Domingo Faustino Sarmiento

Domingo F. Sarmiento

Sarmiento in 1874 after handing over Presidency of Argentina.
7th President of Argentina
In office
October 12, 1868  October 11, 1874
Vice President Adolfo Alsina
Preceded by Bartolomé Mitre
Succeeded by Nicolás Avellaneda
Personal details
Born February 15, 1811
San Juan
Died September 11, 1888(1888-09-11) (aged 77)
Asunción, Paraguay
Nationality Argentine
Political party Liberal
Spouse(s) Benita Martínez Pastoriza
Children Ana Faustina Sarmiento[1]
Domingo Fidel Sarmiento[2][3]
Profession Journalist
Signature

Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (February 15, 1811 September 11, 1888) was an Argentine activist, intellectual, writer, statesman and the seventh President of Argentina. His writing spanned a wide range of genres and topics, from journalism to autobiography, to political philosophy and history. He was a member of a group of intellectuals, known as the Generation of 1837, who had a great influence on nineteenth-century Argentina. He was particularly concerned with educational issues and was also an important influence on the region's literature.

Sarmiento grew up in a poor but politically active family that paved the way for much of his future accomplishments. Between 1843 and 1850 he was frequently in exile, and wrote in both Chile and in Argentina. His greatest literary achievement was Facundo, a critique of Juan Manuel de Rosas, that Sarmiento wrote while working for the newspaper El Progreso during his exile in Chile. The book brought him far more than just literary recognition; he expended his efforts and energy on the war against dictatorships, specifically that of Rosas, and contrasted enlightened Europea world where, in his eyes, democracy, social services, and intelligent thought were valuedwith the barbarism of the gaucho and especially the caudillo, the ruthless strongmen of nineteenth-century Argentina.

While president of Argentina from 1868 to 1874, Sarmiento championed intelligent thought—including education for children and women—and democracy for Latin America. He also took advantage of the opportunity to modernize and develop train systems, a postal system, and a comprehensive education system. He spent many years in ministerial roles on the federal and state levels where he travelled abroad and examined other education systems.

Sarmiento died in Asunción, Paraguay, at the age of 77 from a heart attack. He was buried in Buenos Aires. Today, he is respected as a political innovator and writer.

Youth and influences

A current map of Argentina, showing some of the key locations in Sarmiento's life such as San Juan (to the West) and Buenos Aires (in the East)

Sarmiento was born in Carrascal, a poor suburb of San Juan, Argentina on February 15, 1811.[4] His father, José Clemente Quiroga Sarmiento y Funes, had served in the military during the wars of independence, returning prisoners of war to San Juan.[5] His mother, Doña Paula Zoila de Albarracín e Irrázabal, was a very pious woman,[6] who lost her father at a young age and was left with very little to support herself.[6] As a result, she took to selling her weaving in order to afford to build a house of her own. On September 21, 1801, José and Paula were married. They had 15 children, 9 of whom died; Domingo was the only son to survive to adulthood.[6] Sarmiento was greatly influenced by his parents, his mother who was always working hard, and his father who told stories of being a patriot and serving his country, something Sarmiento strongly believed in.[5] In Sarmiento's own words:

"I was born in a family that lived long years in mediocrity bordering on destitution, and which is to this day poor in every sense of the word. My father is a good man whose life has nothing remarkable except [for his] having served in subordinate positions in the War of Independence... My mother is the true figure of Christianity in its purest sense; with her, trust in Providence was always the solution to all difficulties in life."[7]

At the age of four, Sarmiento was taught to read by his father and his uncle, José Eufrasio Quiroga Sarmiento, who later became Bishop of Cuyo.[8] Another uncle who influenced him in his youth was Domingo de Oro, a notable figure in the young Argentine Republic who was influential in bringing Juan Manuel de Rosas to power.[9] Though Sarmiento did not follow de Oro's political and religious leanings, he learned the value of intellectual integrity and honesty.[9] He developed scholarly and oratorical skills, qualities which de Oro was famous for.[9][10] In 1816, at the age of five, Sarmiento began attending the primary school La Escuela de la Patria. He was a good student, and earned the title of First Citizen (Primer Ciudadano) of the school.[11] After completing primary school, his mother wanted him to go to Córdoba to become a priest. He had spent a year reading the Bible and often spent time as a child helping his uncle with church services,[12] but Sarmiento soon became bored with religion and school, and got involved with a group of aggressive children.[13] Sarmiento's father took him to the Loreto Seminary in 1821, but for reasons unknown, Sarmiento did not enter the seminary, returning instead to San Juan with his father.[14] In 1823, the Minister of State, Bernardino Rivadavia, announced that the six top pupils of each state would be selected to receive higher education in Buenos Aires. Sarmiento was at the top of the list in San Juan, but it was then announced that only ten pupils would receive the scholarship. The selection was made by lot, and Sarmiento was not one of the scholars whose name was drawn.[15]

