fbpx
Wikipedia

Pedro José de Guerra

Pedro José Domingo de Guerra (4 December 1809 – 10 September 1879) was a Bolivian jurist who served as the acting President of Bolivia[1] in 1879 in the absence of Hilarión Daza who was personally commanding the Bolivian Army in the War of the Pacific between Chile, and an allied Bolivia and Peru. His grandson, José Gutiérrez Guerra, was also president of Bolivia between 1917 and 1920.

Pedro José Domingo de Guerra
President of Bolivia
In office
17 April 1879 – 10 September 1879
Preceded byHilarión Daza (provisional)
Succeeded bySerapio Reyes Ortiz (acting)
Minister of the Interior
In office
9 August 1845 – 25 November 1847
PresidentJosé Ballivián
Preceded byPedro Buitrago
Succeeded byTomás Frías
Personal details
Born(1809-12-04)4 December 1809
La Paz, Bolivia
Died10 September 1879(1879-09-10) (aged 69)
La Paz, Bolivia
SpouseMaria Rynd
Children
  • María Andrea de Guerra y Rynd
  • José Eduardo de Guerra y Rynd
Parents
  • José de Guerra y Olazo
  • María Andrea Sánchez de Bustamante y Peñaranda

Early life and family edit

Born into a family with roots in the Spanish colonial nobility, he won enviable distinction as a statesman, jurist, and diplomat. Completing his primary and secondary studies in the city of his birth, he moved to Sucre to continue his post-secondary studies. He graduated from the Universidad Mayor, Real y Pontificia de San Francisco Xavier de Chuquisaca as a lawyer in June 1829.

A philanthropist and considered a man of high integrity, in tune with the social needs of his time, he founded the Philological Society in La Paz with José Joaquín de Mora and engaged in several charitable activities.[2]

Political career edit

Diplomatic roles edit

 
José Ballivián, under whom Guerra served as Minister of the Interior between 1845 and 1847.

Years later, he traveled to Peru to study international law, for which he was appointed as Consul of Bolivia before the Government of Lima by the members of the ruling party at the time. He held the position until 1834.[3]

 
Linares appointed Guerra as chief justice of the Supreme Court.

In the late 1830s, he served as Bolivia's consul in Paris and minister plenipotentiary to the Court of St. James's. There, he met and, in 1840, married the scion of an aristocratic Anglo-Irish family, Lady Maria Rynd. She was the stepdaughter of Admiral Thomas Brown, the niece of physician Francis Rynd and a maternal relative of Lord Palmerston.[4] After the collapse of the Peru–Bolivian Confederation, Guerra returned to Bolivia and was assigned as minister plenipotentiary in Lima,[5] a role he occupied until 1843.

During his time in Lima, he was charged with a project that was far too ambitious for its time, a first attempt to lay the groundwork for a treaty that would integrate the Empire of Brazil, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and the Republic of New Granada into an "American Union", exclusive of the United States of America.[6] This idea would fail and would not be seriously pursued by the governments followed Ballivián.

Ministerial and judicial roles edit

In 1845, he was appointed as Minister of the Interior during the presidency of José Ballivián, an office he was in charge of until 1847.[7]

Guerra served first as justice, and then chief justice, of the Supreme Court,[8] a position he held between 1859 and 1861, the year that civilian President José María Linares was overthrown by José María de Achá. During his tenure, he reformed much of the judiciary and of the legal and criminal proceedings of the time.[9] Guerra was replaced alongside several other judges that had served under Linares, as President Achá wanted to rid the Supreme Court of any remaining Linaristas. Guerra would be one of the leading opposition leaders during the Achá presidency and constantly barraged the President and his allies in the press and through individual pamphlets which became widely popular throughout the country.[10]

However, with Achá's imminent overthrow in 1864, Guerra decided to ally himself with the president, as he was more opposed to Manuel Isidoro Belzu and Mariano Melgarejo. For this, he was made a magistrate that year,[11] a position he held even after Achá's overthrow.

Guerra remained in the Supreme Court well into the dictatorships of Melgarejo and Agustín Morales. However, after nearly four decades of serving his country as minister, diplomat, and magistrate, Guerra officially retired on June 17, 1873.[12] Guerra would return to politics with the outbreak of the War of the Pacific.

