Content deleted Content added
Marceloapm (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
updated |
||
(34 intermediate revisions by 26 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Short description|President of Peru from 1899 to 1903}}
{{Infobox Officeholder▼
{{more citations needed|date=August 2020}}
{{family name hatnote|López de Romaña|Alvizuri|lang=Spanish}}
|name = Eduardo López de Romaña
|image =
|order =
|term_start = September 8, 1899
|term_end = September 8, 1903
|primeminister=[[Manuel María Gálvez Egúsquiza]]<br>[[Enrique de la Riva-Agüero y Looz Corswaren]]<br>[[Domingo M. Almenara Butler]]<br>[[Cesáreo Chacaltana Reyes]]<br>[[Cesáreo Octavio Deustua Escarza]]<br>[[Eugenio Larrabure y Unanue]]
|vicepresident = [[Isaac Alzamora]]<br/>[[Federico Bresani]]
|predecessor = [[Nicolás de Piérola]]
|successor = [[Manuel Candamo]]
|order2 = [[Ministry of Development (Peru)|Minister of Public Works]]
|term_start2 = 25 January 1896
|term_end2 = 8 August 1896
|president2 = [[Nicolás de Piérola]]
|predecessor2 = Office created
|successor2 = [[Manuel J. Cuadros]]
|order3 = 1st Vice President of the Chamber of Deputies
|term_start3 = 1895
|term_end3 = 1896
|birth_name = José Gabriel Eduardo Octavio López de Romaña y Alvizuri
|birth_date = 19 March 1847
|birth_place = [[Arequipa]], [[Peru]]
|death_date = 26 May 1912 (age 65)
|death_place = {{ill|Yura, Arequipa|lt=Yura|es|Yura (Arequipa)}}, [[Peru]]
|resting_place =
|alma_mater = [[King's College London]]
|parents = Juan Manuel López de Romaña y Fernández Pascua <br> María Josefa Alvizuri y Bustamante
|spouse = María Josefa de Castresana y García de la Arena <br> Julia de Castresana y García de la Arena
|children = Eduardo, Carlos, Hortencia, Juan, Luis, Catalina, Julia, Fernando and Francisco
}}
'''Eduardo López de Romaña y Alvizuri''' (19 March 1847 – 26 May 1912) served as the 32nd [[List of Presidents of Peru|President of Peru]] from September 1899 to September 1903.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CDROAAAAMAAJ&q=Eduardo+L%C3%B3pez+de+Roma%C3%B1a++8+de+septiembre+de+1899+1903|title=El Constitucionalismo en las postrimerías del siglo XX.: Constitucionalismo|date=1989|publisher=Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas|isbn=978-968-837-547-1|language=es}}</ref>
A member of the landowning elite, he was the first engineer to become President of the Republic, and one of several Presidents from the era of the so-called Aristocratic Republic.
==Early years==
López de Romaña was born in [[Arequipa]], the son of Juan Manuel López de Romaña y Fernández Pascua and María Josefa Alvizuri y Bustamante. His father was a wealthy [[landowner]] of [[Spaniards|Spanish]] [[ancestry]] owner of large ''[[haciendas]]'' and ''[[fincas]]'' in the [[Southern Peru]].
He was educated at the San Jerónimo Seminary, Arequipa, and [[Stonyhurst College]], [[Lancashire]]. Romaña received his [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]] from [[King's College London]] in [[1868]] and was appointed a member of the [[Institute of Civil Engineers]] of [[London]] in [[1872]]. He went to [[India]] and worked in the construction of the Ravi Bridge for the [[Punjab Northern State Railway]] and then to [[Brazil]] where he was employed by the Public Works Construction Company in the construction of the railroad line from the [[Madeira River]] to the [[Mamoré River]]. The climate of the [[Brazilian Amazon]] was so unhealthful that of thirty engineers engaged in the work twenty-one died before it was completed.
Upon his return to Peru in [[1874]], he devoted himself to the management of one of the family [[plantations]] in the [[Tambo Valley]] and worked in the fledgling agricultural development and engineering circles of the country. When the [[War of the Pacific|war with Chile]] broke out in [[1879]], he was appointed [[commanding general]] of the civic division of Tambo which operated in the coast of Arequipa. Having under his command three battalions, he took an active part in the expedition which stopped the [[Chilean Army]] from entering Arequipa city and compelled it to reembark at [[Mollendo]]. When the Chilean counter-attacked in [[1882]], they initially defeated them once again but then the city surrendered to the southern army after the provisional government was deposed.
Residing in Arequipa after the war, he was elected President of the Liberal Club and served three terms as Director of the Public Charity of the city. After [[Nicolás de Piérola]] and the [[National Coalition]] between ''[[Civilista Party|Civilistas]]'' and [[Democratic Party (Peru)|Democrats]] triumphed in the Civil War of 1894, Romaña was elected Deputy for Arequipa in the 1895 general election and was designated First Vice-President of his chamber by the [[Congress of peru|Congress]]. When President Piérola created the Ministry of Public Works in January [[1896]], he was appointed for this portfolio but his ministry lasted less than seven months because the Barinaga Cabinet fell in August of the same year. The following year he was elected Mayor of Arequipa but was compelled to resign due to a conflict of interest with the city's infrastructure projects.
In 1898 he was elected [[Senator]] for [[Ayacucho]]. By July 1899, when Piérola's administration called general election, the National Coalition offered the presidential candidacy to his brother Alejandro (former Prime Minister) but he declined in favor of Eduardo, an independent.{{Citation needed|date=March 2013}}
==President of the [[Peru|Republic of Peru]] (1899 – 1903)==
During these years, Carlos de Piérola, a democrat and brother of former president [[Nicolás de Piérola]], was the majority leader of the [[Chamber of Deputies]], while [[Manuel Candamo]], a civilista party leader, presided over the [[Upper house|Senate]]. This division allowed for the prevalence of the democrats in the Chamber of Deputies, and for the ''civilistas'' in the Senate. These differences, however, rapidly led to the democrats leading the opposition. López de Romaña reshuffled his cabinet
As a result, there were various parliamentary discords concerning the non-dismissal of censured
==Death==
Eduardo
== Family ==
López de Romaña married María Josefa de Castresana y García de la Arena on 20 March 1877.<ref name=cp>{{cite encyclopedia |last= Castro Peña |first= Jenny |editor= |encyclopedia= Grandes Forjadores del Perú |entry=López de Romaña y Alvizuri, Eduardo |year= 2000 |publisher=Lexus Editores |location=Lima |isbn=9972625508 |pages=242–243 }}</ref> The couple had three children.<ref name=cp/> His wife died after the war with Chile and he remarried his former sister-in-law Julia de Castresana.<ref name=cp/> They had six children.<ref name=cp/>
==See also==
* [[Politics of Peru]]
* [[List of
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{s-start}}
Line 39 ⟶ 71:
{{Presidents of Peru}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lopez de Romana, Eduardo}}
Line 44 ⟶ 78:
[[Category:1847 births]]
[[Category:1912 deaths]]
[[Category:Peruvian people of Spanish descent]]
[[Category:People from Arequipa]]
▲[[Category:Presidents of Peru]]
[[Category:People educated at Stonyhurst College]]
[[Category:Peruvian engineers]]
[[Category:Civilista Party politicians]]
[[Category:Presidents of Peru]]
[[Category:Diez Canseco family]]
[[Category:Ministers of development and public works of Peru]]
|