Elegías de varones ilustres de Indias (transl. Elegies of illustrious men from the Indies) is an epic poem written in the late sixteenth century by Juan de Castellanos.[1][2]
Author | Juan de Castellanos |
---|---|
Language | Spanish |
Subject | Spanish conquest of Colombia Spanish conquest of Venezuela indigenous groups in Colombia indigenous groups in Venezuela |
Genre | Poem |
Set in | Colombia, Venezuela |
Publication date | Late 16th century |
Publication place | Colombia |
Pages | 567 |
Text | Elegías de varones ilustres de Indias online |
Description
editThe work gives a detailed account of the colonization of the Caribbean and the territories in present-day Colombia and Venezuela. It describes the settlement companies and foundation of cities as well as vivid depictions of indigenous cultures, such as the Muisca, and natural history, making this text an important early chronicle of the Spanish colonization of the Americas. Besides its historical value, it is notable for the use of multiple Renaissance-era literary styles, including the elegy, epic, pilgrimage tale, pastoral romance, chivalric romance and other literary forms.
The book contains one of the earliest descriptions of the New World species potato (Solanum colombianum), an unknown plant in the Old World before the discovery of the Americas by Europeans.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Becco, Horacio Jorge (1991), Crónicas de la Naturaleza del Nuevo Mundo, Cuadernos Lagoven, Lagoven, S.A. Caracas, p. 148, ISBN 980-259-407-5
- ^ Hernández Caballero, Serafín (1998), Gran Enciclopedia de Venezuela, Editorial Globe, C.A. Caracas, ISBN 980-6427-00-9
- ^ Rodriguez, Francisco Javier, Interpretación del 'Las Elegías' de Juan de Castellanos, p. 39, retrieved 2016-08-26
External links
edit