Discurso unamuno paraninfo salamanca

Discurso unamuno paraninfo salamanca del momento

«Venceréis, pero no convenceréis», or also «To win is not to convince»,[1][2] is a famous quote attributed to Miguel de Unamuno, writer and philosopher of the generation of ’98, on October 12, 1936 at the auditorium of the University of Salamanca, during a ceremony of the then called Fiesta de la Raza, anniversary of the discovery of America.[3][4][5]
Miguel de Unamuno, then rector of the University of Salamanca, initially supported the uprising,[note 1] but soon saw the repression, such as the arrest and subsequent shooting of friends such as Professor Prieto Carrasco, former mayor of the city, the president of the Workers’ Federation José Andrés Manso and his favorite student Salvador Vila, rector of the University of Granada. [3] As an eminent figure in Salamanca, the rector received requests from relatives to intercede for many of those arrested, many of them acquaintances and friends of his. 3]
Coinciding with the opening of the university year,[9] on October 12 the festivity of the Day of the Race was solemnly celebrated in Salamanca with the celebration of a political-religious act in the cathedral -which Unamuno did not attend-[3] and another of university character -presided by the writer and philosopher- which would be attended by Franco’s wife, Carmen Polo de Franco, the Africanist general Millán-Astray, the bishop of the diocese Enrique Plá y Deniel, José María Pemán, the military governor of the square and the rest of the active forces of the city. 4][3] The event was opened by Unamuno, to later give the floor to the speakers, without the maximum university authority being expected to intervene later.[3][note 2] The event was broadcasted by the local radio.[10][10][note 3][note 3] The event was broadcast by the local radio.

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what unamuno never said to millán astray

«Venceréis, pero no convenceréis», or also «To win is not to convince»,[1][2] is a famous quote attributed to Miguel de Unamuno, writer and philosopher of the generation of ’98, on October 12, 1936 in the auditorium of the University of Salamanca, during a ceremony of the then called Fiesta de la Raza, anniversary of the discovery of America.[3][4][5]
Miguel de Unamuno, then rector of the University of Salamanca, initially supported the uprising,[note 1] but soon saw the repression, such as the arrest and subsequent shooting of friends such as Professor Prieto Carrasco, former mayor of the city, the president of the Workers’ Federation José Andrés Manso and his favorite student Salvador Vila, rector of the University of Granada. [3] As an eminent figure in Salamanca, the rector received requests from relatives to intercede for many of those arrested, many of them acquaintances and friends of his. 3]
Coinciding with the opening of the university year,[9] on October 12 the festivity of the Day of the Race was solemnly celebrated in Salamanca with the celebration of a political-religious act in the cathedral -which Unamuno did not attend-[3] and another of university character -presided by the writer and philosopher- which would be attended by Franco’s wife, Carmen Polo de Franco, the Africanist general Millán-Astray, the bishop of the diocese Enrique Plá y Deniel, José María Pemán, the military governor of the square and the rest of the active forces of the city. 4][3] The event was opened by Unamuno, to later give the floor to the speakers, without the maximum university authority being expected to intervene later.[3][note 2] The event was broadcasted by the local radio.[10][10][note 3][note 3] The event was broadcast by the local radio.

wikipedia

«Venceréis, pero no convenceréis», or also «To win is not to convince»,[1][2] is a famous quote attributed to Miguel de Unamuno, writer and philosopher of the generation of ’98, on October 12, 1936 at the auditorium of the University of Salamanca, during a ceremony of the then called Fiesta de la Raza, anniversary of the discovery of America.[3][4][5]
Miguel de Unamuno, then rector of the University of Salamanca, initially supported the uprising,[note 1] but soon saw the repression, such as the arrest and subsequent shooting of friends such as Professor Prieto Carrasco, former mayor of the city, the president of the Workers’ Federation José Andrés Manso and his favorite student Salvador Vila, rector of the University of Granada. [3] As an eminent figure in Salamanca, the rector received requests from relatives to intercede for many of those arrested, many of them acquaintances and friends of his. 3]
Coinciding with the opening of the university year,[9] on October 12 the festivity of the Day of the Race was solemnly celebrated in Salamanca with the celebration of a political-religious act in the cathedral -which Unamuno did not attend-[3] and another of university character -presided by the writer and philosopher- which would be attended by Franco’s wife, Carmen Polo de Franco, the Africanist general Millán-Astray, the bishop of the diocese Enrique Plá y Deniel, José María Pemán, the military governor of the square and the rest of the active forces of the city. 4][3] The event was opened by Unamuno, to later give the floor to the speakers, without the maximum university authority being expected to intervene later.[3][note 2] The event was broadcasted by the local radio.[10][10][note 3][note 3] The event was broadcast by the local radio.

unamuno short stories

Unamuno was dismissed as rector by the Republican government and reinstated by the coup plotters. The Falangist writer José María Pemán, who was in the auditorium, acknowledged in an article in ABC in 1964 the meaning of the rector’s words, but denied that it was a reply to Millán-Astray. Pemán affirmed that the military man only intervened at the end of the act to shout «death to intelligence!», although it could also have been «death to traitorous intellectuals» or «death to traitorous intellectuals».
Unamuno claimed to have felt disenchanted with the military coup just a few weeks after it took place because of the repression carried out by Franco’s troops, the indiscriminate shootings, the disappearances, the forced labor and the parades (which were at their peak between July and December 1936).