G. C. Lorenzo

Gianizio Cristofano Lorenzo ( Juanicio Cristóbalo Vargas y Lorenzo; September 17, 1904 – June 23, 2002) was a Bahian soldier, intelligence officer, anthropologist and author. He is best known for his pivotal role in the Volonian Revolt (1939-43) against the Imperium of Caphiria. The sheer breadth and variety of his deeds and associations during the successful revolt, helped along by the fantastically vivid descriptions of those events in his wartime journal, had earned him the internationally-renowned nickname Lorenzo of Volonia, which was used as the title of the 1985 film based on his wartime activities.

Born in Flordetierra, Bahia in September 1904 to Flora Lorenzo (1877-1978), a former governess, and Don Tomas de Rivera (1872-1905), an aristocrat. De Rivera had eloped with Lorenzo in 1899, the two calling themselves Sr. and Sra. Vargas to avoid getting caught. After Lorenzo's birth, his father died less than four months later on board a liner that had sank after striking a rock off the coast of Valio. Lorenzo's military career started in 1922 with his enlistment into the Bahian Royal Army. Due to his aptitude in the initial tests at the beginning of his conscription, he caught the attention of the commander of the Royal Bahian Guard regiment who wished to recruit him into the elite Royal Bahian Guard. Lorenzo eventually caught the attention of recruiters for the National Bureau in the early 1930s, who eventually recruited him into the ON.

Soon after his transfer into the ON in 1931, he and Colonel Jorge Videla were sent to what is now the Volonian capital of Caradej, then a part of Caphiria, to ostensibly conduct anthropological studies, while clandestinely being assigned intelligence missions to establish contact with underground Volonian nationalist groups and to send them weapons and supplies in preparation for the eventual armed struggle. With the start of the Second Great War in 1934, Lorenzo quickly became involved with these groups and eventually took a lead role in the Volonian Revolt when it started in 1939. The revolt would end in 1943 with Volonia winning their independence, a fact that was declared in the Treaty of Kartika.

After the end of the war, he continued to serve the ON until 1945 when he resigned to pursue his greatest passion, the field of anthropology, at De Rivera University. During this time, Professor Guillermo Arnez encouraged Lorenzo to publish what would become his best-known work Testament of Volonia (1952), an autobiographical account of his participation in the Volonian Revolt. He also translated books into Pelaxian, and wrote The Assembly Line (1972), which detailed his time in the National Bureau in the years leading up to the Second Great War. He corresponded extensively and was friendly with people from all sorts of professions from well-known artists to writers and politicians.

Lorenzo's public image resulted in part from the sensationalised reporting of the Volonian Revolt in the Alstinian press, as well as from Testament of Volonia. On 23 June 2002, Lorenzo passed away peacefully at the age of 97.

Early life
Juanicio Cristóbalo Vargas y Lorenzo was born on 17 September 1904 in Flordetierra in the Kingdom of Bahia. His Delepasian father Tomas de Rivera had eloped with Flora Lorenzo, who had been governess to his younger siblings, in 1899 and took on the name Vargas. Flora herself was the daughter of immigrants from the island of Urlazio. Lorenzo had two older siblings named Teresa (1900-2005), and Miguel (1902-1958). De Rivera died in January of 1905 after the liner he was on struck some rocks and sank. Flora soon married Hugo Jimenez (1879-1930) in 1906. Jimenez was a local civil servant and a veteran of the First Great War. A pacifist due to his experiences in the war, he tried to pass on these beliefs to his stepchildren. Problem was, as Lorenzo recounted, Jimenez was an alcoholic who was rarely ever sober and had a real nasty temper that often led to him beating his wife and stepsons (though he got along very well with Teresa). When Jimenez died from alcohol-induced in 1930, Lorenzo and his siblings decided to legally change their names, with Lorenzo himself changing his name to Gianizio Cristofano Lorenzo. During his schooling, he developed an interest in history and anthropology thanks to, as Lorenzo put it, his history teacher.

