in Richmond, and exhibited a statuette of Robert E. Lee. He made several ideal heads, among them " The Samaritan Woman " and " Penitent
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Thief," which were admired for their facial ex- pression, and several portrait busts of southern leaders, including Gen. Pierre G. T. Beauregard, Gen. James E. B. Stuart, " Stonewall " Jackson, Com. Matthew F. Maury, and Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, a colossal head of Humboldt, a head of Beethoven, a portrait bust of Edwin Booth, and " Grief," a marble female figure. He was finally given the commission to execute the marble figure of Gen. Robert E. Lee (see illustration), in the mausoleum attached to the chapel of Washing- ton and Lee university at Lexington, Va. This is among the finest pieces of sculpture of the kind in the United States. Another of his works is a group representing Andromache and Astyanax.
VALENTINE, Milton (val-en'-tine), theologian,
b. near Uniontown, Carroll co., Md., 1 Jan., 1825.
He was graduated at Pennsylvania college, Gettys-
burg, in 1850, and at the theological seminary there
in 1852, and was ordained to the Lutheran minis-
try by the synod of Maryland in 1853. During his
theological course he was tutor in Pennsylvania
college in 1850-'3, and supplied the Lutheran con-
gregation at Winchester, Va., in 1852. He was a
missionary at Alleghany, Pa., in 1853-4, pastor at
Greensburg, Pa., in 1854-'5, principal of Emaus
institute, Middletown, Pa., in 1855-'9, pastor of St.
Matthew's congregation, Reading, Pa., in 1859-'65,
professor of ecclesiastical history and church poli-
ty in the theological seminary at Gettysburg in
1866-'8, and president of Pennsylvania college in
1868-'84, and he has been professor of systematic
theology and chairman of the faculty at Gettys-
burg theological seminary since 1884. He received
the degree of D. D. in 1866 from Pennsylvania col-
lege, and that of LL. D. in 1886 from Wittenberg
college, Springfield, Ohio. He is a frequent con-
tributor to the periodicals of his church, especially
theological reviews, and he was joint editor of the
" Lutheran Quarterly Review," Gettysburg, Pa., in
1871-5 and 1880-'6. Many of his review articles
have been published separately, and have had a
wide circulation. Besides these and numerous
baccalaureate sermons, he has issued " Natural The-
ology and Rational Theism " (Chicago, 1885).
VALENZUELA, Crisanto (vah-lain-thoo-ay-
lah), Colombian patriot, b. in Gambita, Santander.
in 1777; d. in Bogota, 6 July, 1816. He studied
in the College of San Bartolome, where he was
graduated as LL. D. in 1795, and became professor
of philosophy. In 1803 he was admitted to the
bar of the royal audience, and in the following
year obtained the title of attorney of that court.
When independence was proclaimed, Valenzuela
rendered important services to the patriot cause,
and occupied many posts under the republican
government, among which were those of deputy
and secretary of congress, secretary of the senate,
and secretary of foreign relations. He was the
author of the famous manifesto of the Junta de
Santa Fe, entitled " Motivos que han obligado al
Nucvo Reino de Granada, a reasumir su Sobera-
nia." Valenzuela was captured at the entry of
Morillo into Bogota. 26 May, and was shot, Morillo
declaring in an official despatch that all graduates
of colleges in South America, and especially law-
yers, ought to be exterminated.
VALENZUELA, Pedro Fernandez, Spanish
adventurer, b. in Cordova, Spain ; d. in Spain. He
lived in the 16th century. He came with Gonzalo
Jimenez de Quesada to New Grenada, and was com-
missioned by the latter in 1538 to search for a suita-
ble site on the prairie of Bogota on which to build a
city. After exploring the country he found a place
at the foot of the hills that was afterward called
Monserrate and Guadalupe, on a gentle declivity
to which the name Teusaquillo was given by the
Indians. Quesada was satisfied and founded there
the city of Santa Fe de Bogota. He was the first
to discover the emerald mines of Somondoco (1537),
which were worked by the Indians with wooden
shovels. Afterward he contributed largely to the
conquest of the Chipataes Indians, whom he treated
with cruelty. At the end of several years he re-
turned to Spain, filled with remorse for the cruel
deeds he had perpetrated against the natives. He
studied for the priesthood, was ordained, and spent
the remainder of his life in solitude.
VALERIANO, Antonio (vah-lay-re-ah'-no),
Mexican scholar, b. in Azcapotzalco about 1525 ;
d. in the city of Mexico in 1605. He was a son of
one of the caciques of Azcapotzalco, who had in-
termarried with the family of Montezuma, and
died in Cortes's expedition to Hibueras. The boy
showed such a desire for learning that he was
one of the first Indian youths that the viceroy
Antonio de Mendoza placed in the imperial col-
lege of Santa Cruz de Tlaltelolco, which he
founded. Valeriano superseded his Franciscan
teachers as professor of Latin and rhetoric, and
also taught classes in Aztec and antiquarian sci-
ence, in which Juan Bautista and Torquemada
became his pupils. On account of his influence
among the natives and his honesty, he was ap-
pointed, by the viceroy Martin Enriquez de Ai-
manza, in 1570, governor of the Indians of Mexico,
which place he held till his death. He wrote many
Latin letters, of which there was a volume at the
beginning of the 19th century in the Jesuit library
of Tepozotlan, a " Caton Cristiano " in Aztec, and
the famous ft Nican mopehua, motecpana in quenin
yancuican huei Tlamahuizoltica, omonexiti in cen-
quizca itechiposhtli Santa Maria, Dios Inantzin,
tozihuapili Tlatocatzin in onca Tepeyac motene-
hua." The last is an Aztec relation of how the
image of the Virgin appeared, painted in flowers,
on the mountain of Tepeyac. According to Carlos
de Siguenza, the manuscript in Valeriano's own
writing existed in the collection . of Fernando
Ixtlilxochitl. Some authorities think that Valeri-
ano merely translated the narrative from the Span-
ish text of an unknown author.
VALERIANOS, Apostolos, known as Juan de Fuca, Greek navigator, b. in Cephalonia in 1531 ; d. in Zante in 1602. For thirty years he served as a sailor and pilot in the Spanish possessions of America. In 1590 he sailed as pilot with a commander that had been sent by the viceroy of Mexico with three ships to discover the fabulous Strait of Anian, but on the coast of California the crew mutinied, and the officers were forced to return to Acapulco. In 1592 Fuca was sent again on the same errand by the viceroy Luis de Velasco, with one caravel and an armed sloop. In latitude 48° north he found a wide inlet, through which he