The War of the Pacific edit

Prelude and declaration of war edit

 
Scenes of the War of the Pacific.

On November 17, 1878, the government of La Paz ordered the prefect of the department of Cobija, Severino Zapata, to enforce the 10-cent tax established by the Law of February 14, 1878 in an attempt to counteract the serious economic crisis in Bolivia. This violated an agreement signed in 1873 with the Compañía de Salitres y Ferrocarriles de Antofagasta, which stipulated that the company could not be taxed until twenty-five years after the signing of the treaty. Thus, originating the casus belli for Chile.

 
Daza's supreme decree of April 17, 1879, which declared him Supreme Commander of the Bolivian Army left Guerra as Acting President of Bolivia.

Subsequently, on February 1, 1879, the government of Bolivia unilaterally rescinded the contract, suspending the effects of the law of February 14, 1878, and decided to claim the saltpeter fields occupied by the Compañía de Salitres y Ferrocarriles de Antofagasta. They proceeded to auction the assets of the company in order to collect the unpaid taxes, using armed force in the process.[13][14][15] The auction was scheduled for February 14, 1879. President Hilarión Daza ignored the probability of Chilean retaliation. Chile occupied Antofagasta that same February 14, 1879, frustrating the auction. Daza, citing invasion as a casus belli, declared war on Chile. The secret treaty between Peru and Bolivia signed in 1873 in which former pledged to support the latter militarily in case of conflict with Chile.[16][17] Chile declared war on Bolivia on March 5, 1879, and proceeded to occupy the Bolivian coast, asserting old unresolved territorial claims regarding the coast between those parallels.[18]

Acting President edit

Daza's campaign and Guerra's death edit

The war began with the complete and virtually unchallenged occupation by Chile of the Bolivian Litoral. Peru entered the war shortly after, but the Chileans made deep pushes into the Bolivian and Peruvian coastline territories. President Daza would decide to personally take command of the army and left Bolivia in the process, where Guerra assumed the position of Acting President as the President of the Council of Ministers that had been left in charge of the country.[4]

Daza led the army to Tacna, and after the Chilean landing in Pisagua, he marched south to support the Peruvian Army stationed in Iquique. After staying in Arica briefly, he continued marching. However, after three days of marching along the Camarones ravine, he announced to Peruvian President Mariano Ignacio Prado that his troops refused to continue due to the harsh conditions of the desert, opting to return to Arica. Daza's telegram to Prado on November 16 read, "Desert overwhelms, army refuses to move forward," verbatim.[16][19][20] This decision significantly affected the direction of the war, leaving Peru virtually alone in the conflict. Daza was overthrown in a coup in December 1879, however, Guerra did not witness any of these events as he died in office on September 10 of that year, aged 69.[21]

