Justo Sierra O'Reilly
'''Justo Sierra O'Reilly''' (Tixcacal-Tuyú; 1814–1861) was a Mexican novelist and historian, the father of Mexican author and political figure
Justo Sierra Méndez. Sierra O'Reilly was born in the southeastern Mexican state of
Yucatán, his father-in-law
Santiago Méndez Ibarra was the governor there in 1847, in the middle of the
Mexican–American War (in which the state of Yucatán declared its neutrality) and at the outbreak of the
Caste War of Yucatán. In September of that year, he went to the United States as a negotiator on behalf of his father-in-law's government, to request U.S. military aid against the
Maya rebels (who seemed, at that moment, poised to take over the peninsula), and to offer the possibility of U.S. annexation of Yucatán in exchange. His attempts at diplomacy on behalf of the quasi-independent peninsula went nowhere, and by the time he returned home in 1848, Mexico had lost the northern half of its territory to the U.S. but had also solved its differences with Yucatán, and Sierra O'Reilly found himself with an unemployed father-in-law and no government position for himself. It was then, at the age of 34, that he turned to literature. The chapters of his popular melodramatic novel, ''La Hija del Judío,'' a historical novel in the style of
Sir Walter Scott about the star-crossed love of the daughter of a Jewish merchant in colonial Mexico, were published in installments in ''El Fénix,'' a newspaper that he founded in
Campeche. Published years later in book form, the novel sold well all over Latin America. His other works include the pirate novel ''El Filibustero'', the travel journal ''Impresiones de un viaje a los Estados Unidos de América y al Canadá'' (1851), and numerous writings on the regional history of Yucatán such as ''Teogonía de los antiguos indios'' and ''Importancia de un Museo de Antigüedades'', as well as Spanish translations of
John Lloyd Stephens's works on Yucatán. He died in 1861 in
Mérida.
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