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Álvaro de Figueroa, 1st Count of Romanones

Álvaro de Figueroa y Torres-Sotomayor, 1st Count of Romanones (9 August 1863 – 11 October 1950) was a Spanish politician and businessman. He served as Prime Minister three times between 1912 and 1918, president of the Senate, president of the Congress of Deputies, Mayor of Madrid and many times as cabinet minister. He belonged to the Liberal Party. Romanones, who built an extensive political network, exerted a tight control on the political life of the province of Guadalajara during much of the Restoration period.[1] He also was a prolific writer, authoring a number of history essays.

The Count of Romanones
Portrait by Bassano, 1914
Prime Minister of Spain
In office
14 November 1912 – 27 October 1913
MonarchAlfonso XIII
Preceded byManuel García Prieto
Succeeded byEduardo Dato
In office
5 December 1918 – 14 April 1919
MonarchAlfonso XIII
Preceded byManuel García y Prieto
Succeeded byAntonio Maura
Personal details
Born
Álvaro de Figueroa y Torres-Sotomayor

15 August 1863
Casa de Cisneros, Madrid, Spain
Died11 September 1950(1950-09-11) (aged 87)
Madrid, Spain
Political partyLiberal Party
Spouse
Casilda Alonso-Martínez Martín
(1888⁠–⁠1950)
Children7
Parent
Alma materCentral University
Collegio di Spagna
University of Bologna
Signature

Biography edit

Early life edit

Born on 15 August 1863 in the Casa de Cisneros, at the Madrid's Plaza de la Villa,[2] he was son of Ignacio Figueroa y Mendieta (a millionaire who had inherited a fortune from the mining companies of his father) and Ana de Torres y Romo (an aristocrat, daughter of the Marquis of Villamejor).[3] His siblings were Francisca, José, Gonzalo and Rodrigo.[4]

When he was a child, he suffered a barouche accident that broke his right leg and caused a limp for the rest of his life.[5] His disability would come to be mocked on a regular basis in cuplés, jokes and caricatures.[6]

He earned a licentiate degree in Law from the Central University of Madrid in 1884.[7] He moved in February 1885 to the University of Bologna's Collegio di Spagna, where he remained until December 1885, earning a doctorate in jurisprudence by reading a dissertation titled Introduzione allo studio del diritto costituzionale.[8] Despite this, he never practiced law.[8]

Politics in Restoration Spain edit

 
Romanones depicted in his thirties as Mayor of Madrid

In 1888, he became member of the Congress of Deputies in representation of Guadalajara for the first time, elected in a by-election to fill a vacant seat.[9] Short by a few months of turning the 25 years of age needed to become a legislator, he reportedly hid this circumstance.[10] Shortly after, on 21 September 1888, in San Sebastián, Figueroa married the daughter of the Minister of Grace and Justice Manuel Alonso Martínez: Casilda Alonso Martínez, with whom he had seven children: Casilda, Luis [fi], Álvaro, Carlos, José, Eduardo and Agustín [es].[11][n. 1]

He participated in a parliamentary scandal in July 1889, when amid a tense squabble in the legislature, he wielded his walking stick against Felipe Ducazcal [es], who had reportedly approached the Marquis of Vega de Armijo displaying an aggressive attitude.[13] He was falsely accused by Romero Robledo of "having drawn the rapier he had hidden in his cane".[14]

He was elected Madrid municipal councillor in 1889.[15] After serving as responsible for the districts of Buenavista and Audiencia, as patron of the School of San Ildefonso, and as director of the Services of Abattoirs, Markets and Thoroughfares and Works, Figueroa renounced to the office in 1892.[15]

He delivered an ignominious tirade against the Mayor of Madrid Alberto Bosch y Fustegueras from his parliamentary seat in 1892,[16] so much that the offended called for a duel, which was held on 10 July 1892 in Leganés.[17] The combatants crossed two shots.[18] He also held another duel with the Marquis of Valdeiglesias [es].[19]

In 1894 he was appointed as Mayor of Madrid. In 1896 he acquired a daily newspaper, El Globo, based in Madrid, appointing Francos Rodríguez as editor and tilting the editorial line from republicanism to liberal monarchism.[20][21][22]

