Teófilo Dias | |
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A photograph depicting Dias
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Born | Teófilo Odorico Dias de Mesquita 8 November 1854 Caxias, Maranhão, Empire of Brazil |
Died | 29 March 1889 São Paulo City, São Paulo, Brazil |
(aged 34)
Occupation | Poet, journalist, lawyer |
Nationality | Brazilian |
Alma mater | University of São Paulo |
Literary movement | Post-romanticism; Realism; Parnassianism |
Notable works | Fanfarras |
Spouse | Gabriela Frederica Ribeiro de Andrada |
Relatives | Gonçalves Dias |
Teófilo Odorico Dias de Mesquita (November 8, 1854 – March 29, 1889) was a Brazilian poet, journalist and lawyer, nephew of Gonçalves Dias.
He is the patron of the 36th chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters.
The literary critic Alfredo Bosi considers his 1882 work Fanfarras to have launched the Parnassian movement in Brazilian literature.
Teófilo Dias was born in 1854, to Odorico Antônio de Mesquita and Joana Angélica Dias de Mesquita (who was the sister of poet Gonçalves Dias). His initial schooling happened in São Luís, at the Instituto de Humanidades.
Moving to Rio de Janeiro, he was lodged in a convent for two years (1875–1876) and prepared to ingress at a Law course. In Rio, he met many influential people, such as Alberto de Oliveira, Artur de Oliveira, Aluísio Azevedo, Benjamin Constant Botelho de Magalhães, José do Patrocínio and Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis.
In 1881, he finished the Law course at the Faculdade de Direito da Universidade de São Paulo. As a journalist, he wrote for the newspapers A Província de São Paulo, A República and José Veríssimo's Revista Brasileira.
He was also a teacher of Philosophic Grammar and French in Colégio Aquino.