Travels, antiquities, and archaeology
At the age of 15, Lorenzo travelled with his schoolfriend Pedro Villa around both Bahia and Rosario, visiting almost every church whether it be major cathedrals to small village parish churches, studying their monuments and antiquities, and making of their. Lorenzo and Villa monitored building sites in Los Rumas, Santa Maria, and Mauritius and presented whatever they have found to the Great Vallosi Museum. The museum's Annual Report for 1919 said that the two teenage boys "by incessant watchfulness secured everything of antiquarian value which has been found in not only Bahia, but in Rosario as well." In the summers of 1920 and 1921, Lorenzo toured Almadaria by bicycle, sometimes with Villa, collecting photographs, drawings, and measurements of medieval fortresses. In August of 1921, Lorenzo wrote home: "The Almadarians have complimented me on my ability to get their vernacular of Pelaxian down wonderfully: I have been asked at least four times since I've arrived what part of Almadaria I came from".

Early military career, university, and the late interwar period
Shortly after his graduation in 1922, he began his enlistment into the Bahian Royal Army. Following Lorenzo's initial success upon entering the army the commander of the Royal Guard regiment, impressed with his aptitude, recruited him into the regiment where he began his training. Despite the challenges he had faced during his training, Lorenzo reportedly enjoyed his time there and eventually finished his military service as part of the Royal Guard earlier than anticipated. In 1924, thanks to the generous scholarship given to him by the Royal Army, he entered De Rivera University to study anthropology. It was during his time at De Rivera when he was a keen member of the university's officers' training corps. He graduated summa cum laude in 1929 after submitting a thesis titled The Influence of the Indigenous Vallosi on Vallosi Society-to the End of the 19th Century, partly based on his field research both with Villa and while solo all over Vallos. Lorenzo was fascinated by the history of Vallos; his brother Miguel wrote in 1955 that those "Vallosi researches" were a "dream way of escape from the banality of bourgeois Bahia". Lorenzo soon reenlisted into the Royal Guard as part of a preparatory initiative while tensions between LOTA, of which much of the Delepasian polities were a part of, and anti-Levantine powers began to mount.

In 1931, a recruiter from the National Bureai (ON) had received recommendations from the Royal Guard for Lorenzo. Acting upon this, the recruiter came into contact with Lorenzo and interviewed him for the prospect of him joining the ON. The interview was a tremendous success, and Lorenzo was transferred from the Royal Guard and into the ON. It was during this time when he met Colonel Jorge Videla, whom he quickly became "very close" with, and Videla in return took him under his wing to help him settle into the ON. Videla was soon given the command over the ON operations in modern day Volonia, and he assigned Lorenzo as his second-in-command for the operation, a decision that was met with initial disapproval from his peers due to Lorenzo being a new recruit into the intelligence service.

Initial deployment to Volonia
Due to his background in anthropology, Lorenzo was sent to the Volonian capital of Caradej under the guise of conducting anthropological studies of the ancient Volonian people for De Rivera University. It was during this mission when he made initial contact with the rebel cells, relaying information from them to the ON and vice versa. His initial deployment officially ended after the breakout of the war in 1934, with another ON operative returning to Bahia, posing as Lorenzo, while the real Lorenzo joined the rebels in hiding, training them and relaying further information back and forth between the rebels and Bahia.

Volonian Revolt
Delepasian involvement in the Volonian nationalist movements had been an open secret since the early 20th century, with involvement ranging from recruiting to supplying them. Involvement was limited until the years leading up to the Second Great War when operations in the region quickly expanded, with Lorenzo detailing unexpectedly meeting multiple ON assets, both Delepasian and Volonian. Between 1935 and 1937, whilst Lorenzo waited for the arrival of Videla and his handpicked operatives, he spent time making contact with the already established ON assets and used them to get acquainted with the multiple Volonian nationalist movements which at that time were more akin to rivals than aliies, with relations between these movements ranging from tolerant at best to violent at worst. He initially spent time with all these movements to become a neutral entity among them before initiating discussions between them to eventually establish the "United Volonia Movement", highlighting that despite their political differences it was in their best interests to put these differences aside and work together to ensure that Volonia would be a free country.