He served as Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts (1901–1902) in the government of Sagasta. In 1901, he incorporated primary education teachers' salaries (hitherto dependent on the local administrations) in the State budget, securing the teachers economic autonomy and curbing the influence of caciquismo in education.[23] In 1903 he founded a new political newspaper, Diario Universal [es], replacing El Globo,[24] which had been sold to Emilio Rius y Periquet.[25]

In the Liberal governments of 1905 and 1906 he was Minister of Development (Fomento which included agriculture, industry, commerce and public works), Justice and Interior. He contributed to the rise of José Canalejas to the top of the Liberal Party and, as a reward, he was appointed minister of public instruction in 1909 and later propmoted to the presidency of the House of Representatives (Congreso de los Diputados) in 1912.

After the assassination of Canalejas, he became one of the prominent figures in the Liberal Party and he was appointed prime minister (1912–1913). He negotiated with France a treaty on Morocco.

During the First World War he held a pro-French stance, which put him in conflict with the official declaration of neutrality of the government of Eduardo Dato and with the pro-German stance of the conservatives. When he again became prime minister (1915–1917), he changed Spain's foreign policy closer to the allies and confronting Germany over an incident of Spanish ships being torpedoed by German submarines. Incapable of resolving Spain's social problems and attacked by the pro-German conservative press, he finally resigned.

 
The 1918 cabinet presided by Romanones

Shortly after he participated in the coalition government of Antonio Maura as Minister of Instruction and of Justice and in the government of Manuel García Prieto as Minister of State (1918), and he presided a brief government in December 1918, which was toppled by the autonomist agitation in Catalonia and the labour conflicts. He was replaced in April 1919 after issuing the Eight Hour Workday Decree.

He was minister of justice (1922–1923) in the liberal government of Manuel García Prieto and became president of the Senate in 1923, serving in such capacity when the military coup of Miguel Primo de Rivera took place on 13 September 1923.

 
Romanones with Ángel Pestaña (left) in 1922

During the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera, he stayed out of politics although he participated in the conspiracy known as the Sanjuanada for which he was fined.

He was appointed Minister of State in the government of Juan Bautista Aznar Cabañas, but the elections in 1931 showed that the monarchy was unpopular so he advised Alfonso XIII to leave Spain.

Romanones talked personally to Niceto Alcalá Zamora and his revolutionary committee and agreed to the peaceful transfer of power to the Provisional Republican Government, without military intervention, in exchange of the guarantee for the life of the royal family.

Later life edit

 
Romanones attending the hippodrome of Lasarte in 1932

During the Second Republic, he remained deputy representative for Guadalajara.

The outbreak of the Civil War found him in San Sebastián in charge of his own business, and he crossed over to France with the help of the French ambassador. He moved to the Nationalist zone in 1937, and, having become an ardent supporter of Francisco Franco,[26] he was one of the signatories of the Advisory Opinion on the Illegitimacy of the Acting Powers on the 18th of July 1936, an ad-hoc juridical report commissioned by the Francoist Government in Burgos, trying to legitimate the "national uprising"—the 1936 coup d'etat—by means of twisted arguments such as imputing on those assaulted the very crime that the assault entailed, that of "aiding of the rebellion".[27]

After the war he wrote his memoirs and was president of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando and member of the academies of History and Jurisprudence.

He died on 11 September 1950 in Madrid.[28]

Works and views edit

Romanones was a prolific writer and he wrote his memoirs during the Second Republic. He wrote several biographies as well as political works and essays.

Although Catholic, he was against religious intolerance and also against the influence of the clergy for which he often clashed with religious authorities. An example of this happened with the enactment of the Civil Marriage Law of 1905 which stated that those getting married did not have to declare their religion. He reinstated diplomatic relations with the Holy See but he was a fervent supporter of the separation of Church and State.

Honours edit

He was a Doctor of Law by the University of Bologna, a member of the Royal Academy of History and of the Royal Academy of Moral and Political Sciences. Director of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando and a president of the Ateneo Madrileño.

He was made Count of Romanones in 1893 and Grandee of Spain in 1911, as well as 7th Count of Yebes in 1922.

