Juan Bautista Pablo Forner

Juan Bautista Pablo Forner (17 or 23 February 1756[1] – 7 March 1799), Spanish a satirist and scholar, was born in Mérida (Badajoz Province).

He studied at the University of Salamanca and was called to bar in Madrid in 1783.

[2] During the next few years under the pseudonyms of Tome Cecial, Pablo Segarra, Don Antonio Varas, Bartolo, Pablo Ignocausto, El Bachiller Regañadientes, and Silvio Liberio Forner was engaged in a series of polemics with García de la Huerta, Iriarte and other writers; the violence of his attacks was so extreme that he was finally forbidden to publish any controversial pamphlets, and was transferred to a legal post at Seville.

[2] Forner's brutality is almost unexampled, and his satirical writings give a false impression of his powers.

His Oración apologética por la España y su mérito literario (1786) is an excellent example of learned advocacy, far superior to similar efforts made by Carlo Denina and Antonio Cavanilles; and his posthumous Exequias de la lengua castellana (printed in the Biblioteca de autores españoles, vol.