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Juan Pablo Duarte

Juan Pablo Duarte y Díez (January 26, 1813 – July 15, 1876)[1] was a Dominican military leader, writer, activist, and nationalist politician who was the foremost of the founding fathers of the Dominican Republic and bears the title of Father of the Nation. As one of the most celebrated figures in Dominican history, Duarte is considered a folk hero and revolutionary visionary in the modern Dominican Republic, who along with military generals Ramón Matías Mella and Francisco del Rosario Sánchez, organized and promoted La Trinitaria, a secret society that eventually led to the Dominican revolt and independence from Haitian rule in 1844 and the start of the Dominican War of Independence.

In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Duarte and the second or maternal family name is Díez.

Juan Pablo Duarte

(1813-01-26)January 26, 1813

July 15, 1876(1876-07-15) (aged 63)

Dominican

1833–1876

Central Government Junta

Vicente Celestino (brother)

Maria Josefa (sister)
Manuel (brother)
Ana Maria (sister)
Manuel (brother)
Filomena (sister)
Rosa Duarte (sister)
Juana Bautista (sister)
Manuel Amáralos María (brother)
María Francisca (sister)

1834–1876

Brigadier General

 Dominican Army

  • Liberation Army
  • Restoration Army

Born into a middle-upper class family in 1813, his desire for knowledge and his dreams of improvement led him to Europe, where he strengthened his liberal ideas. These ideas formulated the outline for establishing an independent Dominican state. Upon returning, he voluntarily dedicated himself to teaching in the streets, improvising a school in his father's business, determined that the people of his era assimilate his ideals of revolutionary enlightenment.


Duarte became an officer in the National Guard and a year later in 1843 he participated in the "Reformist Revolution" against the dictatorship of Jean-Pierre Boyer of Haiti, which occupied Santo Domingo since over 20 years. After the defeat of the Haitians and the proclamation of the Dominican Republic in 1844, the Board formed to designate the first ruler of the nation and elected Duarte by a strong majority vote to preside over the nation but he declined the proposal, while Tomás Bobadilla took office instead.[2]


Duarte helped inspire and finance the Dominican War of Independence, paying a heavy toll which would eventually ruin him financially. Duarte also disagreed strongly with royalist and pro-annexation sectors in the nation, especially with the wealthy caudillo and military strongman Pedro Santana, who sought to rejoin the Spanish Empire. From these struggles, Santana emerged victorious while Duarte suffered in exile, despite coming back a few times, Duarte lived most of his remaining years in Venezuela until his death in 1876.

Duarte's birth is commemorated by Dominicans every January 26.

Tristezas de la noche

Santana

Canto de guerra

Antífona

El Criollo

Desconsuelo

Suplica

Himno

La Cartera del procrito

Romántica

Father of the Nation

History of the Dominican Republic

Dominican War of Independence

Dominican Restoration War

Juan Sánchez Ramírez

José Núñez de Cáceres

Francisco del Rosario Sánchez

Matías Ramón Mella

José Joaquín Puello

La Trinitaria

Pedro Santana

Buenaventura Báez

Tomás Bobadilla

Gregorio Luperón

Eugenio María de Hostos

José Martí

Duarte, Rosa. Apuntes para la historia de la isla de Santo Domingo y para la biografía del general dominicano Juan Pablo Duarte y Diez. Santo Domingo, 1994.

García, José Gabriel. Compendio de la historia de Santo Domingo. 4 vols. Santo Domingo, 1968.

García, José Gabriel. Rasgos biográficos de dominicanos célebres. Santo Domingo, 1971.

García Lluberes, Alcides. Duarte y otros temas. Santo Domingo, 1971.

García Lluberes, Leonidas. Crítica histórica. Santo Domingo, 1964.

Martínez, Rufino. Diccionario biográfico-histórico dominicano. Santo Domingo, 1997.

Tena Reyes, Jorge (ed.). Duarte en la historiografía dominicana. Santo Domingo, 1994.

Selden Rodman, Quisqueya: A History of the Dominican Republic (1964).

Howard J. Wiarda, The Dominican Republic: Nation in Transition (1969).

Ian Bell, The Dominican Republic (1981).

Howard J. Wiarda, and MJ Kryzanek, The Dominican Republic: A Caribbean Crucible (1982).