This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Gutiérrez, the second or maternal family name is Sánchez, and, for married women, the optional marital name is de Gambra.
Carmela Gutiérrez de Gambra
Born
María del Carmen Gutiérrez Sánchez 1921
Died
31 July 1984(1984-07-31) (aged 62–63) Madrid, Spain
Carmela Gutiérrez de Gambra (née, María del Carmen Gutiérrez Sánchez; 1921 - Madrid, 31 July 1984), was a Spanish scholar, translator, writer, and Christian feminist. Between 1948 and 1971, she was author of more than 40 novels. Most of these were romance novels using the pseudonyms of Miguel Arazuri, André Ronsac, Clara San Miguel, Alice Norton, and Enid Colman.[1] Her husband was the traditionalist teacher, writer and philosopher Rafael Gambra Ciudad.
Biography
María del Carmen Gutiérrez Sánchez was born in 1921. Her nickname was "Carmela", a name with which she even signed some of her translations.[2]
She was a professor of Geography and History at the Ramiro de Maeztu Institute in Madrid, a profession that she combined with her career as a translator of French and English. She was also the author of mainly romantic novels, under the pseudonyms of Miguel Arazuri, André Ronsac, Clara San Miguel, Alice Norton and Enid Colman.[2] She werote some 30 novels, some of them forming part of a wider entity.[2]
Gutierrez was also the founder and manager of Fundación Stella, an independent radio station.[3]
She married Rafael Gambra Ciudad, and the couple had three children, Andrés, José Miguel and Irene, all of them becoming teachers.[2][4] Of their two sons, Andrés Gambra Gutiérrez is professor of medieval history[5] and the university official,[6] while José Miguel Gambra Gutiérrez is scholar in philosophy,[7] both in Madrid. The two are active Traditionalists,[8] the latter leading the sixtinos Carlists since 2010.[9]
^ abcd"Miguel Arazuri". www.biblioromance.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 December 2024.
^Manuel Santa Cruz [Alberto Ruiz de Galarreta], "Rafael Gambra. un hombre cabal", Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada, 2004 (10), p. 176
^Luis Hernando de Larramendi, 2004, "Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004", filosofia.org, p. 172
^In UCM, UNED, Universidad Europea de Madrid, Colegio Universitario Domingo de Soto (Segovia), Universidad Francisco (Vitoria) and Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, see D. Andrés Gambra Gutiérrez, [in:] Universidad Rey Juan Carlos service, available here; for some of his works see dialnet.unirioja service, available here
^Secretario general and member of Consejo de Gobierno, D. Andrés Gambra Gutierrez, [in:] Universidad Rey Juan Carlos service, available here
^See Profesores del Departamento, [in:] Universidad Complutense, Departamento de Lógica y Filosófia de la Ciencia service, available here; for some of his works see dialnet.unirioja service, available here
^See e.g. Andrés Gambra, acting as official at Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, in public confronting marginalisation of Christianity and deification of progress, La Razón 15.02.11, available hereArchived 2016-06-02 at the Wayback Machine
^See e.g. José Miguel Gambra, nuevo jefe de la Sec. Política de S.A.R. Don Sixto Enrique Bornón, [in:] Radio Cristianidad service 09.03.10, available here