Miss Leonor de Mezerville with a copy of La Ilustración Guatemalteca
Photograph by Alberto G. Valdeavellano |
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Type | Biweekly magazine |
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Format | magazine |
Owner(s) | Arturo Síguere y Cía |
Founder(s) |
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Publisher | Arturo Síguere |
Editor | Rafael Spinola |
Opinion editor | Ramón A. Salazar |
Photo editor | Alberto G. Valdeavellano |
Founded | 1 July 1896 |
Political alignment | Liberal |
Language | Spanish |
Ceased publication | 15 June 1898 |
Headquarters | Ciudad de Guatemala, Guatemala |
Website | La Ilustración Guatemalteca |
La Ilustración Guatemalteca (Guatemalan Illustration) was a biweekly cultural magazine that was published in Guatemala from 1 July 1896 to 15 June 1898. At a time when only 5% of the Guatemalan population could read, this magazine had extended articles aimed for the society elite and described numerous episodes of the later years of the presidency of general José María Reina Barrios, especially the economic crisis that originated when coffee -principal export from Guatemala at the time- and silver international prices plummeted. It also describd the Exposición Centroamericana -Central American Exposition-, an event that Reina Barrios organized to showcast the Interoceanic railroad in Guatemala -at a time when the Panama Canal had not yet being built- and get Guatemala out of the crisis by means of international investors interested in move their products from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. The magazine presented a good amount of pictures made by Alberto G. Valdeavellano, a photography pioneer from Guatemala.
La Ilustración Guatemalteca appeared on 1 August 1896 aimed to entertain those who could read and were not involved in politics or religious issues. One of its main goals was to promote and inform about the Exposición Centroamericana, an event that then president Reina Barrios had organized at very large cost from the national treasure in order to show the technological advances made in Central America -mainly the Interoceanic Railroad- to potential investors from abroad.
Although it originally aimed not to take any side, it was openly liberal and anticlerical, following the official government policy in those days. It also took advantage of the free press guaranteed by president Reina Barrios, publishing accurate and alarming reports on the economic issues that affected Guatemala at the time due to the large investments in public infrastructure and the plummeting of coffee and silver international prices; it also reported the return of archbishop Ricardo Casanova y Estrada from his exile in Costa rica who was pardoned by general Reina Barrios after former president general Manuel Lisandro Barillas Bercián expelled him to Cuba in 1887; and finally, informed about the attempts and manoeuvers Reina Barrios made to extend his constitucional mandate beyond 1898 and all the criticism he got for doing that.