Gabriel Pereira de Castro
Gabriel Pereira de Castro (1571-1632) was a Portuguese priest, lawyer and poet.
Biography
Gabriel Pereira de Castro was born in Braga on 7 February 1571. He became a priest there. Then he studied law at the University of Coimbra.[1] Later he was a professor there.[2] He died on 18 October 1632 in Lisbon.
Works
Gabriel Pereira de Castro wrote some books about law. He is however known chiefly for his epic poem Ulisseia ou Lisboa Edificada (Ulisseia or Lisbon Built). It consists of ten books and is written in ottava rima.[3] Its form is typical for Renaissance epic poems. The poem imitates The Lusiads by Luís Vaz de Camões. It is about the founding of the town of Lisbon by Ulysses (Odysseus).[4] The book was published posthumously by poet's brother Luís Pereira de Castro in 1636.[1] He wrote poems in Latin and Spanish, too.[1] Ulisseia is considered to be one of the most significant Portuguese epic after Camões.[5]
References
- Gabriel Pereira de Castro at Projecto Vercial
- Malcolm Jack, Lisbon: City of the Sea: A History, p. 3.
- Pereira de Castro, Gabriel. Ulyssea, ou Lisboa Edificada.
- Encyclopædia Britannica 11 Ed. Vol. 22.
- William Hayley, An essay on epic poetry : in five epistles to the Revd. Mr. Mason. With notes, London 1782, p. 277.