Numa Pompilio Llona
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Guayaquil, Ecuador
Guayaquil, Ecuador
Numa Pompilio Llona Echeverri | |
|---|---|
| Born | March 5, 1832 Guayaquil, Ecuador |
| Died | October 10, 1907 (aged 75) Guayaquil, Ecuador |
| Occupation | Poet, Diplomat |
| Literary movement | Romanticism |
| Spouse | Enriqueta Marchena y Bentín, Lastenia Larriva |
Numa Pompilio Llona Echeverri (March 5, 1832 – April 5, 1907) was an Ecuadorian poet, journalist, educator, diplomat, and philosopher.
Numa Pompilio Llona was widely read in his time, but today he is mostly forgotten.[1]
His father was the Ecuadorian lawyer Dr. Manuel Leocadio de Llona y Rivera, and his mother was Mercedes Echeverri Llados from Colombia. Born in Guayaquil, Numa Pompilio Llona completed primary school in Cali, Colombia, and completed secondary school in Lima, Peru.[2] He received a law degree at the Universidad San Marcos in Lima, Peru.
Career
From 1854 to 1859, Numa Pompilo Llona was the literary editor of the Peruvian newspaper El Comercio. In 1882 he was appointed the rector of the University of Guayaquil, where he held the professorship of aesthetics and general literature. He also served as a diplomat in Spain (1860–62), France, Italy (1864), and Colombia (1884), and formed friendships with many famous poets and writers of the time, such as Victor Hugo, George Sand, Alphonse de Lamartine, Cienfuegos Manzini, Núñez de Arce, Leopard and others. He was also the director of the Municipal Museum and Library of Guayaquil (1904 to 1907).
Marriage
Numa Pompilio Llona was married to Enriqueta Marchena y Bentín, and after her death, married the Peruvian poet and journalist Lastenia Larriva.