This writer and exponent of the spiritualist movement ran the magazine La luz del porvenir, which dealt with issues relating to spiritualism, which only women wrote in and was censored. Her literary talent came out at a very early age, but in her youth she had to work as a seamstress in order to survive. She defended women's right to training and secular education. She also wrote for the Gaceta de Cataluña and the magazine Revista de Estudios Psicológicos, among other publications. With frail health and seriously impaired vision, she found that spiritualism was a way of making sense of her life. She came across this school of thought in the 1870s, through the specialist publication a El Criterio, and she stayed with it, eventually becoming one of the leading exponents of esoteric material of the time. She was closely linked to the La Buena Nueva Spiritualist Centre, in Gràcia.

English
Seville 1835 – Barcelona 1909 ID 4451

A writer and proponent of the spiritualist movement, she was the editor-in-chief of the magazine La luz del porvenir. She stood out for her defence of women's rights to training and secular education.