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Sabino Arana : ウィキペディア英語版
Sabino Arana

Sabino Policarpo Arana Goiri, self-styled as Arana ta Goiri'taŕ Sabin, (January 26, 1865 – November 25, 1903), was a SpanishBasque writer. He was the founder of the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV) and father of Basque nationalism.
He died in Sukarrieta at the age of 38 after falling ill with Addison's disease during time spent in prison. He had been charged with treason for attempting to send a telegram to President Theodore Roosevelt, in which he praised the United States for helping Cuba gain independence from Spain.
==Background==

One of the consequences of the First Carlist War was the substitution of the Ancien Régime Basque home rule (''fueros'') by a limited still relevant autonomy. A majority in Navarre and the rest of the Basque districts supported the pretender to the Spanish crown Carlos V for his support to the their institutions and laws (characterized for being (more liberal than elsewhere ) in Spain). However, they were defeated in 1839, and Navarre, Biscay, Álava and Gipuzkoa were integrated into the Spanish customs system. Basque industrialists profited from privatization of exploitations and the Spanish captive market with the iron ore and the Bessemer converter, and Biscay became "the iron California". Workers from all of Spain were attracted to the area as labourers for the burgeoning industry.
Arana was born in a ''jauntxo'' ("petty noble") family from Abando, a neighbourhood that had been recently incorporated into the city of Bilbao as the new extension for the growth of the industrial era. Abando was a Basque speaking town, but following the attitudes of the elites in the area of Bilbao during this period, Basque was not transmitted to Arana's siblings within the family. Abando and its port were at the centre of the ''Zamacolada'' uprising against attempts by the Spanish premier Manuel Godoy to recruit Basques for the Spanish army (1804), a ''contrafuero'' or breach of basic Basque legislation.
In the aftermath of the Second Carlist War (1876), Arana attended the Jesuit School of Orduña along with his brother Luis (1876-1881). Orduña became a hotspot and meeting point for the pro-''fueros'', primeval Basque nationalists concerned with (the loss of the Basque native institutions ). Arana claimed that he had a quasi-religious revelation on Easter, 1882,〔It was the origin of the Basque Fatherland Day. José Luis de la Granja Sáinz, however, claims that the revelation was dated on Easter in 1932 after Arana's death, when the EAJ-PNV established the commemoration. José Luis de la Granja Sáinz, ''Historia y política: Ideas, procesos y movimientos sociales'', ISSN 1575-0361, Nº 15, 2006 , pags. 65–116〕 one that he communicated to his brother Luis Arana. From then he devoted himself to the nationalist cause of Biscay, later extended to the Basque Country.

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