Fernanda del Carpio

E110168

Fernanda del Carpio is a devout, conservative aristocrat who marries into the Buendía family in Gabriel García Márquez’s novel "One Hundred Years of Solitude," symbolizing the clash between rigid tradition and the chaotic world of Macondo.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Fernanda del Carpio canonical 5

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (30)

Predicate Object
instanceOf aristocrat
fictional character
literary character
appearsIn One Hundred Years of Solitude
associatedWithPlace Macondo
authorNationality Colombian
conflictWith Aureliano Segundo
Petra Cotes
the customs of Macondo
countryOfOrigin Colombia
creator Gabriel García Márquez
familyName del Carpio
fictionalUniverse One Hundred Years of Solitude
firstPublicationOfWork 1967
genre magic realism
languageOfWorkOrName Spanish
medium novel
memberOfFictionalFamily Buendía family
narrativeRole foil to the chaotic world of Macondo
symbol of rigid tradition
personalityTrait pious
proud
rigid
politicalOrientation conservative
religiousCharacteristic devout Catholic
socialClass aristocracy
spouse Aureliano Segundo
themeInvolvement class and social hierarchy
religion and superstition
tradition versus change

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (5)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

One Hundred Years of Solitude mainCharacter Fernanda del Carpio
Úrsula Iguarán relativeOf Fernanda del Carpio
Remedios the Beauty relative Fernanda del Carpio
Aureliano Babilonia relative Fernanda del Carpio
Buendía family hasMember Fernanda del Carpio