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| Antonio Nari�o, by Acevedo Bernal. |
A child of a wealthy Bogot� family, Nari�o suffered lifelong health problems for which he moved to the warmer climate of Cartagena, where he became a successful exporter. He also imported the first privately-owned printing press in La Nueva Granada, ending the royal government's monopoly on the press.
In 1794, Nari�o used that printing press to publish La Nueva Granada's first copies of 'The Rights of Man and the Citizen,' the fundamental document of the French Revolution and a furious challenge to the absolutist Spanish monarchy. After distributing only a few copies, Nari�o got cold feet and burned the rest. But the virrey had already discovered the publication, and Nari�o was arrested and condemned to ten years' exile in a Spanish colony in Africa.
Back in Bogot�, Nari�o founded what was probably Colombia's first opposition newspaper, La Bagatela, with which he helped drive out of office Jorge Tadeo Lozano, the first president of the then-independent Estado de Cundinamarca. Nari�o then became Cundinamarca's second president.
| The La Bagatela newspaper, in the Archivo de Bogot�. |
Suffering health problems, Nari�o moved from Bogot� to a warmer climate, where he died two years later.
How might Colombia's history have been different if it had had such a fighter during each generation?
As for La Casa de Nari�o, the presidential palace, it is located on the site of Nari�o's birthplace.
By Mike Ceaser, of Bogot� Bike Tours

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