El Supremo: Difference between revisions
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'''El Supremo''' is a fictional character, possibly modeled on [[José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia]], the [[Paraguay]]an dictator who used the same sobriquet, in [[C.S. Forester]]'s novels about [[Horatio Hornblower]], appearing in ''[[The Happy Return]]''. He is an insane and ambitious leader of a rebellion against the Spanish in the Pacific. He is aided and given a captured ship by Hornblower, until Hornblower discovers that the Spanish have switched sides. He is captured by the Spanish and eventually hanged. |
'''El Supremo''' is a fictional character, possibly modeled on [[José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia]], the [[Paraguay]]an dictator who used the same sobriquet, in [[C.S. Forester]]'s novels about [[Horatio Hornblower]], appearing in ''[[The Happy Return]]''. He is an insane and ambitious leader of a rebellion against the Spanish in the Pacific. He is aided and given a captured ship by Hornblower, until Hornblower discovers that the Spanish have switched sides. He is captured by the Spanish and eventually hanged. |
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Revision as of 09:03, 16 May 2010
El Supremo is a fictional character, possibly modeled on José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia, the Paraguayan dictator who used the same sobriquet, in C.S. Forester's novels about Horatio Hornblower, appearing in The Happy Return. He is an insane and ambitious leader of a rebellion against the Spanish in the Pacific. He is aided and given a captured ship by Hornblower, until Hornblower discovers that the Spanish have switched sides. He is captured by the Spanish and eventually hanged.
He for example demanded a 23-gun salute, as a self-proclaimed superior being.
Some characters in W. E. B. Griffin's The Corps series referred to General Douglas MacArthur as "El Supremo." The main character to do this, Fleming Pickering, is a shipping magnate turned US Marine general from San Francisco. As a seaman himself, he could have been familiar with Forester's works.