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Antonio de Zayas : ウィキペディア英語版 | Antonio de Zayas Antonio de Zayas-Fernández de Córdoba y Beaumont, Duke of Amalfi (1871–1945) was a Spanish diplomat and writer. As a poet, he is classified into the movement known as Hispanic Modernismo. He was born in Madrid on 3 September 1871 and died in Málaga in 1945. ==Diplomatic career== An aristocrat of Granada origins, Zayas was a friend of the Manuel and Antonio Machado brothers and actor Ricardo Calvo and was active in the Modernism against academicism and nineteenth-century rhetoric. He protested with Valle-Inclán, Villaespesa and many others, over the Nobel awarded to Jose Echegaray and made friends with Juan Valera and Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo, for whom he wrote a eulogy when he died in 1912. Around 1907, he translated ''Los Trofeos'' (the Trophies) (1893) by Jose Maria de Heredia, the most important book from this aesthetic. As a diplomat he lived for some time in Istanbul, a city to which he devoted the memoirs ''A orillas del Bósforo, Estocolmo, San Petersburgo, Bucarest, Berlín y México'' (On the banks of the Bosphorus, Stockholm, St Petersburg, Bucharest, Berlin and Mexico). He received the Gran Cruz de la Estrella Polar from the hands of the King of Sweden, and also the Gran Cruz de la Corona, a proposal by the Minister of Romania. He was stationed in Buenos Aires in 1926, in February 1927 but had to cease duties suddenly for protesting along with the aviator Ramon Franco for the establishment of a regular airline between France and Argentina, which Spain had long delayed. This caused Franco to be arrested and Zayas was unposted. He spent the Civil War in the Royal Legation of Romania, where he was a diplomat.
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