Eduardo Lemaitre

Eduardo Lemaitre Román
Born (1914-09-17)17 September 1914
Cartagena, Colombia
Died 25 November 1994(1994-11-25) (aged 80)
Cartagena, Colombia
Nationality Colombian
Occupation Historian, writer, journalist, politician

Eduardo Lemaitre Román (17 September 1914 - 25 November 1994, Cartagena, Colombia) was a prominent historian, writer, journalist and politician who lived in Cartagena, Colombia. He held the positions of Representative (1943), Senator (1950) and Governor (1962) of Colombia's Bolivar department. He also served as Ambassador to UNESCO.[1]

Biography

He graduated from El Rosario University (Colegio del Rosario, Bogotá), acquired his doctorate degree in political law from National University of Colombia (Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá) and further pursued specialization in administrative law on Sorbonne (La Sorbonne, Paris) and in Hispanic studies on Universidad Central de Madrid (since 1970 called Complutense University of Madrid).[2]

He was acting president of the History Academy of Cartagena and corresponding member of various Colombian and foreign academies, including the Colombian Academy of History. He had been rector of the University of Cartagena 1954-57 and professor of human studies at the University of the Andes in Bogotá. In administrative field, Lemaitre held important positions in private companies and his own family firm (Daniel Lemaitre & asc.) or founded by him as Gráficas El Faro y otras.[2]

During his political career he served several mandates as Cartagena councilor; he was elected to the Colombian House of Representatives in 1943, the Colombian Senate in 1950, and finally he served as governor of Bolívar department in 1962. He was also Colombian ambassador to United Nations' UNESCO. In 1982, the government of President Julio Cesar Turbay awarded him one of the highest honors in Colombia, the Orden de Boyacá (Cruz de Boyacá)[2]

As a journalist, Lemaitre was owner and editor of “El Fígaro de Cartagena” from 1941-1948 period, until it was burned down during rioting on April 9, 1948. In 1949 he worked as director of El Siglo (today El Nuevo Siglo) (translated “The Century”), where his management was quite controversial, because in his first editorial he wrote that he was at disposition “to work for national understanding. It is impossible that politics will continue in this tone of stridency.” However, the liberal press felt that El Siglo editorial column was kept up under belligerent tone and didn't “soften” political issues. Also, for several years he wrote weekly column in El Tiempo, one of the largest newspapers in Colombia.[2]

He also founded a programadora, Producciones Eduardo Lemaitre, which he operated from 1979 until 1988.

Works

Historical works

Lemaitre said that "literary activity" with which he most closely identify himself was history. He didn't considered himself historian, since this was “so dignified, so serious, so graceful word. I am a publicist. I feel able to publicize history in a sociable form, pleasant, serious and funny at the same time.” (--El Espectador, 10 September 1978).[2]
The huge reception of his works should be precisely credited to readability of his novels and strong narrative force that grabs the reader from the first to the last page, not diminishing value of historical accuracy, especially in Historia general de Cartagena (1983) which has been classified as a “classic” within summarized works on country's history.[2]

Eduardo Lemaitre remains a preeminent historian for Cartagena.

A list of history books he authored include:

Plays

Eduardo Lemaitre's writing also extended beyond histories. He wrote theatrical plays, which include:

His plays were written and performed during the 1960s, which was period of experimental theater, avant garde student movement at all levels, and especially inside theater. Lemaitre therefore considered that country has entered stage for theatrical closure, as the modern avantgarde theater is “very complicated” and only a small minority could understand “its psychological and literary subtlety”.
After its release Iphigenia was referred as one “elementary” piece, written by a “bourgeois for bourgeois”, which doesn't “raises pathological concerns”.
Additionally, Lemaitre wrote for television ten scripts about Colombian historical topics, produced under the name Revivamos nuestra historia (transl. “Relive our history”). This program was aired by his programadora Producciones Eduardo Lemaitre with the production assistance of Promec Televisión. [2]

References

  1. "Murió el historiador Eduardo Lemaitre" [Historian Eduardo Lemaitre died]. El Tiempo Newspaper (in Spanish). El Tiempo Newspaper. 26 November 1994. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Lamús Obregón, Marina (13 December 2004). "Ficha bibliográfica - Eduardo Lemaitre" (in Spanish). Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  3. Eduardo Lemaitre Roman (1971). "Panamá y su separación de Colombia" (PDF) (in Spanish). Editorial Pluma, Bogotá 1980, Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango.

External links

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