See also edit

References edit

Informational notes
  1. ^ His grandson, Carlos Figueroa, competed for Spain at the 1956 Summer Olympics.[12]
Citations
  1. ^ Moreno Luzón 1996, pp. 145, 165.
  2. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, p. 27.
  3. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, pp. 24–25; Moreno Luzón 1996, p. 147
  4. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, pp. 26–27.
  5. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, p. 34; Cabello Carro 2013, p. 38
  6. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, p. 348.
  7. ^ Conde y Díaz-Rubín & Sanchiz Ruiz 2008, p. 356.
  8. ^ a b Nieto Sánchez 2012, p. 369.
  9. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, p. 49; Moreno Luzón 1996, p. 146
  10. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, pp. 49–50.
  11. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, pp. 62–63.
  12. ^ . sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 2020-04-18. Retrieved 2012-02-14.
  13. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, p. 71.
  14. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, pp. 71, 75.
  15. ^ a b Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, p. 79.
  16. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, pp. 83–84.
  17. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, pp. 83–87.
  18. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, p. 87.
  19. ^ Antón del Olmet & Torres Bernal 1922, p. 89.
  20. ^ López Blanco, Rogelio (2001). "Madrid". El poder de la influencia. Geografía del caciquismo en España (1875-1923). Madrid: Marcial Pons Historia. p. 411. ISBN 84-259-1152-4.
  21. ^ Aguilera Sastre, Juan (2009). "Valle-Inclán y la "Hoja Literaria" de "El Globo" (1909)". Anales de la literatura española contemporánea. Anuario Valle-Inclán IX. 34 (3): 704. JSTOR i27742628.
  22. ^ "Title: El Globo (Madrid. 1875)". Hemeroteca Digital. Retrieved 1 June 2022.
  23. ^ Scanlon 1987, p. 202.
  24. ^ López Blanco 2001, p. 411.
  25. ^ Aguilera Sastre 2009, p. 704.
  26. ^ Ruiz 2005, p. 1.
  27. ^ Aróstegui 2000, p. 40.
  28. ^ Francés 1951, p. 7.
Bibliography
  • Antón del Olmet, Luis; Torres Bernal, José de (1922). Los grandes españoles. Romanones. Madrid: Imprenta de Juan Pueyo.
  • Aróstegui, Julio (2000). "Política y administración en el régimen de Franco". El franquismo, el régimen y la oposición: Actas de las IV Jornadas de Castilla-La Mancha sobre Investigación en Archivos. Vol. 1. Anabad Castilla-La Mancha. pp. 35–68. ISBN 84-931658-1-6.
  • Cabello Carro, Paz (2013). "Inicio de las políticas de conservación del Patrimonio Histórico en 1900 y creación de la Dirección General de Bellas Artes en 1915". Patrimonio Cultural y Derecho (17): 35–70. ISSN 1138-3704.
  • Conde y Díaz-Rubín, José Ignacio; Sanchiz Ruiz, Javier (2008). "Referencias bibliográficas" (PDF). Historia genealógica de los títulos y dignidades nobiliarias en Nueva España y México. Vol. I. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. pp. 331–428. ISBN 978-970-32-4999-2.
  • Francés, José [in Spanish] (1951). "Semblanza y loa del conde de Romanones". Academia: Boletín de la Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando. 1. Madrid: Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando: 5–15. ISSN 0567-560X.
  • Moreno Luzón, Javier (1996). "El conde de Romanones y el caciquismo en Castilla (1888–1923)" (PDF). Investigaciones Históricas: Época Moderna y Contemporánea (16): 145–166. ISSN 0210-9425.
  • Nieto Sánchez, Carlos (2012). San Clemente de Bolonia (1788–1889) (PDF). Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. ISBN 978-84-9031-158-5.
  • Ruiz, Julius (2005). Franco's Justice: Repression in Madrid After the Spanish Civil War. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-928183-1.
  • Scanlon, Geraldine M. (1987). "La mujer y la instrucción pública de la ley Moyano a la II República" (PDF). Historia de la Educación: Revista Interuniversitaria (6). Salamanca: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca: 93–208. ISSN 0212-0267.

This article is based on the article in the Spanish Wikipedia.

