Montevideo. 20 March, 1848. He studied in the
college of his native city, and was graduated in
law in 1827 at the university. He was then em-
ployed under the secretary of the interior, and took
part in the revolution of 1828 under Lavalle. who
made him chief clerk of the ministry. In August,
1829, at the fall of Lavalle and the accession of
Rosas, whom Varela had opposed, the latter went
to Montevideo, where he published some poems and
a drama in the magazines. In 1835 he was ad-
mitted to the bar of the supreme court of Uru-
fuay. and in April, 1838, he was exiled by order of
resident Oribe, who accused him of complicity
in the revolutionary attempt of Rivera; but he re-
turned in October, after the installation of Rivera
as president. In 1840-'2 he sojourned in Brazil on
account of his health, and returned in December
of the latter year, when the siege of Montevideo
had begun. In 1843 he was sent as commissioner
of the Montevideo government to England to ne-
gotiate the withdrawal of the English blockading
forces, and on his return he abandoned his literary
studies and entered politics, founding the journal
" El Comercio de la Plata," which soon became a
powerful instrument of opposition to Rosas and
Oribe, and excited the patriotism of the besieged
city. It was generally reported that he was assas-
sinated by instigation of Rosas while returning
one evening from the press-rooms of his paper to
his home. He wrote "Rosas y las Provincias"
(Montevideo. 1844), which was translated into
French under the title " Affaires de Buenos Ayres "
(Paris, 1844) ; " La Confederation Argentina "
(1845) ; " Proyectos de Monarquia en America "
(1846) ; and " Biblioteca del Comercio de la Plata,"
a geographical, historical, and political magazine,
of which four volumes had appeared at his death.
His portrait is engraved on the notes of the pro-
vincial bank of Buenos Ayres. — His son, Hector
Florencio, journalist, b. in Montevideo in 1832,
after the assassination of his father removed his
mother and brothers for security to Rio Janeiro,
where he labored as a commercial clerk to sustain
his family, employing his leisure in acquiring other
European languages, and soon became an accom-
plished linguist. When Urquiza declared war
against the dictator Rosas in 1851, Varela returned
to Montevideo and founded the " Tribuna," which,
under his management and that of his brother,
Mariano, soon became one of the most popular
newspapers of South America. He became the
chief champion of the opposition to Urquiza and
of the independence of Buenos Ayres, and took an
active though indirect part in the operations that
forced Urquiza to raise the siege of Buenos Ayres
in July, 1853. He visited Europe in 1854, and was
appointed consul-general of Uruguay in Paris, but
was refused the exequatur by the French govern-
ment, on account of his severe criticism of the
coup d'etat of 2 Dec, 1851, in the columns of " La
Tribuna." On his return, and after the accession
of Venancio Flores, he was elected to the legisla-
ture of Montevideo, and formed part of that gen-
eral's cabinet. After Flores's resignation, Varela
left the cabinet, and when the former was assas-
sinated, 19 Feb., 1868, the latter returned to Bue-
nos Ayres. During the cholera epidemic that
desolated that city in 1871 he was one of the
first to call a meeting, on 10 March, for the pur-
pose of establishing a health and charitable com-
mittee, of which he was appointed vice-presi-
dent, and when the president, Dr. Roque Perez,
succumbed under his arduous duties, Varela as-
sumed the lead and made heroic efforts for the
relief of the afflicted. .One afternoon, when the
' grave-diggers fled in the presence of 700 bodies
to be buried, he personally, with members of his
' committee, undertook the task, and did not re-
| tire until every coffin was covered. Toward the
I end of 1871 he made a tour through Chili and
other Spanish-American republics to obtain sub-
scriptions for the foundation in Europe of a large
journal destined to defend the interests of the
Latin-American people, to make their civilization
and literature known in Europe, and to acquaint,
his country with the progress of science in the Old
World. He was assisted by the authorities and pri-
vate persons, and. going to Paris, founded there the
journal " El Americano," which soon became widely
known and was the means of attracting the interest
of European statesmen and merchants toward South
America. In 1873 he was appointed minister resi-
dent of Guatemala at Paris, and in the next year he
began the publication of a series of noteworthy
political essays, which were afterward collected in
book-form. In 1874 he founded in Turin another
journal, " La Italia y El Plata," having the same
object as " El Americano." He is a fluent orator
and writer, although his speeches as well as his
works suffer from verbosity. He is the author of
'• Revolucion de Lima ; resefia de los acontecimi-
entos de Julio," with introduction by Emilio Cas-
telar (Paris, 1872) ; " Perou devant les pays d'Eu-
rope " (1873) : " La republique de Venezuela et
son president Blanco " (1874) ; " Elisa Lynch " ;
" A Alvarez Calderon " ; and " Emilio Castelar "
(1874). — Another son, Mariano, b. in Montevideo
in 1834, assisted his brother on " La Tribuna," and
after the latter's departure for Europe continued
the journal. In 1869 he was secretary of foreign
relations under Sarmiento's administration, and in
1871 was sent as minister plenipotentiary of the
Argentine Republic to London, where he negotiated
a loan of $30.000,000.— Another son, Juan Crnz,
b. in Montevideo in 1843, although occupied in
mercantile pursuits, has given much time to lit-
erature and travel. He is a contributor to many
periodicals, a notable antiquarian, and author of
two dramas in verse, " La Pecadora arrepentida "
(Buenos Ayres, 1873), and " Facundo," unpub-
lished. — Another son, Luis Vicente, author, b. in
Montevideo, 27 May, 1845, studied law, was editor
of " El Autonomista " and assistant on u La Tri-
buna," and is the author of " Estudios sobre la
constitucion de Buenos Ayres" (Buenos Avres,
1868); "El Ciego,"a drama (1871); " Concordan-
cias y Fundamentos del Codigo Civil Argentino "
(14 vols.. 1873-"6); and "Organization del Regis-
tro del Estado Civil " (1874). — Florencio's brother,
Juan Crnz, journalist, b. in Buenos Ayres in
1794: d. in Montevideo, 15 Jan., 1839, studied in
Cordova and Tucuman, and was graduated in the
latter city in theology and law in 1816. When in
that year the congress of the United Provinces of
La Plata met at Tucuman, Varela was elected one
of the deputies for Buenos Ayres, and thenceforth
abandoned the church for politics. He took an
active part in the direction of the papers "El
Mensajero Argentino," " El Tiempo," " El Centi-
nela," and " El Porteiio," held several public offices,
and from 1824 till 1827 was secretary of the Na-
tional congress. He suffered persecutions for his
political opinions after the fall of the government
of Rivadavia, and, taking part in the revolution of
December, 1828, emigrated to Uruguay, whence he
was banished by Oribe, together with other politi-
cal enemies of Rosas, and returned only after the
former's fall. He is the author of the dramas
" Dido " (Buenos Ayres, 1823) and " Arjia" (Mon-
tevideo, 1834), and left a collection of unpublished
Page:Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1889, volume 6).djvu/286
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VARELA