficencia, etc. Viuda, hijos e hijos políticos
Publications
Muñoz wrote a number of books, some of which remain influential in the history of the Spanish language today.[2]
- Bibliografía Española de Lenguas Indigenas de América (Spanish bibliography of indigenous American languages), Madrid, Ed. Sucesores de Rivadeneyra, xxv + 427 pages, 1892, reprinted by Father Carmelo Sáenz de Santa María, 1977: ISBN 978-84-363-0495-4. A catalogue of 1,100 works in indigenous American languages with Spanish translations, printed from the 16th to 19th centuries. The bibliography includes profiles of the works' authors, many Spanish-born or mixed race bilingual descendants of Spanish and Indian parents. Many of the books concern the teaching of Christianity in aboriginal American languages.
- Escritos de los portugueses y castellanos referentes a las lenguas de China y el Japon: estudio bibliografico por el conde de la Viñaza, Cipriano Muñoz y Manzano (Portuguese and Castilian writings on the languages of China and Japan: a bibliographic study for the conde de la Viñaza, Cipriano Muñoz y Manzano. Published: Lisboa, M. Gomez and also London, B. Quaritch, 1892. A collection of studies on Chinese and Japanese languages carried out by Spanish and Portuguese travelers and settlers from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century.
- Poesia satirico – politica bajo el Reinado de los ultimos Austrias, Discurso de Ingreso en la Real Academia Española de 16 Junio 1893, contestación del Académico Alejandro Pidal. An account of political gossip, libels and poems circulated at the Madrid Court during the second half of the 17th century.
- Biblioteca Histórica de la Filología Castellana. 3 vols., Imprenta de Manuel Tello, Madrid (1893); facsimile by Linotipias Montsarrat, Ediciones Atlas, Madrid (1978), XXXV + 1113 pp.
- Santa Teresa de Jesús: Ensayo Crítico (Santa Teresa de Jesus: A critical essay), por el Conde de la Viñaza.
- Adiciones al "Diccionario histórico de los muy ilustres profesores de Bellas Artes en España" de Cean Bermudez. An Expansion on the much sought after and rare 6 volumes edition of the year 1800 on over three Centuries of Spanish artists, mainly painters, by Juan Agustín Ceán Bermúdez, (Gijón, 17 September 1749 – Madrid, 3 December 1829). The original volumes have been reprinted by Edit. Akal, Madrid, (2001), ISBN 84-460-1617-6
Art historians have credited him as the first Spaniard to produce a catalogue of the works of Aragonese painter Francisco de Goya.
References
Gran Enciclopedia de España, (1999), 22 vols. 11,052 pages, ISBN 84-87544-01-0, in vol 14, page 6,501 to 6,996, ISBN 84-87544-14-2
- ↑ Josep Maria Fullola i Pericot, El sueño de una generación: el crucero universitario por el Mediterráneo de 1933 p.82
- ↑ http://www.benjamins.com/cgi-bin/t_bookview.cgi?bookid=SiHoLS%2091
Juan Agustín Ceán Bermúdez - A biography of 18th-century Spanish painting historian Juan Agustín Ceán Bermúdez from Spanish Wikipedia. In Spanish.
Preceded by |
Ambassador of Spain in Belgium 1895–1898 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by |
Ambassador of Spain in Portugal 1904–1905 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by James Fitz-James Stuart, 2nd Duke of Berwick |
Ambassador of Spain in Rusia 1904–1905 |
Succeeded by es:Marcelino Pascua |
Preceded by de:Luis Polo de Bernabé Pilón |
Ambassador of Spain to the Holy See 1913–1916 |
Succeeded by es:Wenceslao Ramírez de Villaurrutia |
Preceded by es:Antonio Vargas Laguna |
Ambassador of Spain in Italy 1924–1931 |
Succeeded by es:Gabriel Alomar |