Dominican politician, sociologist and intellectual (1828–1906)
In this
Spanish name, the first or paternal
surname is
Bonó and the second or maternal family name is
Mejía.
Pedro Francisco Bonó y Mejía (October 18, 1828 – September 13, 1906) was a Dominican politician, sociologist and intellectual. He is credited with being the first Dominican sociologist. He was the president of the Senate of the Dominican Republic in 1858.[1]
Bonó was born in 1828, to Joseph Bonó (a ranchman and trader of Italian origin) and Inés Mejía y Port. His maternal grandmother, Doña Eugénie Port, a native of Brittany (North-Western France) who had large plantations and fortune in the Saint-Domingue until the outbreak of the Haitian Revolution, taught him the French language and fashioned him intellectually.[2]
A metro station in Santo Domingo is named after him.
Publications
- El Montero (1856)
- Apuntes para los Cuatro Ministerios de la República (1857)
- Apuntes sobre las Clases Trabajadoras Dominicanas (1881)
- Congreso Extraparlamentario (1895)
- Epistolario
- Ensayos Sociohistóricos
- Actuación Pública
- Papeles de Pedro Francisco Bonó (Works collected by Emilio Rodríguez Demorizi, 1963)
References