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・ José de Antequera y Castro
・ José de Aquino Pereira
・ José de Armas
・ José de Armendáriz, 1st Marquis of Castelfuerte
・ José de Avelar Rebelo
・ José de Azlor y Virto de Vera
・ José de Barboza
・ José de Bustamante y Guerra
・ José de Canterac
・ José de Carabantes
・ José de Carvajal y Hué
・ José de Carvajal y Lancáster
・ José de Cascante
・ José de Castro
・ José de Castro y Orozco
José de Cañizares
・ José de Cieza
・ José de Córdoba y Ramos
・ José de Córdoba y Rojas
・ José de Côrtes Duarte
・ José de Diego
・ José de Elduayen, 1st Marquis of the Pazo de la Merced
・ José de Escandón, 1st Count of Sierra Gorda
・ José de Espronceda
・ José de Eusebio
・ José de Fontes Pereira
・ José de Freitas
・ José de Freitas Ribeiro
・ José de Garro
・ José de Gregorio


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José de Cañizares : ウィキペディア英語版
José de Cañizares

José de Cañizares y Suárez (4 July 1676 – 4 September 1750) was a Spanish playwright. Cavalry officer, public official, and author of around one hundred works, he was one of the most important dramatists of the early 18th century.
==Life==
The life of José de Cañizares spans the transition between Spain's 17th and 18th centuries. Born in Madrid on 4 July 1676, and baptized ten days later in the church of San Martín, Cañizares had his roots in the countryside south of the capital. His parents were by birth ''manchegos'', from Almagro, Ciudad Real, in the region known as La Mancha. Don José was named after his father. His mother was Doña Jerónima Suárez de Toledo y la Caballería. Both parents belonged to the minor nobility or hidalgo class, which their son later portrayed with humor in many of his plays.
Sometime in his late teens or early twenties, Cañizares entered the military service. In the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714) he served with a unit of heavily armored cavalry, fighting on the side of Felipe V. By 1711, he had attained the rank of Lieutenant Captain, and also, due to his family background, the patronage of the Duke of Osuna, and his own growing fame as author of comedias in the Golden Age tradition, enjoyed a place at Felipe's court.
In 1702 Cañizares found himself appointed by the Magistrate of Madrid as ''fiscal de comedias'', a member of the Board of Theatrical Censors, an office which he exercised in the intervals between combat when the king and his armies returned to the capital. This five-member committee included the Magistrate and his appointee (Cañizares), plus the Vicar of Madrid and his two appointees.
Every play proposed for public performance in Madrid had to be submitted to this committee. Each of the officials in turn must approve the play or it would be banned from the stage. As the years went by, Cañizares submitted many of his own plays for approval. As he gained experience in his craft, the board occasionally called upon him to revise a classic Golden Age play so that it would comply with the moral and political views of early 18th century Spain.
His signed approbations are to be found on manuscripts dating as early as 1702. Receipts for his annual salary as ''fiscal'' are found dating as early as 1708. He supplemented his military and civil service incomes by composing 2-4 major plays per year up through 1734.
Of Cañizares' family life, we know only what the public records, as cited chiefly by Cristóbal Pérez Pastor, reveal. Sometime prior to 1733, Cañizares retired from the military and contracted marriage with Doña Lorenza, daughter of Don Gregorio Alvarez de Losada and Doña Phelipa Osorio de Redín, both residents of Madrid. Doña Lorenza was the widow of Don Andrés González Valdés y Salgado, with whom she had had a son, Pedro. On 16 November 1733, she gave birth to Cañizares' son and heir, named José after his father and grandfather. She also bore him a daughter, Jerónima, presumably named after Cañizares' mother. Pérez Pastor notes the daughter's birth as after 1734. The family residence was located in the Calle de las Veneras, opposite the Plazuela de Santo Domingo.
The year 1747 marked a change in Cañizares' life. Now in his seventies, he took a position in the counting house of the Duke of Osuna. On 25 November, he and his wife made a will, giving her custody of the children in the event of his death. He received his salary as ''fiscal'' for the last time on 10 September 1750. The balance for the remaining six months was collected by his widow.
Don José de Cañizares died on 4 September 1750 at his Madrid residence, and was buried in the Dominican monastery of El Rosario. His works lived on, continuing to be performed in Madrid and the provinces through the remainder of the 18th century and on into the first few years of the 19th, with occasional revivals up to the present day.

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