Joaquín Acosta (born Dec. 29, 1799/1800, Guaduas, New Granada [now in Colombia]—died Feb. 21, 1852, Guaduas, Colom.) was a Colombian scientist, historian, and statesman who sought to preserve knowledge of his country’s early history.
Acosta entered a military career in 1819, becoming an officer in the patriot army under Simón Bolívar. He subsequently became a member of virtually all the scientific and civic societies that were founded in Colombia in his lifetime and contributed generously to the national library and university. On various occasions he was a general, diplomatic envoy, secretary of foreign affairs, and member of Congress; in 1842 he was ambassador in Washington, D.C.
In 1841 he first expressed his intent to reprint some of the chronicles originating during the period of Spanish discovery and colonization, but he abandoned his plan on recognizing that the accounts were incomplete, factually inaccurate, and archaic in language. To fill what he considered a civic need, he composed his Compendio histórico del descubrimiento y colonización de la Nueva Granada en el siglo décimosexto (“Historical Compendium of the Discovery and Colonization of New Granada in the 16th Century”), which was published in Paris in 1848. This work covers in 20 chapters the eventful years from Christopher Columbus’ earliest landings and explorations on the mainland in 1498 to the death in 1579 of the conqueror of New Granada, Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada. The account is based partly on Acosta’s findings in Colombian archives, partly on his research in the Archives of the Indies in Spain, and partly on his travels throughout Colombia during military operations. Acosta also wrote many shorter historical and scientific works.