Government offices
Preceded by
Santiago de Angulo Ortiz de Traspeña [es]
Mayor of Madrid
1894–1895
Succeeded by
Nicolás de Peñalver y Zamora
(Count of Peñalver) [es]
Preceded by
Antonio García Alix [es]
Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
1901–1902
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Francisco Javier González de Castejón y Elío
(Marquis of Vadillo) [es]
Minister of Agriculture, Industry, Commerce and Public Works
1905
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Governation
1905–1906
Succeeded by
Benigno Quiroga [es]
Preceded by
José María Celleruelo [es]
Minister of Grace and Justice
1906
Succeeded by
Antonio Barroso Castillo [es]
Preceded by
Benigno Quiroga [es]
Minister of Governation
1906–1907
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Antonio Barroso Castillo [es]
Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
1910
Succeeded by
Julio Burell [es]
Preceded by President of the Congress of Deputies
1910–1912
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Council of Ministers
1912–1913
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Antonio Barroso Castillo [es]
Minister of Grace and Justice
1913
Succeeded by
Pedro Rodríguez de la Borbolla [es]
Preceded by Minister of State
1916
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Grace and Justice
1918
Succeeded by
José Roig y Bergadá [es]
(acting: Antonio Maura)
Preceded by Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
1918
Succeeded by
Julio Burell [es]
Preceded by Minister of State
1918–1919
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Council of Ministers
1918–1919
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Carlos Cañal y Migolla [es]
Minister of Grace and Justice
1922–1923
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Senate
1923
Succeeded by
Antonio Fontán (1977)
Preceded by Minister of State
1931
Succeeded by
Cultural offices
Preceded by President of the Ateneo de Madrid
1920–1922
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by
Director of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando
1910–1949
Succeeded by
Spanish nobility
New creation Count of Romanones
1893–1950
Succeeded by
Luis de Figueroa y Alonso-Martínez

