Pedro Francisco Bonó
This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Bonó and the second or maternal family name is Mejía.
Pedro Francisco Bonó y Mejía (October 18, 1828 – September 13, 1906) was a Dominican politician, sociologist and intellectual. He is credited with being the first Dominican sociologist.
Bonó was born in 1828, to Joseph Bonó (a ranchman and trader of Italian origin) and Inés Mejía y Port. His maternal grandmother, Doña Eugénie Port, a native of Brittany (North-Western France) who had large plantations and fortune in the Saint-Domingue until the outbreak of the Haitian Revolution, taught him the French language and fashioned him intellectually.[1]
Publications
- El Montero (1856)
- Apuntes para los Cuatro Ministerios de la República (1857)
- Apuntes sobre las Clases Trabajadoras Dominicanas (1881)
- Congreso Extraparlamentario (1895)
- Epistolario
- Ensayos Sociohistóricos
- Actuación Pública
- Papeles de Pedro Francisco Bonó (Works collected by Emilio Rodríguez Demorizi, 1963)
References
- ↑ GUERRERO SÁNCHEZ, José Guillermo (July–December 2006). "Bonó: Precursor de la Historia Social Dominicana" (pdf). Clío (in Spanish). Santo Domingo: Academia Dominicana de la Historia (172): 180, 200. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.