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词条 María Teresa Obregón Zamora
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Career

  3. Legacy

  4. References

     Citations  Bibliography 
{{Spanish name|Obregón|Zamora}}{{Infobox person
| name = María Teresa Obregón Zamora
| image = María_Teresa_Obregón_Zamora.jpg
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1888|03|07|df=y}}
| birth_place = Alajuela, Costa Rica
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1956|09|29|1888|03|07|df=y}}
| death_place = San José, Costa Rica
| nationality = Costa Rican
| other_names = María Teresa Obregón, María Teresa Obregón de Dengo, María Teresa de Dengo
| occupation = Educator, Politician
| years_active = 1906-1956
| known_for = One of the first three female Deputies in Costa Rica, co-founder of the National Liberation Party and teacher's association
| notable_works =
}}

María Teresa Obregón Zamora (1888-1956) was a teacher, suffragist and politician in Costa Rica. She was part of the group that formed the Asociación Nacional de Educadores (ANDE) (National Association of Educators) and fought for women's enfranchisement. After winning the vote, she helped found the National Liberation Party of Costa Rica and was one of the first three women elected as a Deputy of the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica. In 2002, Obregón was honored as one of the inaugural group of women inducted into La Galería de las Mujeres de Costa Rica (The Women's Gallery of Costa Rica).

Early life

María Teresa Obregón Zamora was born on 7 March 1888 in Alajuela, Costa Rica. Her parents were teachers and she was he niece of the educator and founder of the national library, {{Interlanguage link multi|Miguel Obregón Lizano|es}}.{{sfn|Castegnaro|1998}} After completing her primary education at Escuela Central in Alajuela, Obregón attended the Colegio Superior de Señoritas, earning her teaching credentials in 1905.{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}}

Career

Obregón began teaching the following year at the Escuela Superior de Niñas N° 2 (Girl's High School #2), which later became Escuela Julia Lang (Julia Lang High School). She taught at the school until 1916{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}} and the following year married the educator and intellectual {{Interlanguage link multi|Omar Dengo Guerrero|es}}, who was the first director of the country's Normal School. The couple had four children, {{Interlanguage link multi|Jorge Manuel Dengo Obregón|es|3=Jorge Manuel Dengo Obregón|lt=Jorge Manuel}}, Omar, Gabriel and María Eugenia and raised them in the city of Heredia.{{sfn|Gamboa|1990|p=20}} Jorge (1918-2012) would become Vice President of Costa Rica,{{sfn|Vargas|2012}} Gabriel (1922–1999) would become an acclaimed geologist{{sfn|Prucha|Case|2004|pp=13-16}} and María Eugenia (1926-2014) became an educator, Minister of Education and Dean of the Education Faculty at the University of Costa Rica.{{sfn|Chaves Espinach|Herrera F.|2014}} During the early years Obregón was raising her family, she did not teach,{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}} but collaborated with her husband in literary and student magazines, such as Universo and Nosotros.{{sfn|Gamboa|1990|p=195}} Dengo died in 1928 and Obregón returned to teaching to support her family.{{sfn|Castegnaro|1998}}{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}} She first taught elementary students at the Argentine School of Heredia{{sfn|Castegnaro|1998}} and then in 1929 began teaching at the Normal School of Costa Rica,{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}} while she was studying for her examinations to become a professor. Passing the tests in 1932, Obregón became the geography and guidance professor at the Normal School.{{sfn|Castegnaro|1998}} After four years of teaching at the Normal School, she moved to San José and taught at the Escuela República del Perú, where she remained until her retirement in 1941.{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}}

After her retirement, Obregón continued to teach privately and began working with activists and organizers to improve the education system and political access of women in the country.{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}} She was one of the co-founders of the Asociación Nacional de Educadores (ANDE)(National Association of Educators) and she served on the Board of Education for San José.{{sfn|Castegnaro|1998}} In 1943, she joined with students and women in the protests known as the "Women of May 15" to oppose prohibitions to women's political participation and press for suffrage. In 1947, Obregón joined Emma Gamboa and they organized a group of women{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}} including Clarisa Blanco, Rosario Brenes de Facio, Amalia Chavarría de Rossi, Claudia Cortés, Aurelia Pinto de Ross, María del Rosario Quirós Salazar, Etilma Romero de Segura, Cristina Salazar de Esquivel, and Marta Uribe de Pagés to demonstrate{{sfn|Rodríguez S.|2015|p=22}} with around 5,000 other participants against electoral irregularities and fraud in the upcoming election in 1948.{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}}{{sfn|Castegnaro|1998}} The elections sparked the Costa Rican Civil War and at war's end, women finally gained the right to vote and participate in politics.{{sfn|Barahona|2014}}

Between 1948 and 1952, Obregón served in the Ministry of Education overseeing baccalaureate exams and in 1951 served as a delegate of the Inter-American Commission of Women.{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}} That same year,{{sfn|Watkins|1998}} she became a co-founder of the National Liberation Party ({{lang-es|Partido Liberación Nacional (PLN)}}) and headed the Women's Committee for the party.{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}} Obregón was one of the first three women delegates to win a seat in the Costa Rican legislature, when in 1953, the first election in which women were allowed to vote, she, Ana Rosa Chacón and Estela Quesada won seats in the House of Deputies.{{sfn|Oviedo|2010}} She served as first Secretary of the Board of the Legislative Assembly{{sfn|Castegnaro|1998}} and is credited as the first woman to deliver a speech in the Legislative Assembly. Obregón died in office on 29 September 1956 before her term had expired.{{sfn|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}}

