Alonso Quijano

Main article: Don Quixote
Alonso Quijano (seated) beside his squire Sancho. Illustration by Wilhelm Marstrand (1810-1873).

Alonso Quijano (sometimes Quijada in English spelled "Quixano" yet properly pronounced more as /ˌɑːlnsɒ ˈkwɪkshn/) is the Personal name of the famous fictional hidalgo or knight better known as Don Quijote, the leading character of the novel Don Quijote de la Mancha, written by Miguel de Cervantes. At the start of the work Cervantes explains that Alonso Quijano «wanted to link his name to some great thing, and in this thought persisted for eight days, until finally he settled on the title of Don Quixote. (Quijote in Spanish) [...] He wanted to known as a noble and honorable knight, worthy of being added to the roll of honor of his homeland, which is why he is known as Don Quixote de la Mancha.[1]

Other names or nicknames of Alonso Quijano that go appearing in the story are: the Knight of the Sad Face, that puts him alongside his own squire Sancho Panza , or the Knight of the Lions, adopted by Don Quijote after a an encounter with lions (in the second part, at chapter 17). Finally, his town concedes him the surname of Alonso Quijano, el Bueno, (the Good Man).[2]

Lineage and physical description

In chapter 39 of the First Part of the novel written in 1605, Don Quixote himself claims to be a descendant of the family of "Gutierre Quijada", by direct lineage —in which case his correct name would be Alonso Quijada, gentleman of Villagarcía de Campo (an imaginary rural settlement), part of a long and noble tradition of knights whose great-grandfather was Luis Quijada, majordomo of the emperor Carlos V, formerly a butler in the residence of ‘Jeromín', a nickname of Don Juan of Austria, until the emperor recognized him officially after which he served in the court of Felipe II together with his brother

As to his phisique, Cervantes describes o Alonso Quijano: «a brave and noble soul, about the fifty years of age. He was of lean build, wiry with a wrinkled, suntanned face» (first part, chapter I).

In chapter XIV of Part II (1615), a knight errant, Batchelor Sansón Carrasco describes him as a tall man, dry of face, pulled and wrinkled limbs, ageing, with the nose something between the beak of an eagle and a hamstring, underlined by a large, black, droopy mustache.

References

  1. Cervantes, Miguel de (2016-04-20). "Don Quijote" (in Spanish). Centro Virtual Cervantes. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
  2. Not stated (2014-11-25). "Encuentran documentos que avalan la historia real de 'Don Quijote'" (in Spanish). RT en español/TV-Novosti=rt.com. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.