Marcelino Domingo Sanjuán (26 April 1884 – 2 March 1939)[1] was a Spanish teacher, journalist, and politician who served as a minister several times during the government of the Second Spanish Republic.
Marcelino Domingo | |
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Marcel·lí Domingo | |
Personal details | |
Born | 26 April 1884 Tortosa, Spain |
Died | 2 March 1939 Toulouse, France | (aged 54)
Political party | Catalan Republican Party Radical Socialist Republican Party |
Other political affiliations | Republican Left |
Occupation | Politician, journalist, teacher |
Biography
editEarly life and political career
editBorn in Tarragona,[1] he obtained the title of a teacher in the city in 1903. In the same year, he moved to Tortosa, where he began to teach and came into contact with republican cliques. In Tortosa, he directed republican newspaper El Pueblo.[2]
His political career began in 1909 when he was elected a republican councillor for the Tortosa City Council. His influence in Republican groups was consolidated when he joined the General Council of the Republican Nationalist Federal Union (UFNR) and his subsequent election as a deputy in Cortes in the 1914 elections. However, he would leave the UFNR as a result of the failure of the electoral alliance with the radicals of Alejandro Lerroux in the 1914 elections.[3]
Domingo was linked to CNT.[4] During his journalism career, he came to direct the Barcelona newspaper La Lucha , and was editor of the newspaper La Publicidad .[5] During the Spanish crisis of 1917, he would publish a famous article in La Lucha, "¿Qué espera el Rey?",[6] in which he harshly criticized the monarchy.
His political activity increased during the Restoration and the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera. In 1915, he participated in the creation of the Autonomist Republican Bloc, an organization that failed, and two years later he would be one of the founders of the Catalan Republican Party .[3] He was one of the main figures of the Assembly of Parliamentarians and of the preparation of the 1917 Spanish general strike led by PSOE and UGT, among others. Domingo was the main advocate of the autonomy proposal for Catalonia, rejected by the monarchical Cortes in 1918; he also promoted the ephemeral republican platform Left Alliance, which would include PSOE and various republican groups.
In 1928, he published his essay Libertad y Autoridad in the Javier Morata Pedreño Vanguard Library collection in Madrid. In 1930, this publishing house also published his work ¿Qué espera el Rey?.
Second Republic
editIn July 1929, together with Álvaro de Albornoz, Marcelino Domingo founded the Radical Socialist Republican Party,[1] an organization from which he participated in 1934, together with Manuel Azaña from Republican Action and Santiago Casares Quiroga from Autonomous Galician Republican Organization, to form the Republican Left of Catalonia.
Considered by Antonio Checa Godoy as the "inspirer" of the publication Diario de Tarragona , the publication would come to support the electoral candidacies headed by Marcelino Domingo on several occasions. He was elected deputy for Barcelona district in the 1931 general elections.[7] In the 1933 elections, however, he failed to recover his seat. He would once again become deputy for Barcelona in the 1936 elections.[8]
Marcelino Domingo was Minister of Public Instruction during the First Biennium of the Republic, between April and December 1931. During his time as minister, he took significant measures such as restricting religious education, authorizing bilingualism in schools in Catalonia, and creating a program for the construction of new schools.[9] After his dismissal from office, he would be replaced by Fernando de los Ríos.[10] Domingo would serve as Minister of Agriculture between December 1931 and June 1933, and again between June and September 1933. He would return to Public Instruction during the first government of the Popular Front, between February and May 1936.[11]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c Samaniego Boneu, Mercedes (1977). La política educativa de la Segunda República durante el bienio azañista (in Spanish). Madrid: C.S.I.C. Escuela de Historia Moderna. ISBN 84-00-03633-6. OCLC 3612979.
- ^ Emilio, Navarro (1915). Historia crítica de los hombres del republicanismo catalán en la última década : (1905-1914) (in Spanish). Ortega & Artís. OCLC 802572730.
- ^ a b Germain, Gerard González (2012). Epigrafía hispánica falsa del primer renacimiento español : una contribución a la historia ficticia peninsular. Joan Carbonell i Manils, Arthur Freeman, Janet Ing Freeman (1st ed.). Bellaterra. ISBN 978-84-490-2984-4. OCLC 830690644.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Hens Porras, Antonio (2004). Españoles del exilio, 1939. Córdoba: Diputación Provincial de Córdoba, Delegación de Cultura. ISBN 84-8154-093-5. OCLC 170062176.
- ^ Checa Godoy, Antonio (1989). Prensa y partidos politicos durante la II republica (1 ed.). Salamanca: Universidad de Salamanca. ISBN 84-7481-521-5. OCLC 20811278.
- ^ Tuñón de Lara, Manuel (2000). La España del siglo XX. Madrid: Akal Ediciones. ISBN 84-460-1105-0. OCLC 50665722.
- ^ Checa Godoy, Antonio (2006). El ejercicio de la libertad : la prensa española en el Sexenio Revolucionario (1867-1874). Biblioteca Nueva. ISBN 84-9742-559-6. OCLC 86077792.
- ^ "Antonio Checa, que anuncia un nuevo plan estratégico, elegido por unanimidad presidente del CAA". Asociación de la Prensa de Almería (in European Spanish). 15 July 2019.
- ^ Alvarez Lázaro, Pedro F. (2001). Cien años de educación en España : en torno a la creación del Ministerio de Instrucción Pública y Bellas Artes. Fundación BBVA. ISBN 84-369-3429-6. OCLC 851209215.
- ^ Aguilera Sastre, Juan (2002). El debate sobre el teatro nacional en España (1900-1939) : ideología y estética. Centro de Documentación Teatral. ISBN 84-87583-53-9. OCLC 248980406.
- ^ Urquijo y Goitia, José Ramón (2008). Gobiernos y ministros españoles en la Edad Contemporánea. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. ISBN 978-84-00-08737-1. OCLC 434694133.
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