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José Gálvez Egúsquiza

José Gabriel Gálvez Egúsquiza (Cajamarca, March 17, 1819 - Callao, May 2, 1866) was a Peruvian lawyer, professor and liberal politician. During the presidential government of Mariano Ignacio Prado he was Secretary—i.e. Minister—of War and Navy (1865). He was killed in action during the Battle of Callao, where he died fighting the Spanish squadron, thus becoming a symbol of the independence of America.

José Gálvez Egúsquiza
Minister of War and Navy
In office
November 26, 1865 – May 2, 1866
PresidentMariano Ignacio Prado
Preceded byJosé Balta
Succeeded byPedro Bustamante
President of the National Convention
(Congress of Peru)
In office
18561856
Preceded byMiguel de San Román
Succeeded byManuel Toribio Ureta [es]
In office
18571857
Preceded byFrancisco Quirós [es]
Succeeded byConvention closed
Constituent Deputy for Pasco (Junín)
In office
July 14, 1855 – November 2, 1857
Personal details
Born(1819-03-17)March 17, 1819
Cajamarca
DiedMay 2, 1866(1866-05-02) (aged 47)
Callao
Parent(s)José Gálvez Paz
María Micaela de Egúsquiza
Alma materNational University of San Marcos
Military service
Allegiance Peru
Branch/service Peruvian Army
Years of service1854–1855, 1860, 1866
RankColonel
Battles/warsLiberal Revolution of 1854
1860 Coup d'état attempt
Peruvian Civil War of 1865
Chincha Islands War

Chilean historian Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna, who met him in person, described him as "a man of modest figure, small of body, dark, pale, with a carefully combed head, careful in his suit and extremely soft and attractive manners. But under that cold and sweet appearance he hid a big heart and a vast and developed intelligence."

Biography edit

His parents were Colonel José Manuel Gálvez Paz from Lima and María Micaela Egúsquiza y Aristizábal.[1] He was the eldest of his brothers, who included Pedro Gálvez Egúsquiza and Manuel María Gálvez Egúsquiza.[2] His first studies were made at the Cajamarca Central College of Sciences and Arts, run by the Presbyter Juan Pío Burga. After completing his studies, he helped his parents for some time in the work of their Catudén Hacienda.

In 1842 he moved to Lima, enrolling in the San Carlos convictorio, whose rector was clergyman Bartolomé Herrera [es]. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in Sacred Canons in 1843 and graduated as a lawyer in 1845. For five years he practiced his profession in the area of Cerro de Pasco and Tarma, in the central sierra of Peru.[2]

In 1850 he returned to Lima, and joined the Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe National College [es] as a professor of Moral Philosophy, Psychology, Logic, and Theodicy. In 1852 he was appointed director of the same, replacing his brother Pedro Gálvez and he printed a marked liberal tendency in the studies, contrasting with the conservative orientation followed in the Carolina convictorio.[2]

He left teaching to join the revolution started by General Ramón Castilla, in Arequipa,[2] and helped to decide the abolition of the indigenous tax and the emancipation of slaves (1854), for which he had advocated theoretically in his teaching. After the victorious battle of La Palma (January 5, 1855), he was appointed rector of the Convictorio de San Carlos, where he strove to counteract the influence of Herrera.[3]

Later he was elected deputy for the province of Pasco,[4] becoming a member of the National Convention of 1855 [es], summoned to give a new Constitution, replacing the one of 1839. When said Convention was installed on July 13, 1855, Gálvez was elected as Secretary, being re-elected in the successive elections of September 1, October 1 and November 1, holding office until the 30th of this month. On February 1, 1856, he was elected President, a position he held until the 28th of the aforementioned month, being reelected up to two more times. After arduous debates, the conventional ones gave the Liberal Constitution of 1856. Gálvez was also part of the Penal Code Coding Commission in 1857.

In 1857 Castilla dissolved the National Convention, an attitude that turned Gálvez into a staunch opponent, collaborating in the newspaper El Constitucional (April 3 to August 1, 1858). Castilla convened an ordinary Congress and had a new Constitution discussed in it, which was the moderate one of 1860. To prevent this new political charter from prevailing, Gálvez was part, together with Ricardo Palma and other liberals and officers, of a conspiracy to, according to the official version, victimize—i.e. kill—Castilla, storming his house on the Calle de las Divorciadas (November 23, 1860). The attempt failed, he had to take refuge in the Chilean legation in Lima and go into exile, heading to Europe.[2]

On December 14, 1860, he left Callao with one of his minor children, bound for Panama, traveling to Paris and then to Geneva. She returned to Peru on November 2, 1862 and devoted herself to law. The following year she obtained a doctorate in Jurisprudence at the National University of San Marcos, with a thesis on the autonomous nature of scientific institutions with respect to the State.