References edit

  1. ^ House, United States Congress; State, United States Department of (1880). Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States: transmitted to Congress with the Annual message of the President. 1880. US Government Print Office. p. 75.
  2. ^ Monguió, Luis. Don Jose Joaquin de Mora (in Spanish). University of California Press. p. 200.
  3. ^ Guerra, Pedro Jose (1843). Reimpresión de un papel que ha aparecido en el público en forma de circular dirijida al cuerpo diplomático (in Spanish). Imprenta del Estado. p. 4.
  4. ^ a b Rojas, Casto (1917). Bocetos. La Paz: Imprenta Velarde. pp. 239, 407.
  5. ^ Exteriores, Peru Ministerio de Relaciones (1976). Perú y Bolivia, 1840-1843 (in Spanish). Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores del Perú. p. 143.
  6. ^ Cortés, Manuel José (1861). Ensayo sobre la historia de Bolivia. Sucre: Imprenta de Beeche. p. 181.
  7. ^ Bolivia; Sanjinés, Jenaro (1848). Colección oficial de leyes, decretos, órdenes y resoluciones vigentes (in Spanish). Litografias e imprentas unidas. p. 273.
  8. ^ Justicia, Bolivia Corte Suprema de (1860). Gaceta judicial de Bolivia (in Spanish). Imprenta "Bolivar,". p. 581.
  9. ^ Guerra, Pedro José de (1859). Informe sobre la ley del procedimiento criminal (in Spanish).
  10. ^ Guerra, Pedro José de (1862). Queja que hace ante la Asamblea Nacional contra los majistrados de la Corte Suprema, Manuel Sánchez de Velasco, Felipe Echazu, Anjel Aguirre, Manuel Escobar y conjuez Anjel M. Fernández Alonso (in Spanish). Impr. Boliviana.
  11. ^ Paz, Luis (1910). La Corte suprema de justicia de Bolivia: su historia y su jurisprudencia (in Spanish). Impr. "Bolivar" de M. Pizarro. p. 103.
  12. ^ Bolivia (1874). Anuario de Leyes Y Disposiciones Supremas (in Spanish). p. 89.
  13. ^ "Bolivia - POLITICAL INSTABILITY AND ECONOMIC DECLINE, 1839-79". countrystudies.us. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
  14. ^ Rossi, Christopher R. (2017-04-27). Sovereignty and Territorial Temptation. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-18353-7.
  15. ^ General Hilarion Daza: El crimen de Uyuni (in Spanish). Imp. de " La Tribuna". 1894.
  16. ^ a b Farcau, Bruce W. (2000). The Ten Cents War: Chile, Peru, and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific, 1879-1884. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-96925-7.
  17. ^ Basadre, Jorge (1946). Historia de la república del Perú (in Spanish). Editorial Cultura Antártica, s. a., distribuidores exclusivos: Librería Internacional del Perú, s. a.
  18. ^ "Bolivia - FROM THE WAR OF THE PACIFIC TO THE CHACO WAR, 1879- 1935". countrystudies.us. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
  19. ^ Phillips, Richard Snyder (1989). Bolivia in the War of the Pacific, 1879-1884. University of Virginia.
  20. ^ Calvo, Roberto Querejazu (1995). Aclaraciones históricas sobre la Guerra del Pacífico (in Spanish). Librería Editorial "Juventud,".
  21. ^ Ochoa, José Vicente (1899). Diario de la campaña del ejército boliviano en la guerra del Pacífico (in Spanish). Tipografía y Librería Económica. pp. 138–139.
Political offices
Preceded by President of Bolivia
1879
Succeeded by