Political background and exiles

Portrait of Sarmiento at the time of his exile in Chile, by Franklin Rawson.
Sarmiento portrayed by Ignacio Baz.
Portrait of Sarmiento painted by his granddaughter Eugenia.

In 1826, an assembly elected Bernardino Rivadavia as president of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata. This action roused the ire of the provinces, and civil war was the result. Support for a strong, centralized Argentine government was based in Buenos Aires, and gave rise to two opposing groups. The wealthy and educated of the Unitarian Party, such as Sarmiento, favored centralized government. In opposition to them were the Federalists, who were mainly based in rural areas and tended to reject European mores. Numbering figures such as Manuel Dorrego and Juan Facundo Quiroga among their ranks, they were in favor of a loose federation with more autonomy for the individual provinces.[16]

Opinion of the Rivadavia government was divided between the two ideologies. For Unitarians like Sarmiento, Rivadavia's presidency was a positive experience. He set up a European-staffed university and supported a public education program for rural male children. He also supported theater and opera groups, publishing houses and a museum. These contributions were considered as civilizing influences by the Unitarians, but they upset the Federalist constituency. Common laborers had their salaries subjected to a government cap, and the gauchos were arrested by Rivadavia for vagrancy and forced to work on public projects, usually without pay.[17]

In 1827, the Unitarians were challenged by Federalist forces. After the resignation of Rivadavia, Manuel Dorrego was installed as governor of Buenos Aires province. He quickly made peace with Brazil but, on returning to Argentina, was overthrown and executed by the Unitarian general Juan Lavalle, who took Dorrego's place.[18] However, Lavalle did not spend long as governor either: he was soon overthrown by militias composed largely of gauchos led by Rosas and Estanislao López. By the end of 1829 the old legislature that Lavalle had disbanded was back in place and had appointed Rosas as governor of Buenos Aires.[18]

The first time Sarmiento was forced to leave home was with his uncle, José de Oro, in 1827, because of his military activities.[19] José de Oro was a priest who had fought in the Battle of Chacabuco under General San Martín.[20] Together, Sarmiento and de Oro went to San Francisco del Monte, in the neighbour province of San Luis. He spent much of his time with his uncle learning and began to teach at the only school in town. Later that year, his mother wrote to him asking him to come home. Sarmiento refused, only to receive a response from his father that he was coming to collect him.[21] His father had persuaded the governor of San Juan to send Sarmiento to Buenos Aires to study at the College of Moral Sciences (Colegio de Ciencias Morales).[21]

Soon after Sarmiento's return, the province of San Juan broke out into civil war and Facundo Quiroga invaded Sarmiento's town.[22] As historian William Katra describes this "traumatic experience":

At sixteen years of age, he stood in front of the shop he tended and viewed the entrance into San Juan of Facundo Quiroga and some six hundred mounted montonera horsemen. They constituted an unsettling presence [. . . ]. That sight, with its overwhelmingly negative associations, left an indelible impression on his budding consciousness. For the impressionable youth Quiroga's ascent to protagonist status in the province's affairs was akin to the rape of civilized society by incarnated evil.[23]

Unable to attend school in Buenos Aires due to the political turmoil, Sarmiento chose to fight against Quiroga.[24] He joined and fought in the unitarian army, only to be placed under house arrest when San Juan was eventually taken over by Quiroga[24] after the battle of Pilar.[25] He is later released, only to join the forces of General Paz, a key unitarian figure.[26]

First exile in Chile

Fighting and war soon again resumed, but, one by one, Quiroga vanquished the main allies of General Paz, including the Governor of San Juan, and in 1831 Sarmiento fled to Chile.[26] He did not return to Argentina for five years.[27] At the time, Chile was noted for its good public administration, its constitutional organization, and the rare freedom to criticize the regime. In Sarmiento's view, Chile had "Security of property, the continuation of order, and with both of these, the love of work and the spirit of enterprise that causes the development of wealth and prosperity."[28]

