Hernani

French language

Published Feb. 4, 1987 by Éditions Larousse.

ISBN:
978-2-03-870058-9
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Hernani (full title: Hernani, ou l'Honneur Castillan) is a drama in rhyming alexandrines by the French romantic author Victor Hugo. The title originates from Hernani, a Spanish town in the Southern Basque Country, where Hugo's mother and her three children stopped on their way to General Hugo's place of residence.The play was given its premiere on 25 February 1830 by the Comédie-Française in Paris. Today, it is more remembered for the demonstrations which accompanied the first performance and for being the inspiration for Giuseppe Verdi's opera Ernani than it is for its own merits. Hugo had enlisted the support of fellow Romanticists such as Hector Berlioz and Théophile Gautier to combat the opposition of Classicists who recognised the play as a direct attack on their values. Hernani is used to describe the magnitude and elegance of Prince Prospero's masquerade in Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Masque of the Red …

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Intertextualidad

Menciones directas:
El Cantar de mio Cid, anónimo (España, ca. 1200).
La Eneida de Virgilio (Roma, 19 a.C.) (cita: "pendent opera interrupta minaeque murorum ingentes").
Mención al personaje Sancho Panza de Don Quijote de la Mancha de Miguel de Cervantes (España, 1615).
Mención a los escritores Martín Lutero (Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico, s. XVI), Conde de Mirabeau (Francia, s. XVIII), Abad de Aubignac (Francia, s. XVII), Jacques Cujas (Francia, s. XVI), Nicomedes Pastor Díaz y Corbelle (España, s. XIX), Pierre Corneille (Francia, s. XVII), Molière (Francia, s. XVII), Cornelio Agripa (Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico, s. XVI), Julio César (Roma, s. I a.C.), Francesco Petrarca (Italia, s. XIV)

Indirecta:
* Posible influencia de Romeo y Julieta de William Shakespeare (Inglaterra, 1595) en relación al quinto acto.