Juan Díaz Covarrubias


Juan Díaz Covarrubias was a Mexican writer and poet of liberal ideology. He was one of the Martyrs of Tacubaya who were executed during the War of the Reform in Mexico.

Biography

Diaz Covarrubias was born in Xalapa, Veracruz on 27 December 1837. His father, poet José de Jesús Díaz, had an artistic influence on him, since it was customary to hold tertulia at the home. In 1848 he moved with his family to Mexico City and enrolled in the to study philosophy and Latin. He became friends with law student Manuel Mateos —brother of — and Ignacio Manuel Altamirano. He also was a pupil of Ignacio Ramírez.
Despite his great interest in literature and poetry, in 1852 Diaz Covarrubias began to study for a career in medicine. He joined the Liberal Party and simultaneously published articles and poems in the newspapers El Monitor Republicano, El Siglo Diez y Nueve and the Diario de Avisos.
Hearing rumours of the imminent clash between liberal and conservative troops in Tacubaya, he went there to offer his medical services to the troops of Santos Degollado. The battle of Tacubaya resulted to be a victory for the conservative army commanded by Leonardo Márquez. After the battle General Miguel Miramón ordered the Liberal officials who had been apprehended to be executed. In an excess committed by the soldiers of Márquez, in addition to officials and soldiers, doctors and civilians were executed. Covarrubias and his friend Mateos died at the paredón in Tacubaya, Mexico City on 11 April 1859. The shooting of Díaz Covarrubias and the other Martyrs of Tacubaya was strongly criticized by in El Siglo Diez y Nueve. Manuel Acuña called Diaz Covarrubias "the Poet Martyr".
The town of San Juan Sugar in Hueyapan de Ocampo, Veracruz was named in his honour on 20 May 1938. Also Chalco de Díaz Covarrubias, municipal seat of the surrounding municipality of Chalco, added the surname of the poet to its name, as a tribute to his work.

Works

He belonged to the romanticism movement. and is considered one of the pioneers of the Mexican historical novel. In his short life, he wrote numerous poems, several tales and three novels:
In 1959, on the centenary of his death, the historian Clementina Díaz y de Ovando compiled his Complete Works.