As a form of freedom of expression, Sarmiento began to write political commentary. In addition to writing, he also began teaching in Los Andes. Due to his innovative style of teaching, he found himself in conflict with the governor of the province. He founded his own school in Pocuro as a response to the governor. During this time, Sarmiento fell in love and had an illegitimate daughter named Ana Faustina, who Sarmiento did not acknowledge until she married.[29]

San Juan and second and third exiles in Chile

Daguerreotype of Domingo Faustino Sarmiento after the Battle of Caseros. He is wearing the Brazilian Order of the Southern Cross given to him by Emperor Pedro II of Brazil during his exile in Petrópolis in 1852[30]
Monument in homage to Domingo F. Sarmiento in Boston, Massachusetts
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento in Boston, Massachusetts

In 1836, Sarmiento returned to San Juan, seriously ill with typhoid fever; his family and friends thought he would die upon his return, but he recovered and established an anti-federalist journal called El Zonda.[31] The government of San Juan did not like Sarmiento's criticisms and censored the magazine by imposing an unaffordable tax upon each purchase. Sarmiento was forced to cease publication of the magazine in 1840. He also founded a school for girls during this time called the Santa Rosa High School, which was a preparatory school.[31] In addition to the school, he founded a Literary Society.[31]

It is around this time that Sarmiento became associated with the so-called "Generation of 1837". This was a group of activists, who included Esteban Echeverría, Juan Bautista Alberdi, and Bartolomé Mitre, who spent much of the 1830s to 1880s first agitating for and then bringing about social change, advocating republicanism, free trade, freedom of speech, and material progress.[32] Though, based in San Juan, Sarmiento was absent from the initial creation of this group, in 1838 he wrote to Alberdi seeking the latter's advice;[33] and in time he would become the group most fervent supporter.[34]

In 1840, after being arrested and accused of conspiracy, Sarmiento was forced into exile in Chile again.[35] It was en route to Chile that, in the baths of Zonda, he wrote the graffiti "On ne tue point les idées,"[35] an incident that would later serve as the preface to his book Facundo. Once on the other side of the Andes, in 1841 Samiento started writing for the Valparaíso newspaper El Mercurio, as well working as a publisher of the Crónica Contemporánea de Latino América ("Contemporary Latin American Chronicle").[36] In 1842, Sarmiento was appointed the Director of the first Normal School in South America; the same year he also founded the newspaper El Progreso.[36] During this time he sent for his family from San Juan to Chile. In 1843, Sarmiento published Mi Defensa ("My Defence"), while continuing to teach.[27] And in May 1845, El Progreso started the serial publication of the first edition of his best-known work, Facundo; in July, Facundo appeared in book form.[37]

Between the years 1845 and 1847, Sarmiento travelled on behalf of the Chilean government across parts of South America to Uruguay, Brazil, to Europe, France, Spain, Algeria, Italy, Armenia, Switzerland, England, to Cuba, and to North America, the United States and Canada in order to examine different education systems and the levels of education and communication. Based on his travels, he wrote the book Viajes por Europa, África, y América which was published in 1849.[27]

In 1848, Sarmiento voluntarily left to Chile once again. During the same year, he met widow Benita Martínez Pastoriza, married her, and adopted her son, Domingo Fidel, or Dominguito,[27] who would be killed in action during the War of the Triple Alliance at Curupaytí in 1866.[38] Sarmiento continued to exercise the idea of freedom of the press and began two new periodicals entitled La Tribuna and La Crónica respectively, which strongly attacked Juan Manuel de Rosas. During this stay in Chile, Sarmiento's essays became more strongly opposed to Juan Manuel de Rosas. The Argentine government tried to have Sarmiento extradited from Chile to Argentina, but the Chilean government refused to hand him over.[29]

In 1850, he published both Argirópolis and Recuerdos de Provincia (Recollections of a Provincial Past). In 1852, Rosas's regime was finally brought down. Sarmiento became involved in debates about the country's new constitution.[39]

Return to Argentina

Sarmiento in 1864. Photograph by Eugenio Courret.