 
Mariano Ignacio Prado and his "Cabinet of Talents": José Gálvez, José María Químper [es], Manuel Pardo, José Simeón Tejeda [es] and Toribio Pacheco y Rivero [es].

In 1865 he was elected dean of the Lima Bar Association [es] and from that inauguration he criticized the passive attitude of President Juan Antonio Pezet in the face of the aggression of the Spanish Pacific Squad, for which reason he was again exiled to Chile. He returned to Peru and joined the revolution in Chincha led by Colonel Mariano Ignacio Prado, whom he requested to be allowed to fight. His application was accepted and he was awarded the rank of colonel. After the triumph of the revolution and the establishment of the Prado dictatorship, he was appointed Secretary (Minister) of War and Navy, integrating the famous Cabinet of Talents, of which he was leader (1865).

When, in April 1866, he found out about the manifesto made from the frigate Captain Numancia by Admiral Casto Méndez Núñez, commander of the Spanish Squad, threatening to bombard Callao within four days.[2] Gálvez assumed the direction of the defense of the port and He built a series of batteries, located to the north and south, placing the weak and few warships in the center. In the northern defense was the Junín tower, the Ayacucho fort and the famous cannon of the town; On the southern batteries, the Santa Rosa fort, the Merced tower, which was revolving and armored, and the Zepita battery, which faced the Mar Brava.

On May 2, 1866, in the early hours of the fighting, one of the Blakely cannons at Fort Santa Rosa was disabled. A bomb from the Spanish frigate Almansa [es] entered through one of the doors and fell into some gunpowder warehouses, causing an immense explosion that destroyed the tower of La Merced, where Gálvez was, along with some officers and soldiers.

The following day, the Peruvian Government issued a Decree ordering that Gálvez be considered "First Chief" in the Plaza Artillery Battalion. And when his name was read in the act of review, the commander replied: "He died heroically in the Defense of the Homeland and in Honor of America." Gálvez was buried in a mausoleum at the Presbítero Maestro Cemetery.[2]

Legacy edit

His status as a war hero in Peru is comparable to that of Miguel Grau and Francisco Bolognesi, both dead during the later War of the Pacific. His influence against conservatism and towards liberal democracy in the Conservatorio has been noted by promoters of said ideas in the years following his death.[3]

A victory column was inaugurated in the former Ovalo de la Reina, in front of the Callao gate of the old wall of Lima. Originally, the design was to have the bust of Gálvez at its top, but later it was agreed to replace it with the statue of Victory, since it was considered that the monument should pay homage to all the defenders of Callao and not just to a particular individual.[5]

Family edit

On September 7, 1846, he married Ángela Moreno y Maíz in Tarma, daughter of sergeant major José Moreno y Mantilla and María del Carmen Maíz,[2] who belonged to a wealthy family dedicated to mining businesses in the Iglesia del Milagro Church in Lima. Among their seven children were:

  • María Gálvez Moreno, who married Peruvian Army Colonel Samuel Palacios Mendiburu in 1882.
  • Angélica Gálvez Moreno, who married Manuel Bernardo Sayán Palacios on August 4, 1892.
  • Justiniano Aurelio Gálvez Moreno, who married Amalia Barrenechea de la Fuente, daughter of the jurist and diplomat José Antonio Barrenechea y Morales [es], who were parents of the politician José Gálvez Barrenechea.
  • José Gálvez Moreno, politician, sailor and Peruvian war hero of the War of the Pacific. He married Enriqueta Evens y Evens.
  • Luis Augusto Gálvez Moreno
  • Gerardo Wencelao Gálvez Moreno
  • Carlos Enrique Gabriel Gálvez Moreno

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Bravo Maxdeo, Roosevelt (2016). Gálvez, en el sesquicentenario de su muerte heroica (in Spanish). Biblioteca FMP.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "JOSÉ GABRIEL GÁLVEZ EGÚSQUIZA" (PDF). Congress of Peru.
  3. ^ a b Leguía, Jorge Guillermo (1941). Discurso pronunciado en el General de San Marcos el 21 de junio de 1931 (in Spanish). ACI. p. 142. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Constitución Política de la República del Perú (PDF) (in Spanish). Congress of Peru. 1856.
  5. ^ "Un monumento para todos". El Comercio. 1997-06-15.