Álvaro, figueroa, count, romanones, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, figueroa, second, maternal, family, name, torres, sotomayor, Álvaro, figueroa, torres, sotomayor, count, romanones, august, 1863, october, 1950, spanish, politician, businessman. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Figueroa and the second or maternal family name is Torres Sotomayor Alvaro de Figueroa y Torres Sotomayor 1st Count of Romanones 9 August 1863 11 October 1950 was a Spanish politician and businessman He served as Prime Minister three times between 1912 and 1918 president of the Senate president of the Congress of Deputies Mayor of Madrid and many times as cabinet minister He belonged to the Liberal Party Romanones who built an extensive political network exerted a tight control on the political life of the province of Guadalajara during much of the Restoration period 1 He also was a prolific writer authoring a number of history essays The Count of RomanonesPortrait by Bassano 1914Prime Minister of SpainIn office 14 November 1912 27 October 1913MonarchAlfonso XIIIPreceded byManuel Garcia PrietoSucceeded byEduardo DatoIn office 5 December 1918 14 April 1919MonarchAlfonso XIIIPreceded byManuel Garcia y PrietoSucceeded byAntonio MauraPersonal detailsBornAlvaro de Figueroa y Torres Sotomayor15 August 1863Casa de Cisneros Madrid SpainDied11 September 1950 1950 09 11 aged 87 Madrid SpainPolitical partyLiberal PartySpouseCasilda Alonso Martinez Martin 1888 1950 wbr Children7ParentIgnacio Figueroa y Mendieta father Alma materCentral UniversityCollegio di SpagnaUniversity of BolognaSignature Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Politics in Restoration Spain 1 3 Later life 2 Works and views 3 Honours 4 See also 5 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit Born on 15 August 1863 in the Casa de Cisneros at the Madrid s Plaza de la Villa 2 he was son of Ignacio Figueroa y Mendieta a millionaire who had inherited a fortune from the mining companies of his father and Ana de Torres y Romo an aristocrat daughter of the Marquis of Villamejor 3 His siblings were Francisca Jose Gonzalo and Rodrigo 4 When he was a child he suffered a barouche accident that broke his right leg and caused a limp for the rest of his life 5 His disability would come to be mocked on a regular basis in cuples jokes and caricatures 6 He earned a licentiate degree in Law from the Central University of Madrid in 1884 7 He moved in February 1885 to the University of Bologna s Collegio di Spagna where he remained until December 1885 earning a doctorate in jurisprudence by reading a dissertation titled Introduzione allo studio del diritto costituzionale 8 Despite this he never practiced law 8 Politics in Restoration Spain edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alvaro de Figueroa 1st Count of Romanones news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Romanones depicted in his thirties as Mayor of Madrid In 1888 he became member of the Congress of Deputies in representation of Guadalajara for the first time elected in a by election to fill a vacant seat 9 Short by a few months of turning the 25 years of age needed to become a legislator he reportedly hid this circumstance 10 Shortly after on 21 September 1888 in San Sebastian Figueroa married the daughter of the Minister of Grace and Justice Manuel Alonso Martinez Casilda Alonso Martinez with whom he had seven children Casilda Luis fi Alvaro Carlos Jose Eduardo and Agustin es 11 n 1 He participated in a parliamentary scandal in July 1889 when amid a tense squabble in the legislature he wielded his walking stick against Felipe Ducazcal es who had reportedly approached the Marquis of Vega de Armijo displaying an aggressive attitude 13 He was falsely accused by Romero Robledo of having drawn the rapier he had hidden in his cane 14 He was elected Madrid municipal councillor in 1889 15 After serving as responsible for the districts of Buenavista and Audiencia as patron of the School of San Ildefonso and as director of the Services of Abattoirs Markets and Thoroughfares and Works Figueroa renounced to the office in 1892 15 He delivered an ignominious tirade against the Mayor of Madrid Alberto Bosch y Fustegueras from his parliamentary seat in 1892 16 so much that the offended called for a duel which was held on 10 July 1892 in Leganes 17 The combatants crossed two shots 18 He also held another duel with the Marquis of Valdeiglesias es 19 In 1894 he was appointed as Mayor of Madrid In 1896 he acquired a daily newspaper El Globo based in Madrid appointing Francos Rodriguez as editor and tilting the editorial line from republicanism to liberal monarchism 20 21 22 He served as Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts 1901 1902 in the government of Sagasta In 1901 he incorporated primary education teachers salaries hitherto dependent on the local administrations in the State budget securing the teachers economic autonomy and curbing the influence of caciquismo in education 23 In 1903 he founded a new political newspaper Diario Universal es replacing El Globo 24 which had been sold to Emilio Rius y Periquet 25 In the Liberal governments of 1905 and 1906 he was Minister of Development Fomento which included agriculture industry commerce and public works Justice and Interior He contributed to the rise of Jose Canalejas to the top of the