Antonio de la Cuesta y Sáinz (1864–1924) was a Spanish journalist and poet. A prolific writer, his works range from articles and essays to poems and novellas. While residing at Bilbao he ran the traditionalist newspaper "La Cantabria", and founded and directed religious magazine "El Pan de los Pobres". He was awarded the pro Ecclesia et Pontifice cross by the Pope.
Biography
His parents were Pedro de la Cuesta y Rodríguez, a Carlist army officer, and María Sáinz y Fernández, native from Salamanca. Both of them were banished to Burgos, where they had at least 3 children. His older brother Pedro served as a judge in Cuba,[1]Madrid[2] and Equatorial Guinea,[3] and was lieutenant of the royal army in the Caribbean. His younger brother Julio was also a lieutenant in Cuba and died in Malabo in 1908.
Antonio de la Cuesta was born in 1864 at Los Balbases. He married arabar Santa de Urquiza y Amézaga in Bilbao.[4] The couple had two children, Antonio and María.[5][6]
Antonio became a traditionalist following his father and started his political activities at the Traditionalist Communion, later adhering to the Integrist secession under Ramón Nocedal in 1888.
Following the papal exhortation, de la Cuesta consecrated his literary activity to the promotion of Catholic morality and philosophy as an author of cuentos, short novels and poems. He directed the traditionalist newspaper "La Cantabria" between 1892 and 1897.[7]
De la Cuesta also sought to promote Catholicism through his magazine "El Pan de los pobres". Founded the 13th April 1886, the publication had the objectives of fostering devotion to Saint Anthony of Padua and contributing to the intellectual formation of Catholics in Spain.[8] His descendants would later cede the magazine's property in 1976 to the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul, which keeps publishing it nowadays.
Antonio de la Cuesta y Sáinz died at Madrid in 1924 due to his cardiorespiratory illness while travelling south on his doctor's order, who prescribed him to avoid Bilbao's cold climate. He was buried with his family at the Cemetery of Begoña.
Works
Press
He collaborated with the following media (non-exhaustive list):
Marqués de Arriluce de Ybarra (1968). La casa Urrutia de Avellaneda y familias enlazadas españolas y americanas. Bilbao.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)