Bibliography edit

josé, gálvez, egúsquiza, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, gálvez, second, maternal, family, name, egúsquiza, josé, gabriel, gálvez, egúsquiza, cajamarca, march, 1819, callao, 1866, peruvian, lawyer, professor, liberal, politician, during, preside. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Galvez and the second or maternal family name is Egusquiza Jose Gabriel Galvez Egusquiza Cajamarca March 17 1819 Callao May 2 1866 was a Peruvian lawyer professor and liberal politician During the presidential government of Mariano Ignacio Prado he was Secretary i e Minister of War and Navy 1865 He was killed in action during the Battle of Callao where he died fighting the Spanish squadron thus becoming a symbol of the independence of America Jose Galvez EgusquizaMinister of War and NavyIn office November 26 1865 May 2 1866PresidentMariano Ignacio PradoPreceded byJose BaltaSucceeded byPedro BustamantePresident of the National Convention Congress of Peru In office 1856 1856Preceded byMiguel de San RomanSucceeded byManuel Toribio Ureta es In office 1857 1857Preceded byFrancisco Quiros es Succeeded byConvention closedConstituent Deputy for Pasco Junin In office July 14 1855 November 2 1857Personal detailsBorn 1819 03 17 March 17 1819CajamarcaDiedMay 2 1866 1866 05 02 aged 47 CallaoParent s Jose Galvez PazMaria Micaela de EgusquizaAlma materNational University of San MarcosMilitary serviceAllegiance PeruBranch servicePeruvian ArmyYears of service1854 1855 1860 1866RankColonelBattles warsLiberal Revolution of 18541860 Coup d etat attemptPeruvian Civil War of 1865Chincha Islands War Battle of Callao Chilean historian Benjamin Vicuna Mackenna who met him in person described him as a man of modest figure small of body dark pale with a carefully combed head careful in his suit and extremely soft and attractive manners But under that cold and sweet appearance he hid a big heart and a vast and developed intelligence Contents 1 Biography 2 Legacy 3 Family 4 See also 5 References 6 BibliographyBiography editHis parents were Colonel Jose Manuel Galvez Paz from Lima and Maria Micaela Egusquiza y Aristizabal 1 He was the eldest of his brothers who included Pedro Galvez Egusquiza and Manuel Maria Galvez Egusquiza 2 His first studies were made at the Cajamarca Central College of Sciences and Arts run by the Presbyter Juan Pio Burga After completing his studies he helped his parents for some time in the work of their Catuden Hacienda In 1842 he moved to Lima enrolling in the San Carlos convictorio whose rector was clergyman Bartolome Herrera es He graduated with a bachelor s degree in Sacred Canons in 1843 and graduated as a lawyer in 1845 For five years he practiced his profession in the area of Cerro de Pasco and Tarma in the central sierra of Peru 2 In 1850 he returned to Lima and joined the Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe National College es as a professor of Moral Philosophy Psychology Logic and Theodicy In 1852 he was appointed director of the same replacing his brother Pedro Galvez and he printed a marked liberal tendency in the studies contrasting with the conservative orientation followed in the Carolina convictorio 2 He left teaching to join the revolution started by General Ramon Castilla in Arequipa 2 and helped to decide the abolition of the indigenous tax and the emancipation of slaves 1854 for which he had advocated theoretically in his teaching After the victorious battle of La Palma January 5 1855 he was appointed rector of the Convictorio de San Carlos where he strove to counteract the influence of Herrera 3 Later he was elected deputy for the province of Pasco 4 becoming a member of the National Convention of 1855 es summoned to give a new Constitution replacing the one of 1839 When said Convention was installed on July 13 1855 Galvez was elected as Secretary being re elected in the successive elections of September 1 October 1 and November 1 holding office until the 30th of this month On February 1 1856 he was elected President a position he held until the 28th of the aforementioned month being reelected up to two more times After arduous debates the conventional ones gave the Liberal Constitution of 1856 Galvez was also part of the Penal Code Coding Commission in 1857 In 1857 Castilla dissolved the National Convention an attitude that turned Galvez into a staunch opponent collaborating in the newspaper El Constitucional April 3 to August 1 1858 Castilla convened an ordinary Congress and had a new Constitution discussed in it which was the moderate one of 1860 To prevent this new political charter from prevailing Galvez was part together with Ricardo Palma and other liberals and officers of a conspiracy to according to the official version victimize i e kill Castilla storming his house on the Calle de las Divorciadas November 23 1860 The attempt failed he had to take refuge in the Chilean legation in Lima and go into exile heading