In 1854, Sarmiento briefly visited Mendoza, just across the border from Chile in Western Argentina, but he was arrested and imprisoned. Upon his release, he went back to Chile.[27] But in 1855 he put an end to what was now his "self-imposed" exile in Chile:[40] he arrived in Buenos Aires, soon to become editor-in-chief of the newspaper El Nacional.[41] He was also appointed town councillor in 1856, and 1857 he joined the provincial Senate, a position he held until 1861.[42]

It was in 1861, shortly after Mitre became Argentine president, that Sarmiento left Buenos Aires and returned to San Juan, where he was elected governor, a post he took up in 1862.[43] It was then that he passed the Statutory Law of Public Education, making it mandatory for children to attend primary school. It allowed for a number of institutions to be opened including secondary schools, military schools and an all-girls school.[44] While governor, he developed roads and infrastructure, built public buildings and hospitals, encouraged agriculture and allowed for mineral mining.[29] He resumed his post as editor of El Zonda. In 1863, Sarmiento fought against the power of the caudillo of La Rioja and found himself in conflict with the Interior Minister of General Mitre's government, Guillermo Rawson. Sarmiento stepped down as governor of San Juan, but ran unsuccessfully for president of the Argentine Republic in 1864 against General Mitre.[29] He did, however, become the Plenipotentiary Minister to the United States where he was sent in 1865, soon after the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln. Moved by the story of Lincoln, Sarmiento ended up writing his book Vida de Lincoln.[29] It was on this trip that Sarmiento received an honorary degree from the University of Michigan. A bust of him stood in the Modern Languages Building at the University of Michigan until multiple student protests prompted its removal. Students installed plaques and painted the bust red to represent the controversies surrounding his policies towards the indigenous people in Argentina. There still stands a statue of Sarmiento at Brown University. While on this trip, he was asked to run for President again. He won, taking office on October 12, 1868.[29]

President of Argentina, 1868-1874

President Sarmiento in 1873.

Domingo Faustino Sarmiento served as President of the Republic of Argentina from 1868–1874, becoming president despite the maneuverings of his predecessor Bartolomé Mitre.[45] According to biographer Allison Bunkley, his presidency "marks the advent of the middle, or land-owning classes as the pivot power of the nation. The age of the gaucho had ended, and the age of the merchant and cattleman had begun."[46] Sarmiento sought to create basic freedoms, and wanted to ensure civil safety and progress for everyone, not just the few. Sarmiento's tour of the United States had given him many new ideas about politics, democracy, and the structure of society, especially when he was the Argentine ambassador to the country from 1865 to 1868. He found New England, specifically the Boston-Cambridge area to be the source of much of his influence, writing in an Argentine newspaper that New England was "the cradle of the modern republic, the school for all of America." He described Boston as "The pioneer city of the modern world, the Zion of the ancient Puritans ... Europe contemplates in New England the power which in the future will supplant her."[47] Not only did Sarmiento evolve political ideas, but also structural ones by transitioning Argentina from a primarily agricultural economy to one focused on cities and industry.[48]

Historian David Rock notes that, beyond putting an end to caudillismo, Sarmiento's main achievements in government concerned his promotion of education. As Rock reports, "between 1868 and 1874 educational subsidies from the central government to the provinces quadrupled."[45] He established 800 educational and military institutions, and his improvements to the educational system enabled 100,000 children to attend school.

He also pushed forward modernization more generally, building infrastructure including 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi) of telegraph line across the country for improved communications, making it easier for the government in Buenos Aires and the provinces to communicate; modernizing the postal and train systems which he believed to be integral for interregional and national economies, as well as building the Red Line, a train line that would bring goods to Buenos Aires in order to better facilitate trade with Great Britain. By the end of his presidency, the Red Line extended 1,331 kilometres (827 mi). In 1869, he conducted Argentina's first national census.[29]

Though Sarmiento is well known historically, he was not a popular president.[49] Indeed, Rock judges that "by and large his administration was a disappointment".[45] During his presidency, Argentina conducted an unpopular war against Paraguay; at the same time, people were displeased with him for not fighting for the Straits of Magellan from Chile.[49] Although he increased productivity, he increased expenditures, which also negatively affected his popularity.[50] In addition, the arrival of a large influx of European immigrants was blamed for the outbreak of Yellow Fever in Buenos Aires and the risk of civil war.[50] Moreover, Sarmiento's presidency was further marked by ongoing rivalry between Buenos Aires and the provinces. In the war against Paraguay, Sarmiento's adopted son was killed.[29] Sarmiento suffered from immense grief and was thought to never have been the same again.

On August 22, 1873, Sarmiento was the target of an unsuccessful assassination attempt, when two Italian anarchist brothers shot at his coach. They had been hired by federal caudillo Ricardo López Jordán.[29] A year later in 1874, he completed his term as President and stepped down, handing his presidency over to Nicolás Avellaneda, his former Minister of Education.[51]

Final years

The coffin with the Sarmiento's body, arriving to Buenos Aires to be buried.

