Ángel de Saavedra, duque de Rivas

Ángel
de Saavedra , duke de Rivas, (b. March
10, 1791, Córdoba, Spain—d. June 22,
1865, Madrid), Spanish poet, dramatist,
and politician, whose fame rests
principally on his play Don Álvaro, o la
fuerza del sino (“Don Álvaro, or the
Power of Fate”), which marked the
triumph of Romantic drama in Spain.
After
entering politics Saavedra was condemned
to death in 1823 for his extreme liberal
views. He fled to London and lived
subsequently in Italy, Malta, and
France, where he earned his living by
painting. During his exile he came under
that Romantic influence which, already
visible in El moro expósito (1834; “The
Foundling Moor”), was to triumph in his
Romances históricos (1841; “Historical
Romances”), both significant examples of
his Romantic poetry.
Returning to Spain after the amnesty of
1833, he presently inherited the title
of duke de Rivas and on March 22, 1835,
staged Don Álvaro, whose place in the
history of the Spanish theatre is
analogous to that of Victor Hugo’s drama
Hernani in France. The Italian composer
Giuseppe Verdi later used Don Álvaro as
the source for his opera La forza del
destino. Saavedra’s later dramas are
undistinguished. In 1836 he became
minister of the interior under Francisco
de Istúriz and in the following year was
again compelled to flee the country
owing to his conversion to conservative
opinions. Returning to Spain in 1838, he
entered the Senate and was subsequently
ambassador in Naples and Paris. He died
while serving as president of the
Spanish Royal Academy.