Delfina Vedia de Mitre

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Tertulia
Tertulia
Monument Cochabamba
Monument Cochabamba
Monument Cochabamba
Monument Cochabamba
 

Gender:Female

Ethnic origen: Unknown

Events:

1819  -  Montevideo  -  Not applicable  -  She was born in Montevideo on 12 December 1819.
1819-1852  -  Montevideo  -  Not applicable  -  She lived here variously from 1819-1852.
1841  -  Montevideo  -  Unknown  -  She married Bartolomé Mitre on 11 January 1841.
1843  -  Montevideo  -  Unknown  -  Her first daughter, Delphina, was born.
1852  -  Buenos Aires  -  Unknown  -  She lived here from around 1852.
1870  -  Rio de Janeiro  -  Unknown  -  Her son, Jorge, committed suicide.
1874  -  Buenos Aires  -  Unknown  -  Her husband, Bartolomé Mitre, was condemned to death but spared by President Avellaneda's commutation
1882  -  Buenos Aires  -  Unknown  -  She died in Buenos Aires on 6 September 1882.

Connections:

Argentine exiles in Uruguay
Female relatives of past and future leading political/military/ cultural figures
Rosas opponents
Women of character
Writers (women) others
Writers (women) poets

Texts:
1874 - Extract

Biography:
She was born in Montevideo on 12 December 1819, the daughter of Nicolás de Vedia and Manuela Josefa Gabina Pérez y Pagola from Montevideo. The family went into exile during Rosas's rule where she met Bartolomé Mitre; they married on 11 January 1841. Their first daughter, Delphina, was born in 1843. On 1 April 1846, there was a revolution in favour of Rivera. Two of her brothers took part; one of them died and she ran onto the battlefield, dodging bullets to rescue her younger brother, Julio who was injured. She then took him to their aged father. In 1847 Mitre left Montevideo to fight against Rosas and she did not see him again until 1851. When Rosas fell they returned to Buenos Aires. Her son, Jorge, committed suicide in 1870. In 1874, Mitre was condemned to death in another revolution. She found comfort in the pen, writing about the death of her son (see below). She also wrote poetry and translated a history of Washington and US independence. Many of her translations appear in Mitre's paper. Her unedited memoirs reveal her literary talents, and her attitude as a wife and mother. She died in Buenos Aires on 6 September 1882. (Sosa de Newton, 658)

References:

Sosa de Newton, Lily (1986) Diccionario biográfico de mujeres argentinas