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GONZALO See also: Spanish historian, was See also: born at See also: Madrid in See also: August 1478
.
Educated ht the See also: court of See also: Ferdinand and Isabella, in his thirteenth
See also: year he became page to their son, the Infante See also: Don See also: John, was
See also: present at the siege of See also: Granada, and there saw See also: Columbus previous to his voyage to See also: America
.
On the See also: death of See also: Prince John (4th of See also: October 1497), See also: Oviedo went to See also: Italy, and there acted as secretary to Gonzalo See also: Fernandez de Cordoba
.
In 1514 he was appointed supervisor of gold-smeltings at See also: San Domingo, and on his return to See also: Spain in 1523 was appointed historiographer of the Indies
.
He paid five more visits to America before his death, which took place at See also: Valladolid in 1557
.
Besides a See also: romance of chivalry entitled Claribalte (1519) Oviedo wrote two extensive See also: works of permanent value: La General y natural historia de See also: las Indias and Las Quinquagenas de la nobleza de Espana
.
The former See also: work was first issued at
.
Toledo (1526) in the See also: form of a See also: summary entitled La Natural hystoria de las Indias; the first See also: part of La Historia general de las Indias appeared at Seville in 1535; but the See also: complete work was not published till 1851-1855, when it was edited by J
.
A. de los Rios for the Spanish See also: Academy of See also: History
.
Though written in a diffuse See also: style, it embodies a mass of curious information collected at first See also: hand, and. the incomplete Seville edition was widely read in the See also: English and French versions published by See also: Eden and Poleur respectively in 1555 and 1556
.
Las Casas describes it as " containing almost as many lies as pages," and Oviedo undoubtedly puts the most favourable interpretation on the proceedings of his countrymen; but, apart from a patriotic See also: bias which is too obvious to be misleading, his narrative is both trustworthy and interesting
.
In his Quinquagenas he indulges in much lively gossip concerning eminent contemporaries; this collection of quaint, moralizing anecdotes was first published at Madrid in 188o, under the editorship of See also: Vicente de la Fuente
.
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