Violante Atabalipa Ximenes de Bivar e Vellasco (December 1, 1817 – May 25, 1875) was a Brazilian feminist, writer and newspaper owner.
Vellasco was born on December 1, 1817, in São Salvador da Bahia. [1] As a young child, she was provided a good education and lived with her mother and grandfather while her father was in Rio de Janeiro. [1] The family eventually joined her father in Rio de Janeiro. [2] In 1845, Vellasco married a lieutenant, João Antonio Boaventura, who died only a few years after they were married. [2] Vellasco was wealthy and had an independent income and was able to finance her own work. [3] [4] She was against women's exclusion from higher education in Brazil. [3]
Vellasco served as the editor and patron of O Jornal das Senhoras, a feminist magazine created in 1852 and first edited by Joana Paula Manso de Noronha. [5] [6] O Jornal das Senhoras covered the positive qualities of women, advocated for women's education and covered other topics of interest to women. [5] Another editor of the journal, with Vellasco, was Gervasia Nunenzia Pires dos Santos. [7] The journal continued until December 1855. [5] She also translated literary works. [2] She later published another journal, O Domingo, in 1874, [8] which defended and discussed the rights of women in Brazil. [9] [10]
On May 25, 1875, Vellasco died in Rio de Janeiro. [11] [12]
Vellasco was a member of the Imperial Council in Brazil and the founder and director of the Brazilian Dramatic Conservatory in Rio de Janeiro. [13]
Violante Atabalipa Ximenes de Bivar e Vellasco (December 1, 1817 – May 25, 1875) was a Brazilian feminist, writer and newspaper owner.
Vellasco was born on December 1, 1817, in São Salvador da Bahia. [1] As a young child, she was provided a good education and lived with her mother and grandfather while her father was in Rio de Janeiro. [1] The family eventually joined her father in Rio de Janeiro. [2] In 1845, Vellasco married a lieutenant, João Antonio Boaventura, who died only a few years after they were married. [2] Vellasco was wealthy and had an independent income and was able to finance her own work. [3] [4] She was against women's exclusion from higher education in Brazil. [3]
Vellasco served as the editor and patron of O Jornal das Senhoras, a feminist magazine created in 1852 and first edited by Joana Paula Manso de Noronha. [5] [6] O Jornal das Senhoras covered the positive qualities of women, advocated for women's education and covered other topics of interest to women. [5] Another editor of the journal, with Vellasco, was Gervasia Nunenzia Pires dos Santos. [7] The journal continued until December 1855. [5] She also translated literary works. [2] She later published another journal, O Domingo, in 1874, [8] which defended and discussed the rights of women in Brazil. [9] [10]
On May 25, 1875, Vellasco died in Rio de Janeiro. [11] [12]
Vellasco was a member of the Imperial Council in Brazil and the founder and director of the Brazilian Dramatic Conservatory in Rio de Janeiro. [13]