Legacy

In 2002, Obregón was inducted into La Galería de las Mujeres de Costa Rica (The Women's Gallery of Costa Rica) as one of the inaugural group of women for her contributions to education and founding of the national teacher's association. {{sfn|Briceño Obando|2002}} The National Development Plan adopted in 2010, to improve the infrastructure and guide the country's governance, bears her name.{{sfn|UNESCO|2013|p=15}}

References

Citations

Bibliography

{{Refbegin|30em}}
  • {{cite news|ref=harv|last1=Barahona|first1=Macarena|title=La batalla de las sufragistas ticas|url=http://www.nacion.com/ocio/artes/batalla-sufragistas-ticas_0_1429257083.html|accessdate=16 July 2016|publisher=La Nación|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140728094357/http://www.nacion.com/ocio/artes/batalla-sufragistas-ticas_0_1429257083.html|archivedate=28 July 2014|date=27 July 2014|location=San José, Costa Rica|language=Spanish}}
  • {{cite news|ref=harv|last1=Briceño Obando|first1=Cynthia|title=Mujer con todos los honores|url=http://wvw.nacion.com/ln_ee/2002/marzo/08/pais0.html|accessdate=15 July 2016|publisher=La Nación|date=8 March 2002|location=San José, Costa Rica|language=Spanish}}
  • {{cite news|ref=harv|last1=Castegnaro|first1=Marta|title=El día historico|url=http://wvw.nacion.com/viva/1998/septiembre/21/cul3.html|accessdate=16 July 2016|publisher=La Nación|date=21 September 1998|location=San José, Costa Rica|language=Spanish}}
  • {{cite news|ref=harv|last1=Chaves Espinach|first1=Fernando|last2=Herrera F.|first2=Manuel|title=María Eugenia Dengo Obregón, exministra de Educación y premio Magón, falleció este miércoles|url=http://www.nacion.com/ocio/artes/Maria-Eugenia-Obregon-Educacion-Premio_0_1428457254.html|accessdate=16 July 2016|publisher=La Nación|date=23 July 2014|location=San José, Costa Rica|language=Spanish}}
  • {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Gamboa|first=Emma|title=Omar Dengo|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bq3JNsWILoUC&pg=PA9|edition=2nd|year=1990|publisher=Editoria Universidad Estatal a Distancia|location=San José, Costa Rica |language=Spanish|isbn=978-9977-64-531-5}}
  • {{cite news|ref=harv|last1=Oviedo|first1=Esteban|title=Mujer gana 60 años después del primer voto femenino|url=http://wvw.nacion.com/ln_ee/2010/febrero/08/pais2252402.html|accessdate=16 July 2016|publisher=La Nación|date=8 February 2010|location=San José, Costa Rica|language=Spanish}}
  • {{cite journal|ref=harv|last1=Prucha|first1=John James|last2=Case|first2=James E.|title=Memorial to Gabriel Dengo 1922–1999|journal=Memorials|date=April 2004|volume=33|url=ftp://rock.geosociety.org/pub/Memorials/v33/Dengo.pdf|accessdate=16 July 2016|publisher=Geological Society of America|location=Boulder, Colorado}}
  • {{cite web|ref=harv|last1=Rodríguez S.|first1=Eugenia|title=Participación Socio¬política Femenina en Costa Rica (1890 – 1952)|url=http://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/dialogos/article/viewFile/6254/5956|publisher=Universidad de Costa Rica|accessdate=16 July 2016|location=San José, Costa Rica|language=Spanish|date=2015}}
  • {{cite book|ref=harv|author=UNESCO|title=National Journeys – 2013 – Towards Education for Sustainable Development|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0Fiw6H_eWd8C&pg=PA3|year=2013|publisher=United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization|location=Paris, France|isbn=978-92-3-001184-0}}
  • {{cite news|ref=harv|last1=Vargas|first1=David|title=Falleció exvicepresidente Jorge Manuel Dengo|url=http://www.nacion.com/archivo/Fallecio-exvicepresidente-Jorge-Manuel-Dengo_0_1246075563.html|accessdate=16 July 2016|publisher=La Nación|date=23 January 2012|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140302192146/http://www.nacion.com/archivo/Fallecio-exvicepresidente-Jorge-Manuel-Dengo_0_1246075563.html|archivedate=2 March 2014|location=San José, Costa Rica|language=Spanish}}
  • {{cite web|ref=harv|last1=Watkins|first1=Thayer|title=The Political Career of José Figueres Ferres, (Don Pepe)|url=http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/costarica.htm|website=SJSU|publisher=San José State University Department of Economics|accessdate=16 July 2016|location=San Jose, California|date=1998}}
  • {{cite web|ref={{harvid|Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|2009}}|author=|title=María Teresa Obregón Zamora|url=http://virtual.inamu.go.cr/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&catid=141%3Agaleria-de-la-mujer&id=158%3Amaria-teresa-obregon-zamora&Itemid=1521|website=INAMU|publisher=Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres|accessdate=15 July 2016|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160715213841/http://virtual.inamu.go.cr/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&catid=141%3Agaleria-de-la-mujer&id=158%3Amaria-teresa-obregon-zamora&Itemid=1521|archivedate=15 July 2016|location=San José, Costa Rica|language=Spanish|date=2009}}
{{refend}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Obregon Zamora, Maria Teresa}}

7 : 1888 births|1956 deaths|People from Alajuela|Costa Rican women|Suffragists|Costa Rican educators|Costa Rican politicians

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