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Title: BiĂłfilo Panclasta Timeline Author: Ritmomaquia Date: 2013 Language: en Topics: BiĂłfilo Panclasta Source: Seven Years Buried Alive and Other Writings by BiĂłfilo Panclasta. Ritmomaquia, 2013.
1879 October 26: Vicente R. Lizcano, better known as BiĂłfilo Panclasta
(BP) is born in Chinácota, in the northern part of the Santander
Department, Colombia. Santander is the traditional home of the Colombian
liberals, as opposed to the centralist conservatives.
1882 MagĂłn brothers found RegeneraciĂłn in Mexico
1883 Anniversary of Paris Commune celebrated by anarchist group in
Montevideo, Uruguay. Anonymous anarchist pamphlets circulate in Chile.
1885 Malatesta visits Buenos Aires. Elisée Reclus visits Nueva Granada
in the north of Colombia and publishes his geographical work, Colombia.
1884–1886, 1892–1898 JoaquĂn Crespo is president of Venezuela.
1886 Malatesta looks for gold in Patagonia to fund the revolution.
1886 BP begins elementary school.
1889 Nietzsche’s collapse, followed by madness. Malatesta returns to
Europe.
1890 Birth of Renzo Novatore.
1890 BP wins an award in History in a school in Pamplona. About this he
later commented: “It was like an intuition of the eternal exile of my
life”
1892 Death of Ravachol in France, by guillotine. First worker’s congress
in Brazil, with anarchists in the majority. Alexander Berkman attempts
to assassinate Henry Clay Frick. He spends fourteen years in prison as a
result.
1893 Craftsmen riot in Bogotá followed by a crackdown on press freedoms
and incarceration of opposition leaders by President Miguel Antonio
Caro. The French governments’ report refers to this as an anarchist
movement practicing by propaganda by the deed.
1897- 1898 BP studies in the Escuela Normal in Bucaramanga. He composes
a small handwritten newspaper in which he fought the re-election of
Miguel Antonio Caro. For this reason, and for “serious faults in
discipline”, he is expelled by the principal.
1899 Libertarian periodical El pabellĂłn rojo appears in Ecuador,
defending Ravachol.
1899 With Eléazar López Contreras BP founds the first public school in
Capacho Nuevo (Venezuela). He participates in Cipriano Castro’s
overthrow of Ignacio Andrade’s government.
1900 Death of Nietzsche. El Acrata, anarchist journal, appears in Chile.
190? Jacinto AlbarracĂn, a Colombian anarchist of indigenous descent,
founds a commune in the jungle of Magdalena, Department of Boyaca. It
was called “Otanche, a society without authority, concepts of property,
or judicial powers.” Panclasta was later to meet him.
1900 BP is in Valencia, Carabobo State, Venezuela.
1899–1908 Cipriano Castro is President of Venezuela after overthrowing
Ignacio Andrade, whose allegedly fraudulent presidency lasted only a
year.
1899–1902 Thousand Days’ War, civil war between right- and left-wing
parties in Colombia.
1901 Founding of Argentine Worker’s Federation. Flores Magón, now openly
anarchist, in jail in Belén.
1901 Birth of Severino Di Giovanni in Italy.
1901 BP arrives in CĂşcuta as a protest against neutrality in the War. An
attempt is made to execute him.
1902–1903 Because of the non-payment of debts by Castro’s regime,
Germany and England, and subsequently many other nations, blockade
Venezuela.
1903 US activity (especially construction of canal) leads to a military
uprising in the province of Panama, eventually leading to independence.
1904 BP takes on the pseudonym BiĂłfilo Panclasta.
As colonel under Cipriano Castro, he arrives in Barranquilla and offers
his services in favor of Colombian territorial integrity against US
backed separatists.
In Bogotá he is made First Assistant General of the Fourth “Expedition
to Panama.”
1904 Ecuador-Peru boundary dispute, which had been ongoing for decades,
threatens to erupt into war after a series of confrontations in the Napo
River basin.
1904 Argentine Worker’s Federation renames itself to Argentine Regional
Worker’s Federation (FORA) to reflect internationalism. The next year it
would formally declare itself anarchist. Flores MagĂłn begins
republication of RegeneraciĂłn in San Antonio, Texas.
1904 Accused of conspiracy, BP travels to Ecuador and offers his service
in the projected war with Peru.
1904–1909 Rafael Reyes is dictator of Colombia.
1906 BP travels to Argentina. He forms relationships with anarchist and
socialist youth, going to their meetings and writing in their
newspapers.