Videla and his operatives would finally arrive in Volonia in 1937, with Lorenzo personally going himself to establish contact with them while accompanied by rebel personnel. He escorted them back into one of their field headquarters located in an abandoned train station not far off from Caradej, where he briefed Videla on his progress, followed by him calling the leading elements of various nationalist movements to the Volonian Convention. It was on 20 July 1938 when the UVM was officially established, with Lorenzo and Videla beginning widespread training to the UVM personnel to prepare them for the coming struggle. It was during this time when Videla began planning out reliable supply routes for the ON to smuggle in notable amounts of weapons and supplies for the UVM while staying under the radar from Caphirian officials. Although Lorenzo never disclosed what method of smuggling Videla decided upon, some historians suspect the smuggling was done by carefully hiding weapons, ammo, and other supplies inside food delivery trucks among containers genuinely carrying food.

It would not be until 1939 when the Volonian Revolt was officially started with the Battle of Caradej and the subsequent Capture of Caradej in 1940. Lorenzo himself contributed greatly in the area of strategy and liason with the ON, but he had also participated in a few military engagements. The revolt was a success, with Volonia finally winning its independence in 1943 after the Treaty of Kartika was put in effect. It was during these years in Volonia when Lorenzo had written an extensive wartime journal detailing his actions and associations while serving in Volonia.

Post-war career
Lorenzo returned to Bahia a full colonel, making him an equal to Videla. He lived a relatively peaceful and quiet life following the war. He served in the ON with Videla for two more years after the end of the war before resigning in 1945, though not before being decorated with the Order of Los Rumas and Las Joquis and the Legion of Valour for his valiant efforts in the Volonian Revolt. He began working at De Rivera University in the anthropological department, occasionally visiting his colleagues to give lectures based on his experiences in Volonia during the war. The lectures he held for his colleague, Professor Guillermo Arnez eventually lead to Arnez discovering that Lorenzo had kept a journal for the entirety of his twelve-year stay in Volonia. After Lorenzo loaned it to Arnez, he encouraged him to get it published. Lorenzo took Arnez's suggestion and began to work on getting his journal transcribed into an autobiographical format. He would publish the autobiography in 1952 under the title Testament of Volonia.

He stayed at De Rivera University for 40 years before deciding to focus on his writing career and translating books into Pelaxian, something which he could easily do now that he became a professor emeritus. He moved to Porto Natal for the weather in 1987, and would live there for the rest of his life. His other books that followed his journal were moderate successes, though the most successful of those subsequent books was the 1972 book The Assembly Line which detailed his time in the National Bureau in the years leading up to the Second Great War. The royalties he got from Testament alongside his other books, alongside the money he got from doing official Pelaxian translations of books, were more than enough to allow him to live a comfortable life. Lorenzo stayed in regular contact with some of the comrades he made in Volonia, and was a life-long friend of Videla until his death in 1971. Lorenzo wrote one last autobiography in 1998 titled Fortresses of Inspiration that detailed his childhood and how he got interested in the field of anthropology.

Personal life
Lorenzo never got married. During his lifetime, many speculated that he might have been a homosexual and that his relation with Videla was in fact romantic. Some have also interpreted some of his books to have homosexual undertones, but Lorenzo had never commented on these interpretations, nor on his own sexuality; he was an intensely private man in life, and whenever he talked about his life he preferred talking about his childhood or his experiences in Volonia.

Politically, Lorenzo saw himself as disinterested in the realm of politics in general beyond studying the human behaviour surrounding it, seeing himself as an anthropologist first and foremost than some "cheap and ghastly" pundit.

Death
Lorenzo passed away in the summer of 2002 of, he was 97 years old. He was predeceased by his older brother Miguel who died in 1958 at the age of 56 from, and was survived by his older sister Teresa who died in 2005 at the age of 105 from natural causes. Following his wishes, he was buried next to his mother in Flordetierra.