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Rosalia de Castro Park

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Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Rosalia de Castro Park
Phone:
+34 982 29 71 00

Hours:
Sunday11am - 6pm
Monday11am - 1:30pm, 5pm - 7:30pm
Tuesday11am - 1:30pm, 5pm - 7:30pm
Wednesday11am - 1:30pm, 5pm - 7:30pm
Thursday11am - 7:30pm
Friday11am - 7:30pm
Saturday11am - 7:30pm


María Rosalía Rita de Castro , was a Galician romanticist writer and poet. Writing in Galego, the Galician language, after the period known as the Séculos Escuros , she became an important figure of the Galician Romantic movement, known today as the Rexurdimento , along with Manuel Curros Enríquez and Eduardo Pondal. Her poetry is marked by saudade, an almost ineffable combination of nostalgia, longing and melancholy. She married Manuel Murguía, a member of the important literary group known as the Royal Galician Academy, historian, journalist and editor of Rosalía's books. The couple had seven children: Alexandra , Aura , twins Gala and Ovidio , Amara , Adriano and Valentina . Only two of Rosaía's children married, Aura in 1897 and Gala in 1922; neither they nor their siblings left any children, and thus, today there are no living descendants of Rosalía de Castro and her husband. Their son Ovidio was a promising painter, his career cut short by early death. Rosalía published her first collection of poetry in Galician, Cantares gallegos , on 17 May 1863. This date, 17 May, is now known as the Día das Letras Galegas , and commemorates Rosalía's achievement by dedicating, every year, this special day to a different writer, who must also write in the Galician language, since 1963. Día das Letras Galegas is an official holiday in the Autonomous Community of Galicia. Relative poverty and sadness marked Rosalía's life, in spite of this, she had a strong sense of commitment to the poor and to the defenseless. She was a strong opponent of authoritative abuse or abuse of authority and an ardent defender of women's rights. Rosalia suffered from uterine cancer and died in Padrón, province of A Coruña, Spain, on 15 July, 1885. She is buried in the Panteón de Galegos Ilustres, a pantheon in the Convent of San Domingos de Bonaval in Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
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