BP is invited to the Congress of the World Union of Free-Thinkers. It
turns out to be a Conference of liberal thought. He does not go, and
leaves for Europe.
1907 International Anarchist Congress in Amsterdam.
1907 BP arrives in Europe as delegate of the FederaciĂłn Obrera Nacional
Argentina [National Argentine Workers’ Federation] to the Amsterdam
Worker’s Congress. He acquaints himself with all its countries, if only
superficially: France, Spain, England, Switzerland, Italy, Belgium, and
Holland.
In Holland he debates Bestraud at a session of the “Social Studies”
group.
He is confused with the Colombian delegate to the World Congress for
Peace, Mr. Santiago PĂ©rez Triana.
1908 BP is exiled from Spain at the request of Rafael Reyes. He arrives
at Puerto Colombia with the intention of continuing to Bogotá, but he
must go to Panama. Reyes has him thrown out of Panama where he had taken
refuge, and he is turned over as a prisoner to the authorities of the
Department of ChocĂł, in the northeast of Colombia. In and out of jail
for the next three years.
1908–1935 Juan Vicente Gómez is dictator of Venezuela.
1909 From Central America BP announces the new periodical The Antichrist
to be published in Bogotá.
He heads to Cartagena, in the BolĂvar Department, and he is detained by
its governor, De la Vega; he is sent in a German boat to ColĂłn, in the
Putumayo Department, where he is once again taken prisoner.
BP appears before the Supreme Court of Panama and the police places him
on a boat and abandons him in Colombian territory.
1910 Mexican Revolution.
1910 Juan Francisco Moncaleano’s newspaper Ravachol published in Bogotá.
Strongly anticlerical, it evolved from socialism to anarchism, also
advocating equality of the sexes.
1910 BP is jailed in the police barracks in Barranquilla, Atlántico
Department and writes his “Datos Autobiográficos” for the newspaper El
Pueblo, edited by Aurelio de Castro.
Thrown out of the country, he travels to Curacao, where he is expelled
again. He heads for the Dominican Republic; he is expelled once more. He
writes various letters about this.
1911 El Ăšnico, individualist anarchist periodical, begins publication in
ColĂłn, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. Magonists enter Baja California
to make revolution. Flores Magon ends up in jail again.
1911–1912 Bonnot Gang active in France.
1911 In the newspaper Maquetas, someone writing as “Juan el Cruzado”
demands the death sentence for Biófilo Panclasta for “disturbing social
order with his revolutionary ideas”
BP is interviewed by journalists working for El Gráfico and El
Republicano in the Bogotá jail where he is held.
1912 A news item states that BiĂłfilo Panclasta has bombed Monsignor
Brioschi, Archbishop of Cartagena.
In the Santa Teresa jail in Cartagena BP writes “Y sueños de ambición”.
Soon after he publishes the poem “EfĂmeras.”
1913 Trial of Bonnot Gang, followed by prison and executions.
1914–1918 First World War
1917 Russian Revolution
1918 Strong anarchist influence (direct action, sabotage) in strikes in
Colombian coastal cities.
1917–1920 Massive wave of anarchist strikes in Brazil.
1914 BP returns to Valencia, Venezuela. Jailed, supposedly for a speech
given in praise of France a few days after the beginning of the war.
More likely it was due to those close to Juan Vicente GĂłmez, hostile to
BiĂłfilo for his friendship with the now deposed Cipriano Castro.
1914–1921 Seven years of prison for BP in Venezuelan jails.
1919 “Tragic Week” in Buenos Aires: wave of strikes and then riots led
by anarchists followed by brutal police repression.
1920–1921 Peasant uprising in Patagonia led by anarchists. They are
massacred by the army.
1922 Death of Renzo Novatore
1923 Kurt Wilckens kills General Hector Varela, responsible for the
suppression of the Patagonia strike, in a bomb attack and shooting in
the streets of Buenos Aires. He is murdered in a hospital later that
year.
1923 BP is named delegate of the Mexican Anarchist Association to an
anarchist congress in Barcelona. He proposes “the formation of an
international committee tasked with organizing, planning, and carrying
out, in one day, the assassination of the Czar of Bulgaria, the king of
England, the king of Italy, the king of Egypt, the Archbishop of Mexico,
the president of France, the cardinal archbishop of Toledo, and LĂ©on
Daudel”, which he referred to as “Operation Europe.”