to Europe 2 On December 14 1860 he left Callao with one of his minor children bound for Panama traveling to Paris and then to Geneva She returned to Peru on November 2 1862 and devoted herself to law The following year she obtained a doctorate in Jurisprudence at the National University of San Marcos with a thesis on the autonomous nature of scientific institutions with respect to the State nbsp Mariano Ignacio Prado and his Cabinet of Talents Jose Galvez Jose Maria Quimper es Manuel Pardo Jose Simeon Tejeda es and Toribio Pacheco y Rivero es In 1865 he was elected dean of the Lima Bar Association es and from that inauguration he criticized the passive attitude of President Juan Antonio Pezet in the face of the aggression of the Spanish Pacific Squad for which reason he was again exiled to Chile He returned to Peru and joined the revolution in Chincha led by Colonel Mariano Ignacio Prado whom he requested to be allowed to fight His application was accepted and he was awarded the rank of colonel After the triumph of the revolution and the establishment of the Prado dictatorship he was appointed Secretary Minister of War and Navy integrating the famous Cabinet of Talents of which he was leader 1865 When in April 1866 he found out about the manifesto made from the frigate Captain Numancia by Admiral Casto Mendez Nunez commander of the Spanish Squad threatening to bombard Callao within four days 2 Galvez assumed the direction of the defense of the port and He built a series of batteries located to the north and south placing the weak and few warships in the center In the northern defense was the Junin tower the Ayacucho fort and the famous cannon of the town On the southern batteries the Santa Rosa fort the Merced tower which was revolving and armored and the Zepita battery which faced the Mar Brava On May 2 1866 in the early hours of the fighting one of the Blakely cannons at Fort Santa Rosa was disabled A bomb from the Spanish frigate Almansa es entered through one of the doors and fell into some gunpowder warehouses causing an immense explosion that destroyed the tower of La Merced where Galvez was along with some officers and soldiers The following day the Peruvian Government issued a Decree ordering that Galvez be considered First Chief in the Plaza Artillery Battalion And when his name was read in the act of review the commander replied He died heroically in the Defense of the Homeland and in Honor of America Galvez was buried in a mausoleum at the Presbitero Maestro Cemetery 2 Legacy editHis status as a war hero in Peru is comparable to that of Miguel Grau and Francisco Bolognesi both dead during the later War of the Pacific His influence against conservatism and towards liberal democracy in the Conservatorio has been noted by promoters of said ideas in the years following his death 3 A victory column was inaugurated in the former Ovalo de la Reina in front of the Callao gate of the old wall of Lima Originally the design was to have the bust of Galvez at its top but later it was agreed to replace it with the statue of Victory since it was considered that the monument should pay homage to all the defenders of Callao and not just to a particular individual 5 Family editOn September 7 1846 he married Angela Moreno y Maiz in Tarma daughter of sergeant major Jose Moreno y Mantilla and Maria del Carmen Maiz 2 who belonged to a wealthy family dedicated to mining businesses in the Iglesia del Milagro Church in Lima Among their seven children were Maria Galvez Moreno who married Peruvian Army Colonel Samuel Palacios Mendiburu in 1882 Angelica Galvez Moreno who married Manuel Bernardo Sayan Palacios on August 4 1892 Justiniano Aurelio Galvez Moreno who married Amalia Barrenechea de la Fuente daughter of the jurist and diplomat Jose Antonio Barrenechea y Morales es who were parents of the politician Jose Galvez Barrenechea Jose Galvez Moreno politician sailor and Peruvian war hero of the War of the Pacific He married Enriqueta Evens y Evens Luis Augusto Galvez Moreno Gerardo Wencelao Galvez Moreno Carlos Enrique Gabriel Galvez MorenoSee also editPedro Galvez Egusquiza Manuel Maria Galvez EgusquizaReferences edit Bravo Maxdeo Roosevelt 2016 Galvez en el sesquicentenario de su muerte heroica in Spanish Biblioteca FMP a b c d e f g h JOSE GABRIEL GALVEZ EGUSQUIZA PDF Congress of Peru a b Leguia Jorge Guillermo 1941 Discurso pronunciado en el General de San Marcos el 21 de junio de 1931 in Spanish ACI p 142 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Constitucion Politica de la Republica del Peru PDF in Spanish Congress of Peru 1856 Un monumento para todos El Comercio 1997 06 15 Bibliography editBasadre Grohmann Jorge Alfredo 1939 Historia de la Republica del Peru Peru ISBN 978 612 306 353 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jose Galvez Egusquiza amp oldid 1145660116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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