The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07.
Silva, Antonio José da
(ntô´ny zhz´ dä sl´v) (KEY) , 170539, Portuguese playwright, b. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He belonged to a family of New Christians (Jews forced to convert), suspected of remaining secretly loyal to Judaism. Silva practiced law in Portugal and wrote a number of vigorous, satiric plays. They are related to the commedia dellarte but have more vitality than polish. Among them are A vida do grande Dom Quixote [the life of Don Quixote] (1733) and Guerras do alecrim e da mangerona [wars between the rosemary and the marjoram] (1737), considered Silvas best work. Brought before the Inquisition in 1737, he and his family were convicted of practicing Jewish rites, strangled, and burned at the stake.