In 1875, following his term as President, Sarmiento became the General Director of Schools for the Province of Buenos Aires. That same year, he became the Senator for San Juan, a post that he held until 1879, when he became Interior Minister.[52] But he soon resigned, following conflict with the Governor of Buenos Aires, Carlos Tejedor. He then assumed the post of Superintendent General of Schools for the National Education Ministry under President Roca and published El Monitor de la Educación Común, which is a fundamental reference for Argentine education.[53] In 1882, Sarmiento was successful in passing the sanction of Free Education allowing schools to be free, mandatory, and separate from that of religion.[29]

In May 1888, Sarmiento left Argentina for Paraguay.[52] He was accompanied by his daughter, Ana, and his companion Aurelia Vélez. He died in Asunción on September 11, 1888, from a heart attack, and was buried in Buenos Aires.[27] His tomb at La Recoleta Cemetery lies under a sculpture, a condor upon a pylon, designed by himself and executed by Victor de Pol. Pedro II, the Emperor of Brazil and a great admirer of Sarmiento, sent to his funeral procession a green and gold crown of flowers with a message written in Spanish remembering the highlights of his life: "Civilization and Barbarism, Tonelero, Monte Caseros, Petrópolis, Public Education. Remembrance and Homage from Pedro de Alcântara."[54]

Philosophy

Statue of Sarmiento made by Auguste Rodin.
The statue of Sarmiento when being unveiled in 1900.

Sarmiento was well known for his modernization of the country, and for his improvements to the educational system. He firmly believed in democracy and European liberalism, but was most often seen as a romantic. Sarmiento was well versed in Western philosophy including the works of Karl Marx and John Stuart Mill.[55] He was particularly fascinated with the liberty given to those living in the United States, which he witnessed as a representative of the Peruvian government. He did, however, see pitfalls to liberty, pointing for example to the aftermath of the French Revolution, which he compared to Argentina's own May Revolution.[56] He believed that liberty could turn into anarchy and thus civil war, which is what happened in France and in Argentina. Therefore, his use of the term "liberty" was more in reference to a laissez-faire approach to the economy, and religious liberty.[56] Though a Catholic himself, he began to adopt the ideas of separation of church and state modeled after the US.[57] He believed that there should be more religious freedom, and less religious affiliation in schools.[58] This was one of many ways in which Sarmiento tried to connect South America to North America.[59]

Sarmiento believed that the material and social needs of people had to be satisfied but not at the cost of order and decorum. He put great importance on law and citizen participation. These ideas he most equated to Rome and to the United States, a society which he viewed as exhibiting similar qualities. In order to civilize the Argentine society and make it equal to that of Rome or the United States, Sarmiento believed in eliminating the caudillos, or the larger landholdings and establishing multiple agricultural colonies run by European immigrants.[60]

Coming from a family of writers, orators, and clerics, Domingo Sarmiento placed a great value on education and learning. He opened a number of schools including the first school in Latin America for teachers in Santiago in 1842: La Escuela Normal Preceptores de Chile.[44] He proceeded to open 18 more schools and had mostly female teachers from the USA come to Argentina to instruct graduates how to be effective when teaching.[44] Sarmiento's belief was that education was the key to happiness and success, and that a nation could not be democratic if it was not educated.[61] "We must educate our rulers," he said. "An ignorant people will always choose Rosas."[62]

Publications

Major works

Other works

Sarmiento was a prolific author. The following is a selection of his other works:

Legacy

Domingo Faustino Sarmiento appears on the 50 Argentine pesos note.

The impact of Domingo Faustino Sarmiento is most obviously seen in the establishment of September 11 as Panamerican Teacher's Day which was done in his honor at the 1943 Interamerican Conference on Education, held in Panama. Today, he is still considered to be Latin America's teacher.[72] In his time, he opened countless schools, created free public libraries, opened immigration, and worked towards a Union of Plate States.[73]

His impact was not only on the world of education, but also on Argentine political and social structure. His ideas are now revered as innovative, though at the time they were not widely accepted.[74] He was a self-made man and believed in sociological and economic growth for Latin America, something that the Argentine people could not recognize at the time with the soaring standard of living which came with high prices, high wages, and an increased national debt.[74]

Today, there is a statue in honor of Sarmiento in Boston on the Commonwealth Avenue Mall, between Gloucester and Hereford streets, erected in 1973.[75] There is a square, Plaza Sarmiento in Rosario, Argentina.[76] One of Rodin's last sculptures was that of Sarmiento which is now in Buenos Aires.[77]

