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Mercedes Agulló y Cobo CBE (born in Madrid on 23 October 1925--El Puerto de Santa María, January 4, 2019) was a Spanish historian known for her research on Lazarillo de Tormes and Don Quixote made public in 2010.

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  • Mercedes Agulló (es)
  • Mercedes Agulló (en)
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  • Mercedes Agulló y Cobo (Madrid, 23 de octubre de 1925-El Puerto de Santa María, 4 de enero de 2019) fue una historiadora española conocida por sus investigaciones sobre El lazarillo de Tormes hechas públicas en 2010 atribuyendo la que es considerada como primera novela moderna, y embrión del Quijote, a Diego Hurtado de Mendoza. Los papeles encontrados por Agulló en la testamentaria del cronista López de Velasco, su albacea, así lo acreditarían.​​ (es)
  • Mercedes Agulló y Cobo CBE (born in Madrid on 23 October 1925--El Puerto de Santa María, January 4, 2019) was a Spanish historian known for her research on Lazarillo de Tormes and Don Quixote made public in 2010. (en)
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  • Mercedes Agulló y Cobo (Madrid, 23 de octubre de 1925-El Puerto de Santa María, 4 de enero de 2019) fue una historiadora española conocida por sus investigaciones sobre El lazarillo de Tormes hechas públicas en 2010 atribuyendo la que es considerada como primera novela moderna, y embrión del Quijote, a Diego Hurtado de Mendoza. Los papeles encontrados por Agulló en la testamentaria del cronista López de Velasco, su albacea, así lo acreditarían.​​ (es)
  • Mercedes Agulló y Cobo CBE (born in Madrid on 23 October 1925--El Puerto de Santa María, January 4, 2019) was a Spanish historian known for her research on Lazarillo de Tormes and Don Quixote made public in 2010. Her work in the field of the historiography of books, painting, sculpture and theatre stands out, which led to the creation of the at the University of Massachusetts (Boston), where all her publications are collected and her latest works are presented. Her research work in national and parish archives is also important, and she is considered an outstanding palaeographer, which is reflected in her large number of documentary works, always based on her transcriptions. In March 2010, Mercedes Agulló in her book "A vueltas con el autor del Lazarillo" published an investigation in which, based on the discovery in some papers by Diego Hurtado de Mendoza with the phrase "a file of corrections made for the printing of Lazarillo and Propaladia", she postulated "a serious hypothesis about the authorship of Lazarillo that, strengthened by other facts and circumstances, points solidly in the direction of Don Diego". The hypothesis takes up again a traditional attribution, since in 1607, in the catalogue of Spanish writers Catalogus Clarorum Hispaniae scriptorum, which was written by the flamenco Valerio Andrés Taxandro, it is said that Diego Hurtado de Mendoza "composed [...] the entertainment book called Lazarillo de Tormes". Other authors from the 17th century, as well as the Diccionario de Autoridades de la Real Academia Española (1726-1739), mention this attribution, which reached a certain fortune, especially in the 19th century. (en)
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