Isaías Gamboa

Isaías Gamboa
Born
Isaías Gamboa Herrera

(1872-12-12)December 12, 1872
DiedJuly 23, 1904(1904-07-23) (aged 31)
MonumentsIsaias Gamboa Park & Statue
NationalityColombian
Occupation(s)Poet, Educator
Notable workTierra Nativa
Parents
  • Mateo Gamboa Llanos (father)
  • Maria Teresa Herrera Cordoba (mother)

Isaías Gamboa Herrera (December 12, 1872 in Cali – July 23, 1904 in El Callao) was a Colombian poet and educator from Cali.[1]

Early years

[edit]

Isaias was brought up in a traditional Colombian family consisting of Mateo Gamboa Llanos and Maria Teresa Herrera Córdoba, a mother who instilled ideals of liberty and justice, ideals which would influence him as a writer and educator. He shared these ideals with his older brother, Francisco Gamboa Herrera, who migrated to El Salvador and became the first education minister, founder of the public school system in the country and the first school for teachers.

His childhood was developed among the green landscapes of El Mameyal, just outside the city of Cali, that inspired his posthumous novel "Tierra Nativa" written in Santiago de Chile.

He attended elementary school in Santa Librada, founded by General Francisco de Paula Santander in 1822. Additionally received private lessons in grammar and literature from Alcides Isaacs, brother of famous writer Jorge Isaacs, author of La Maria.

El Salvador and Chile

[edit]

He followed the footsteps of his brother Francisco to El Salvador in 1893 where he published his first poems. He was very active in literary circles and was an editor of the magazine "El Figaro" which appeared in 1894-5. Roque Baldovinos, Ricardo (2009). "Para una filosofía del hecho menudo: Ambrogi y la crónica modernista". Antología del pensamiento crítico salvadoreño contemporáneo: 239–266. JSTOR j.ctvfjd0vt.12. Retrieved 2023-01-30.

After spending time in Costa Rica he migrated in 1901 to Santiago de Chile where he became a well-known poet, publishing poems in literary magazines and participating in Poetic Festivals with his poem "Ante el mar", that made him famous. He is cited in the public education curriculum in Chile.

He became ill and decided to go back home to see his mother one last time and boarded a ship in Valparaiso but due to his deteriorating health he was disembarked in El Callao the port of the city of Lima, Peru where he died in the Hospital de Guadalupe on July 23, 1904.

Tributes

[edit]

The city of Cali decided ten years after his death to bring his remains and commissioned a delegation that brought his coffin home and was buried in the Capilla de San Antonio.

Statue of Isaías Gamboa.

A statue was erected in a small park named after the poet close to the San Antonio church. A Public Library was dedicated in his name [2] and a anthology of his poems was published in Santiago de Chile, selected and edited with critical notes by Julio Molina Nunez [3] and in Cali in 2001.

At the centenary of his birth, in July 2004, the "Festival de Poesía Isaís Gamboa" was held in Cali in memory of the poet and the book "Los Gamboa: Una Dinastia de Poetas" was published by the poet Hugo Cuevas-Mohr and the historian Vicente Perez Silva.[4] A videoseries with the same name was developed in 2018 conmemorating the more than 36 poets and writers of the Gamboa family, including an episode about Isaias Gamboa.[5]

Works

[edit]

Poetry Books

[edit]
  • Mis Poesias, Ediciones Nascimento (1929)
  • Obra Poetica (2001)

Novels

[edit]
  • Tierra Nativa (1st edition "El Imparcial", 1904; 2nd ed. 1944; 3rd ed. 2001) - The audio book[6] appeared in 2023 in a podcast.

Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es:Isaías Gamboa; see its history for attribution.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Isaias Gamboa". cuevas-mohr.com. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  2. ^ "Biblioteca Pública Isaías Gamboa". cali.gov.co. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  3. ^ "Los Gamboa". cuevas-mohr.com. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  4. ^ "Poesias". cbiblio.com. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  5. ^ "Dinastia de Poetas: Isaias Gamboa". imdb.com. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  6. ^ "Tierra Nativa de Isaías Gamboa". podbean.com. Retrieved 2023-03-18.