Fanny Garrido | |
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Born | Francisca González Garrido 1 September 1846
A Coruña, Spain |
Died | 11 September 1917 Liáns,
Oleiros, Spain | (aged 71)
Other names | Eulalia de Liáns |
Occupation(s) | Writer, translator |
Notable work | Escaramuzas |
Spouses | |
Children | María del Adalid |
Francisca González Garrido (1 September 1846 – 11 September 1917), better known as Fanny Garrido, was a Galician writer and translator. [1]
Fanny Garrido was born in A Coruña in 1846, to military doctor Francisco González Garrido del Amo and Josefa García Cuenca. [2] She married the composer Marcial del Adalid, who musicalized many of her poems. In 1873 she gave birth to their daughter, María del Adalid , who became a noted painter. [3] After the death of her husband, Garrido married Lugo chemist José Rodríguez Mourelo . [2]
She contributed to the Madrid newspapers Galicia and El Correo, [4] writing under the pseudonym Eulalia de Liáns. [5] The most notable of her works is the autobiographical novel Escaramuzas, published in 1885, [5] which she dedicated to her friend Emilia Pardo Bazán (with whom she had co-founded the Galician Folklore Society in 1884). [2] She was also a translator of the German poets Heinrich Heine and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. [2] [6]
Fanny Garrido was a correspondent of the Royal Galician Academy. [4]
In December 1971, a street was named for her in her home city of A Coruña. [4]
Fanny Garrido | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | Francisca González Garrido 1 September 1846
A Coruña, Spain |
Died | 11 September 1917 Liáns,
Oleiros, Spain | (aged 71)
Other names | Eulalia de Liáns |
Occupation(s) | Writer, translator |
Notable work | Escaramuzas |
Spouses | |
Children | María del Adalid |
Francisca González Garrido (1 September 1846 – 11 September 1917), better known as Fanny Garrido, was a Galician writer and translator. [1]
Fanny Garrido was born in A Coruña in 1846, to military doctor Francisco González Garrido del Amo and Josefa García Cuenca. [2] She married the composer Marcial del Adalid, who musicalized many of her poems. In 1873 she gave birth to their daughter, María del Adalid , who became a noted painter. [3] After the death of her husband, Garrido married Lugo chemist José Rodríguez Mourelo . [2]
She contributed to the Madrid newspapers Galicia and El Correo, [4] writing under the pseudonym Eulalia de Liáns. [5] The most notable of her works is the autobiographical novel Escaramuzas, published in 1885, [5] which she dedicated to her friend Emilia Pardo Bazán (with whom she had co-founded the Galician Folklore Society in 1884). [2] She was also a translator of the German poets Heinrich Heine and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. [2] [6]
Fanny Garrido was a correspondent of the Royal Galician Academy. [4]
In December 1971, a street was named for her in her home city of A Coruña. [4]