1924 First Worker’s Congress in Colombia. Strong anarcho-syndicalist
presence. Strike against the Tropical Oil Company, a division of
Standard Oil, in Barrancabermeja, organized by anarcho-syndicalists.
Anarchist workers’ movements in Bogotá.
1924–1929 Publication of La Voz Popular, anarchist newspaper, by the
syndicalist group “Antorcha Libertaria” in Colombia.
1924 In Sao Paulo BP helps to organize a coffee-growers’ strike. The
government deports him to Oyapok, in the far north of Brazil. He
escapes. From Cayenne, French Guiana, the “League of the Rights of Man”
sends him to Martinique. He returns to Colombia after visiting fifty-two
countries.
1925 Severino Di Giovanni founds Culmine, an Italian-language
periodical, in Buenos Aires. New anarchist newspapers in Bogotá: La
Antorcha, El Sindicalista, Pensamiento y Voluntad. In Barranquilla: Via
Libre. In Santa Marta: OrganizaciĂłn.
1926–1927 Second strike, more combative, in Barrancabermeja.Â
1927 Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti in U.S. Massive demonstrations all
over Latin America.
1927 BP imprisoned in the San Gil jail with the syndicalist RaĂşl E.
Mahecha and other comrades.
1928 Anarchist-led banana-grower’s strike in Colombia against United
Fruit leads to declaration of martial law and massacre of 1,500 workers
by the army.
1928 In Bogotá BP founds the Center for Revolutionary Action and Unity.
Their motto is: “Revolutionaries of all ideals, unite!” It was his only
attempt to create an organization. It published a Manifesto directed to
workers, peasants, and students. It was censured by the government and
its signatories were investigated judicially.
In El Socialista BP publishes “I don’t rectify, I ratify”. In various
issues of the newspaper Claridad, he publishes his “Psychological
sketches of criollo revolutionaries.”
1929 “The Voice of the Peasant” anarchist-indigenist manifesto published
in La Paz, Bolivia, by Luis Cusicanqui.
1930 Beginning of overall decline of anarchism in Latin America due to
State repression and growing influence of Marxism.
1929 BP’s book Mis prisiones, mis destierros, y mi vida is published by
Aguila Negra Editorial.
1930–1934 Enrique Olaya Herrera is president of Colombia.
1930 BP writes an open letter to Enrique Olaya Herrera entitled “Pariahs
of the Desert: Voices of the Desert?”
1931 Death of Severino Di Giovanni.
1932 Death of Malatesta
1932 Publication BP’s Seven Years Buried Alive by TipografĂa La
Libertad.
1934 BP begins a relationship with Julia Ruiz, an ex-nun who works as a
fortune teller in Bogotá. A period of his life dedicated to writing
begins
 1935 In the newspaper La Democracia, BP publishes “What Colombia Is
Like” and “Rebirth”.
1934–1938 Alfonso López Pumarejo is president of Colombia.
1935–1941 Eléazar López Contreras, Panclasta’s old companion, is
president of Venezuela.
 1936 The Diario Nacional newspaper publishes BP’s open letter to
President Eléazar López Contreras.
BP sends two letters to president Alfonso LĂłpez Pumarejo requesting his
intervention in expediting a passport to travel to Venezuela, and one
thanking him for the help.
Rafael Gómez Picón interviews him in Bogotá.
1936–1939 Spanish Revolution and Civil War.
1939 J.A. Osorio Lizarazo publishes his article about BiĂłfilo in El
Tiempo.
In Bogotá, BP’s companion Julia Ruiz dies.
1940 Death of Emma Goldman.
1940 BP attempts suicide in Barranquilla, electrocuting himself with
electrical cables and slitting his throat with a straight razor.
BP participates in the 5000^(th) issue of El Deber with the article
“Remembering the past.” El Deber had just published a note on his
suicide attempt a few months before!
The Bucaramanga police orders BP’s expulsion from their city. He is
charged with loitering and drunkenness.
1942 March: Biófilo Panclasta dies in the Old People’s Home in Pamplona
at 10:00 a.m. of a massive heart attack.
Â
In compiling this timeline we relied heavily on the section “Biófilo
Panclasta: Itinerario de lucha y sufrimiento” in Biófilo Panclasta, el
eterno prisionero. We also found the Spanish-language Wikipedia page
useful, as well as a “Cronograma del anarquismo en América Latina” we
found on the Internet. This is also a good place to note that there were
hundreds, maybe even thousands, of anarchist periodicals in Latin
America during this period, and we have only enumerated a few
representative examples.