Emilio Prud'Homme
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Emilio Prud'Homme y Maduro (August 20, 1856- July 21, 1932) was a Dominican Republic, Dominican lawyer, writer, and educator. Prud'Homme is known for having authored the lyrics of the National Anthem of the Dominican Republic, Dominican national anthem. He is also attributed with helping establish a national identity, for what was at the time a nascent republic.


Biography

Emilio Prud'Homme was born in San Felipe de Puerto Plata, Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic on August 20, 1856, to Ana Maduro and Gen. Pedro Prud'Homme. He had a brother, Lorenzo Fenelón Prud'Homme. Prud'Homme excelled in teaching, an activity to which he devoted most of his life. He was a great collaborator and disciple of Eugenio María de Hostos and taught at "Perserevancia of Azua" and also in the "Liceo Dominicano" in 1892 and was director of the "Normal School#Latin America, Normal School", a teaching college founded by Hostos in 1880. He married Manuela Batista on August 19, 1880, and had one daughter: Ana Emilia Prud'Homme.


Politics

Prud'Homme was a legislator in the Congress of the Dominican Republic. He served as the List of Presidents of the Chamber of Deputies of the Dominican Republic, President of Chamber of Deputies of the Dominican Republic in 1900 and 1901. He also served as the Secretary of Justice and Social Instruction in the administration of Francisco Henríquez y Carvajal. Prud’Homme was publicly critical of the United States occupation of the Dominican Republic (1916–1924), United States occupation and as a result was forced to resign his teaching post. As a result, he pursued a career as a lawyer.


Writing career

Most of his literary works were directed to the exaltation of patriotic values, respect and love for the defense of sovereignty and national independence. His Masterpiece, magnum opus being the National Anthem of the Dominican Republic, Dominican National Anthem, which was written in 1883, with music by José Rufino Reyes y Siancas. He later modified his work in 1897, when it began to be used at official state functions. Yet, it was not officially the National Anthem until 1934, when then dictator Rafael Leónidas Trujillo consecrated it as a national symbol and made mandatory its use at state and public functions.


Bibliography

* "El 16 de agosto" ("The 16th of August") * "A la juventud dominicana" ("To the Dominican youth") * "A mi Patria" ("To my homeland") * "Déjame soñar" ("Let me dream") * "Mi tierra mía" ("My land mine") * "National Anthem of the Dominican Republic, Himno Nacional Dominicano" * "Gloria a la idea" ("Glory be to the idea") * "Contra hibridismo" ("Against hybridism") * "A Bolívar" ("To Bolívar") * "Canto a América" ("Song of America")


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Prudhomme, Emilio 1856 births 1932 deaths 20th-century Dominican Republic lawyers Dominican Republic politicians Dominican Republic male writers Dominican Republic people of French descent National anthem writers People from Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic Presidents of the Chamber of Deputies of the Dominican Republic White Dominicans