Victor Balaguer
- In full:
- Victor Balaguer i Cirera
- Died:
- Jan. 14, 1901, Madrid (aged 76)
- Also Known As:
- Victor Balaguer i Cirera
- Political Affiliation:
- Liberal Party
Victor Balaguer (born Dec. 11, 1824, Barcelona, Spain—died Jan. 14, 1901, Madrid) was a Catalan poet and Spanish politician and historian.
Balaguer was a precocious youth; his first dramatic essay, Pépin el Jorobado; o, el hijo de Carlomagno (1838; “Pippin the Hunchbacked; or, The Son of Charlemagne”), was staged in Barcelona when he was 14. At 19 he was publicly “crowned” after the production of his second play, Don Enrique el Dadivoso (1843; “Don Henry the Bountiful”); several other Romantic historical plays followed. From 1843 to 1868 he led the Liberal Party in Barcelona and did much to promote the growth of local patriotism in Catalonia.
In 1857 Balaguer wrote his first poem in Catalan and thereafter adopted the sometime pseudonym of Trovador de Montserrat (“Troubadour of Montserrat”); in 1861 he was proclaimed mestre en gay saber (“master of poetical knowledge”), in a revival of an honour given to medieval troubadours. He moved to Madrid to pursue a political life and, during the troubled times centring on the interrupted reign of Isabella II, was alternately in and out of favour of those in power. He finally put aside Catalan nationalism, took the side of the dynasty, and eventually rose, through several offices, to the position of senator in the Spanish legislature.
In his later years Balaguer sought to explain away the severe criticism of Castile that he had earlier expressed in his Historia de Cataluña y de la Corona de Aragón (1860–63; “History of Catalonia and of the Crown of Aragon”). This narrative, like his Historia política y literaria de los trovadores (1878–79; “Political and Literary History of the Troubadours”), was politically partial in favour of Catalan nationalism and was also often factually inaccurate. As a poet, Balaguer was reminiscent of Manuel José Quintana in his patriotic songs, of José Zorrilla y Moral in his historical ballads, and of Lord Byron in his lyrical poems.