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JUAN DONOSO See also: Marquis de Valdegamas (1809-1853), See also: Spanish author and diplomatist, was See also: born at See also: Valle de la See also: Serena (Extremadura) on the 6th of May 18o9, studied See also: law at Seville, and entered politics as an advanced liberal under the influence of See also: Quintana (q.v.)
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His views began to modify after the rising at La Granja, and this tendency towards conservatism, which became more marked on his See also: appointment as private secretary to the See also: Queen See also: Regent, finds expression in his Lecciones de derecho politico (1837)
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Alarmed by the proceedings of the French revolutionary party in 1848–1849, Donoso See also: Cortes issued his Ensayo sobre el catolicismo, el liberalismo, y el socialismo considerados en See also: sus principios fundamentales (1851), denouncing reason as the enemy of truth and liberalism as leading to social ruin
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He became ambassador at See also: Paris, and died there on the 3rd of May 1853
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The Ensayo has failed to arrest the See also: movement against which it was directed, and is weakened by its extravagant paradoxes; but, with all its rhetorical excesses, it remains the finest specimen of impassioned See also: prose published in See also: Spain during the 19th century
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Donoso Cortes' See also: works were collected in five volumes at See also: Madrid (1854–1855) under the editorship of Gavino Tejado
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