Jump to content

Francisco Agustín Tárrega

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Francisco Agustín Tárrega (c. 1555 – 7 November 1602) was a Spanish clergyman, poet and playwright.

Biografía

[edit]

After graduating in the Arts from the University of Valencia in 1575, he went on to obtain his doctorate in Canon law from the University of Salamanca in 1578.[1]

Tárrega was of the co-founders, in 1591, of the Academia de los Nocturnos (Literary Society of the Night Revelers), one of the first academia literarias created in Spain,[1] where he participated under the psuedonym of Miedo ('Fear').[1]

Works

[edit]

As a participant of the Nocturnos, and writing under the pseudonym Miedo, Tárrega wrote several tens of poems and works of prose. His comedias, all dating from after the mid-1580s,[1] were published posthumously, with El Prado de Valencia (The Meadow of Valencia)[2] being a heroic drama[2] and the remainder, cloak-and-sword plays.[2]

Plays

[edit]
  • El Prado de Valencia (c. 1588[1] – 1590–91?[2])
  • Las suertes trocadas y torneo venturoso[1]
  • La enemiga favorable (before 1606)
  • La duquesa constante (1596?[2])
  • El esposo fingido[1]
  • La fundación de la Orden de Nuestra Señora de la Merced (c. 1602)[1]

References

[edit]