In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Morla and the second or maternal family name is Lynch.
Carmen Morla Lynch
Morla Lynch (standing center) with her mother and siblings, 1904
Born
1887 (1887)
Paris, France
Died
1983 (aged 95–96)
Santiago, Chile
Nationality
Chilean
Other names
Carmen Morla de Maira
Spouse
Manuel A. Maira González
Children
Carmen
Parents
Carlos Morla Vicuña [es] (father)
Luisa Lynch (mother)
Relatives
Carlos [es] (brother)
Ximena (sister)
Carmen Morla Lynch (1887–1983[1]), also known as Carmen Morla de Maira, was a Chilean feminist writer. The daughter of Luisa Lynch and Carlos Morla Vicuña [es],[2] she wrote journals illustrated by her sister Ximena,[3][4] with whom she also practiced spiritism, both as mediums. Her brother Carlos [es] was a diplomat, writer, and journalist.[5][6] She was the great-aunt of writer Elizabeth Subercaseaux.[7]
^Las Morla. Diarios y dibujos de Carmen y Ximena Morla [The Morlas. Journals and Drawings by Carmen and Ximena Morla] (in Spanish). Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. 2016.
^de La Goublaye, Yves; Schuler Dauvin, Santiago (2004). "Descendencia del general de la Real Armada española don Pedro Pérez de la Quintana en Chile, Perú y Bolivia (1600–2004)" [Descent of the General of the Royal Spanish Armada Don Pedro Pérez de la Quintana in Chile, Peru and Bolivia (1600–2004)]. Revista de estudios históricos (in Spanish). 45. Chilean Institute of Genealogical Research: 19–118.
^Subercaseaux, Pilar (January 1, 1999). Las Morla: huellas sobre la arena [The Morlas: Footprints on the Sand] (in Spanish). Aguilar. ISBN 9789562390743.
^Lafourcade, Enrique (1 January 1996). El Veraneo y otros Horrores [The Summer and Other Horrors] (in Spanish). LOM Ediciones. p. 25. ISBN 9789567369416. Retrieved 29 September 2017 – via Google Books.
^Subercaseaux, Bernardo (1 January 1997). Genealogía de la vanguardia en Chile [Genealogy of the Avant-Garde in Chile] (in Spanish). University of Chile Faculty of Philosophy and Humanities. p. 57.
^Valle, Ximena (2011). Mayorga, Rodrigo (ed.). Fuiste mujer, ese fue tu crimen y tu corona. Mujer y escritura en Chile entre dos épocas [You were a woman, that was your crime and your crown. Women and writing in Chile between two eras] (in Spanish). RIL. p. 274. ISBN 9789562848374. Retrieved 29 September 2017 – via Google Books. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
^Labarca B., Cristián (28 August 2011). "La casa de los espíritus de Providencia" [The House of the Spirits of Providence]. La Tercera (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 9 September 2014. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
CarmenMorlaLynch (1887–1983), also known as CarmenMorla de Maira, was a Chilean feminist writer. The daughter of Luisa Lynch and Carlos Morla Vicuña [es]...
diplomat Carlos MorlaLynch [es], and the writers Ximena and CarmenMorlaLynch. In addition, she is the subject of the 1888 sculpture Madame Morla Vicuña by...
Ximena MorlaLynch (1891–1987), also known as Ximena Morla de Subercaseaux, was a Chilean feminist writer and painter. The daughter of writer Luisa Lynch and...
1822 in Concepción, the son of Manuel Fernando Vásquez de Novoa López and Carmen Vidal Gómez. He married Mercedes Risopatrón and in his second marriage he...
by Alberti and María Teresa León. In 1935 at a salon hosted by Carlos MorlaLynch, a diplomat, diarist, amateur musician and closet homosexual working...