Liberal Party and as a reward he was appointed minister of public instruction in 1909 and later propmoted to the presidency of the House of Representatives Congreso de los Diputados in 1912 After the assassination of Canalejas he became one of the prominent figures in the Liberal Party and he was appointed prime minister 1912 1913 He negotiated with France a treaty on Morocco During the First World War he held a pro French stance which put him in conflict with the official declaration of neutrality of the government of Eduardo Dato and with the pro German stance of the conservatives When he again became prime minister 1915 1917 he changed Spain s foreign policy closer to the allies and confronting Germany over an incident of Spanish ships being torpedoed by German submarines Incapable of resolving Spain s social problems and attacked by the pro German conservative press he finally resigned nbsp The 1918 cabinet presided by Romanones Shortly after he participated in the coalition government of Antonio Maura as Minister of Instruction and of Justice and in the government of Manuel Garcia Prieto as Minister of State 1918 and he presided a brief government in December 1918 which was toppled by the autonomist agitation in Catalonia and the labour conflicts He was replaced in April 1919 after issuing the Eight Hour Workday Decree He was minister of justice 1922 1923 in the liberal government of Manuel Garcia Prieto and became president of the Senate in 1923 serving in such capacity when the military coup of Miguel Primo de Rivera took place on 13 September 1923 nbsp Romanones with Angel Pestana left in 1922 During the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera he stayed out of politics although he participated in the conspiracy known as the Sanjuanada for which he was fined He was appointed Minister of State in the government of Juan Bautista Aznar Cabanas but the elections in 1931 showed that the monarchy was unpopular so he advised Alfonso XIII to leave Spain Romanones talked personally to Niceto Alcala Zamora and his revolutionary committee and agreed to the peaceful transfer of power to the Provisional Republican Government without military intervention in exchange of the guarantee for the life of the royal family Later life edit nbsp Romanones attending the hippodrome of Lasarte in 1932 During the Second Republic he remained deputy representative for Guadalajara The outbreak of the Civil War found him in San Sebastian in charge of his own business and he crossed over to France with the help of the French ambassador He moved to the Nationalist zone in 1937 and having become an ardent supporter of Francisco Franco 26 he was one of the signatories of the Advisory Opinion on the Illegitimacy of the Acting Powers on the 18th of July 1936 an ad hoc juridical report commissioned by the Francoist Government in Burgos trying to legitimate the national uprising the 1936 coup d etat by means of twisted arguments such as imputing on those assaulted the very crime that the assault entailed that of aiding of the rebellion 27 After the war he wrote his memoirs and was president of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando and member of the academies of History and Jurisprudence He died on 11 September 1950 in Madrid 28 Works and views editRomanones was a prolific writer and he wrote his memoirs during the Second Republic He wrote several biographies as well as political works and essays Although Catholic he was against religious intolerance and also against the influence of the clergy for which he often clashed with religious authorities An example of this happened with the enactment of the Civil Marriage Law of 1905 which stated that those getting married did not have to declare their religion He reinstated diplomatic relations with the Holy See but he was a fervent supporter of the separation of Church and State Honours editHe was a Doctor of Law by the University of Bologna a member of the Royal Academy of History and of the Royal Academy of Moral and Political Sciences Director of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando and a president of the Ateneo Madrileno He was made Count of Romanones in 1893 and Grandee of Spain in 1911 as well as 7th Count of Yebes in 1922 See also editDictatorship of Primo de Rivera 1926 Spanish coup d etat Bolshevik trienniumReferences editInformational notes His grandson Carlos Figueroa competed for Spain at the 1956 Summer Olympics 12 Citations Moreno Luzon 1996 pp 145 165 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 p 27 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 pp 24 25 Moreno Luzon 1996 p 147 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 pp 26 27 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 p 34 Cabello Carro 2013 p 38 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 p 348 Conde y Diaz Rubin amp Sanchiz Ruiz 2008 p 356 a b Nieto Sanchez 2012 p 369 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 p 49 Moreno Luzon 1996 p 146 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 pp 49 50 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 pp 62 63 Carlos Figueroa Olympic Results sports reference com Archived from the original on 2020 04 18 Retrieved 2012 02 14 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 p 71 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 pp 71 75 a b Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 p 79 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 pp 83 84 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 pp 83 87 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 p 87 Anton del Olmet amp Torres Bernal 1922 p 89 Lopez Blanco Rogelio 2001 Madrid El poder de la influencia Geografia del caciquismo en Espana 1875 1923 Madrid Marcial Pons Historia p 411 ISBN 84 259 1152 4 Aguilera Sastre Juan 2009 Valle Inclan y la Hoja Literaria de El Globo 1909 Anales de la literatura espanola contemporanea Anuario Valle Inclan IX 34 3 704 JSTOR i27742628 Title El Globo Madrid 1875 Hemeroteca Digital Retrieved 1 June 2022 Scanlon 1987 p 202 Lopez Blanco 2001 p 411 Aguilera Sastre 2009 p 704 Ruiz 2005 p 1 Arostegui 2000 p 40 Frances 1951 p 7 Bibliography Anton del Olmet Luis Torres Bernal Jose de 1922 Los grandes espanoles Romanones Madrid Imprenta de Juan Pueyo Arostegui Julio 2000 Politica y administracion en el regimen de Franco El franquismo el regimen y la oposicion Actas de las IV Jornadas de Castilla La Mancha sobre Investigacion en Archivos Vol 1 Anabad Castilla La Mancha pp 35 68 ISBN 84 931658 1 6 Cabello Carro Paz 2013 Inicio de las politicas de conservacion del Patrimonio Historico en 1900 y creacion de la Direccion General de Bellas Artes en 1915 Patrimonio Cultural y Derecho 17 35 70 ISSN 1138 3704 Conde y Diaz Rubin Jose Ignacio Sanchiz Ruiz Javier 2008 Referencias bibliograficas PDF Historia genealogica de los titulos y dignidades nobiliarias en Nueva Espana y Mexico Vol I Mexico Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico pp 331 428 ISBN 978 970 32 4999 2 Frances Jose in Spanish 1951 Semblanza y loa del conde de Romanones Academia Boletin de la Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando 1 Madrid Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando 5 15 ISSN 0567 560X Moreno Luzon Javier 1996 El conde de Romanones y el caciquismo en Castilla 1888 1923 PDF Investigaciones Historicas Epoca Moderna y Contemporanea 16 145 166 ISSN 0210 9425 Nieto Sanchez Carlos 2012 San Clemente de Bolonia 1788 1889 PDF Universidad Carlos III de Madrid ISBN 978 84 9031 158 5 Ruiz Julius 2005 Franco s Justice Repression in Madrid After the Spanish Civil War Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 928183 1 Scanlon Geraldine M 1987 La mujer y la instruccion publica de la ley Moyano a la II Republica PDF Historia de la Educacion Revista Interuniversitaria 6 Salamanca Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 93 208 ISSN 0212 0267 This article is based on the article in the Spanish Wikipedia Government offices Preceded bySantiago de Angulo Ortiz de Traspena es Mayor of Madrid1894 1895 Succeeded byNicolas de Penalver y Zamora Count of Penalver es Preceded byAntonio Garcia Alix es Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts1901 1902 Succeeded byManuel Allendesalazar Preceded byFrancisco Javier Gonzalez de Castejon y Elio Marquis of Vadillo es Minister of Agriculture Industry Commerce and Public Works1905 Succeeded byRafael Gasset Chinchilla Preceded byManuel Garcia Prieto Minister of Governation1905 1906 Succeeded byBenigno Quiroga es Preceded byJose Maria Celleruelo es Minister of Grace and Justice1906 Succeeded byAntonio Barroso Castillo es Preceded byBenigno Quiroga es Minister of Governation1906 1907 Succeeded byJuan de la Cierva y Penafiel Preceded byAntonio Barroso Castillo es Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts1910 Succeeded byJulio Burell es Preceded byEduardo Dato President of the Congress of Deputies1910 1912 Succeeded bySegismundo Moret Preceded byManuel Garcia Prieto Marquis of Alhucemas President of the Council of Ministers1912 1913 Succeeded byEduardo Dato Preceded byAntonio Barroso Castillo es Minister of Grace and Justice1913 Succeeded byPedro Rodriguez de la Borbolla es Preceded byMiguel Villanueva y Gomez Minister of State1916 Succeeded byAmalio Gimeno y Cabanas Preceded byJoaquin Fernandez Prida Minister of Grace and Justice1918 Succeeded byJose Roig y Bergada es acting Antonio Maura Preceded bySantiago Alba Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts1918 Succeeded byJulio Burell es Preceded byEduardo Dato Minister of State1918 1919 Succeeded byManuel Gonzalez Hontoria Preceded byManuel Garcia Prieto Marquis of Alhucemas President of the Council of Ministers1918 1919 Succeeded byAntonio Maura Preceded byCarlos Canal y Migolla es Minister of Grace and Justice1922 1923 Succeeded byAntonio Lopez Munoz Count of Lopez Munoz Preceded byJoaquin Sanchez de Toca President of the Senate1923 Succeeded byAntonio Fontan 1977 Preceded byJacobo Fitz James Stuart y Falco Duke of Alba Minister of State1931 Succeeded byAlejandro Lerroux Cultural offices Preceded byRamon Menendez Pidal President of the Ateneo de Madrid1920 1922 Succeeded byAdolfo Buylla Academic offices Preceded by Director of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando1910 1949 Succeeded byAniceto Marinas Spanish nobility New creation Count of Romanones1893 1950 Succeeded byLuis de Figueroa y Alonso Martinez nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alvaro de Figueroa y Torres Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alvaro de Figueroa 1st Count of Romanones amp oldid 1221776781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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