Footnotes

  1. with María Jesus del Canto
  2. Real Name Domingo Fidel Castro Martínez a.k.a. Dominguito
  3. child of Domingo Castro y Calvo and Benita Martínez Pastoriza
  4. Crowley 1972, p. 11
  5. 1 2 Bunkley 1969, p. 31
  6. 1 2 3 Bunkley 1969, p. 24
  7. Mi Defensa, in Obras Completas de Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (henceforth OC), vol. 3 (Buenos Aires: Editorial Luz Del Dia, 1948), pp. 6-7
  8. Bunkley 1969, p. 35
  9. 1 2 3 Bunkley 1969, p. 26
  10. García Hamilton, José Ignacio (1998). Cuyano alborotador: la vida de Domingo Faustino Sarmiento. Editorial Sudamericana, p. 270-271. ISBN 9500712504 (Spanish)
  11. Bunkley 1969, p. 36
  12. Bunkley 1969, p. 37
  13. Bunkley 1969, p. 38
  14. Bunkley 1969, p. 44
  15. Bunkley 1969, p. 45
  16. Moss & Valestuk 1999, p. 171
  17. Moss & Valestuk 1999, p. 172
  18. 1 2 Moss & Valestuk 1999, p. 173
  19. Crowley 1972, p. 15
  20. Bunkley 1969, p. 47
  21. 1 2 Bunkley 1969, p. 49
  22. Bunkley 1969, p. 50
  23. Katra 1996, p. 29
  24. 1 2 Bunkley 1969, p. 77
  25. Hamilton, pp.52-61
  26. 1 2 Hamilton, pp. 62-65
  27. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Crowley 1972, p. 10
  28. "Los diez años precedentes," El Nacional May 1, 1841 [Hmm. This reference looks a little dodgy!]
  29. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Felipe Pigna, "Domingo Faustino Sarmiento". El Historiador; Biografias. [this reference needs to be replaced by better ones; see talk page]
  30. Calmon (1975), p. 407
  31. 1 2 3 Crowley 1972, p. 16
  32. Katra 1996, pp. 7–9
  33. 1993, p. 35
  34. 1993, p. 41
  35. 1 2 Galvani, p. 20
  36. 1 2 Crowley 1972, p. 9
  37. Galvani, p. 22
  38. After Life: Recoleta Cemetery
  39. Katra 1996, pp. 173–176
  40. Katra 1996, p. 189
  41. Galvani 1990, p. 23
  42. Katra 1996, p. 191
  43. Galvani 1990, pp. 23–24
  44. 1 2 3 Penn 1946, p. 387
  45. 1 2 3 Rock, 1985, p. 130
  46. Bunkley 1969, p. 449
  47. Obras, 31: 197, article written Oct. 9, 1865, for El Zonda, Obras, 24: 71. JSTOR [this reference is very confusing; please clarify]
  48. Crowley 1972, p. 20
  49. 1 2 Crowley 1972, p. 21
  50. 1 2 Crowley 1972, p. 22
  51. Crowley 1972, p. 23
  52. 1 2 Galvani 1990, p. 25
  53. (Spanish) Domingo Faustino Sarmiento
  54. Calmon, Pedro. História de D. Pedro II. v.1. Rio de Janeiro: José Olympio, 1975, pp. 407-8
  55. Katra 1994, p. 78
  56. 1 2 Katra 1994, p. 79
  57. Crowley 1972, p. 39
  58. Crowley 1972, p. 38
  59. Crowley 1972, p. 168
  60. Katra 1994, p. 89
  61. Penn 1946, p. 388
  62. qtd. Penn 1946, p. 388
  63. Ross 2003, p. 18
  64. Molloy 1991, p. 145
  65. Ross 2003, p. 17
  66. Lacayo, Herberto. "Untitled." Hispania 32.2 (1949):pp.409-410
  67. 1 2 3 4 Crowley 1972, p. 26
  68. 1 2 3 Crowley 1972, p. 29
  69. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Crowley 1972, p. 28
  70. 1 2 Crowley 1972, p. 24
  71. Patton 1976, p. 33
  72. Domingo Faustino Sarmiento
  73. Crowley 1972, p. 167
  74. 1 2 Crowley 1972, p. 166
  75. Smithsonian Art Institution. "Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Statue"
  76. Rosario City Website
  77. Musée Rodin Website

References

External links

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