pedro, josé, guerra, pedro, josé, domingo, guerra, december, 1809, september, 1879, bolivian, jurist, served, acting, president, bolivia, 1879, absence, hilarión, daza, personally, commanding, bolivian, army, pacific, between, chile, allied, bolivia, peru, gra. Pedro Jose Domingo de Guerra 4 December 1809 10 September 1879 was a Bolivian jurist who served as the acting President of Bolivia 1 in 1879 in the absence of Hilarion Daza who was personally commanding the Bolivian Army in the War of the Pacific between Chile and an allied Bolivia and Peru His grandson Jose Gutierrez Guerra was also president of Bolivia between 1917 and 1920 Pedro Jose Domingo de GuerraPresident of BoliviaActingIn office 17 April 1879 10 September 1879Preceded byHilarion Daza provisional Succeeded bySerapio Reyes Ortiz acting Minister of the InteriorIn office 9 August 1845 25 November 1847PresidentJose BallivianPreceded byPedro BuitragoSucceeded byTomas FriasPersonal detailsBorn 1809 12 04 4 December 1809La Paz BoliviaDied10 September 1879 1879 09 10 aged 69 La Paz BoliviaSpouseMaria RyndChildrenMaria Andrea de Guerra y RyndJose Eduardo de Guerra y RyndParentsJose de Guerra y OlazoMaria Andrea Sanchez de Bustamante y Penaranda Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Political career 2 1 Diplomatic roles 2 2 Ministerial and judicial roles 3 The War of the Pacific 3 1 Prelude and declaration of war 4 Acting President 4 1 Daza s campaign and Guerra s death 5 ReferencesEarly life and family editBorn into a family with roots in the Spanish colonial nobility he won enviable distinction as a statesman jurist and diplomat Completing his primary and secondary studies in the city of his birth he moved to Sucre to continue his post secondary studies He graduated from the Universidad Mayor Real y Pontificia de San Francisco Xavier de Chuquisaca as a lawyer in June 1829 A philanthropist and considered a man of high integrity in tune with the social needs of his time he founded the Philological Society in La Paz with Jose Joaquin de Mora and engaged in several charitable activities 2 Political career editDiplomatic roles edit nbsp Jose Ballivian under whom Guerra served as Minister of the Interior between 1845 and 1847 Years later he traveled to Peru to study international law for which he was appointed as Consul of Bolivia before the Government of Lima by the members of the ruling party at the time He held the position until 1834 3 nbsp Linares appointed Guerra as chief justice of the Supreme Court In the late 1830s he served as Bolivia s consul in Paris and minister plenipotentiary to the Court of St James s There he met and in 1840 married the scion of an aristocratic Anglo Irish family Lady Maria Rynd She was the stepdaughter of Admiral Thomas Brown the niece of physician Francis Rynd and a maternal relative of Lord Palmerston 4 After the collapse of the Peru Bolivian Confederation Guerra returned to Bolivia and was assigned as minister plenipotentiary in Lima 5 a role he occupied until 1843 During his time in Lima he was charged with a project that was far too ambitious for its time a first attempt to lay the groundwork for a treaty that would integrate the Empire of Brazil Chile Bolivia Peru Ecuador and the Republic of New Granada into an American Union exclusive of the United States of America 6 This idea would fail and would not be seriously pursued by the governments followed Ballivian Ministerial and judicial roles edit In 1845 he was appointed as Minister of the Interior during the presidency of Jose Ballivian an office he was in charge of until 1847 7 Guerra served first as justice and then chief justice of the Supreme Court 8 a position he held between 1859 and 1861 the year that civilian President Jose Maria Linares was overthrown by Jose Maria de Acha During his tenure he reformed much of the judiciary and of the legal and criminal proceedings of the time 9 Guerra was replaced alongside several other judges that had served under Linares as President Acha wanted to rid the Supreme Court of any remaining Linaristas Guerra would be one of the leading opposition leaders during the Acha presidency and constantly barraged the President and his allies in the press and through individual pamphlets which became widely popular throughout the country 10 However with Acha s imminent overthrow in 1864 Guerra decided to ally himself with the president as he was more opposed to Manuel Isidoro Belzu and Mariano Melgarejo For this he was made a magistrate that year 11 a position he held even after Acha s overthrow Guerra remained in the Supreme Court well into the dictatorships of Melgarejo and Agustin Morales However after nearly four decades of serving his country as minister diplomat and magistrate Guerra officially retired on June 17 1873 12 Guerra would return to politics with the outbreak of the War of the Pacific The War of the Pacific editPrelude and declaration of war edit nbsp Scenes of the War of the Pacific On November 17 1878 the government of La Paz ordered the prefect of the department of Cobija Severino Zapata to enforce the 10 cent tax established by the Law of February 14 1878 in an attempt to counteract the serious economic crisis in Bolivia This violated an agreement signed in 1873 with the Compania de Salitres y Ferrocarriles de Antofagasta which stipulated that the company could not be taxed until twenty five years after the signing of the treaty Thus originating the casus belli for Chile nbsp Daza s supreme decree of April 17 1879 which declared him Supreme Commander of the Bolivian Army left Guerra as Acting President of Bolivia Subsequently on February 1 1879 the government of Bolivia unilaterally rescinded the contract suspending the effects of the law of February 14 1878 and decided to claim the saltpeter fields occupied by the Compania de Salitres y Ferrocarriles de Antofagasta They proceeded to auction the assets of the company in order to collect the unpaid taxes using armed force in the process 13 14 15 The auction was scheduled for February 14 1879 President Hilarion Daza ignored the probability of Chilean retaliation Chile occupied Antofagasta that same February 14 1879 frustrating the auction Daza citing invasion as a casus belli declared war on Chile The secret treaty between Peru and Bolivia signed in 1873 in which former pledged to support the latter militarily in case of conflict with Chile 16 17 Chile declared war on Bolivia on March 5 1879 and proceeded to occupy the Bolivian coast asserting old unresolved territorial claims regarding the coast between those parallels 18 Acting President editDaza s campaign and Guerra s death edit The war began with the complete and virtually unchallenged occupation by Chile of the Bolivian Litoral Peru entered the war shortly after but the Chileans made deep pushes into the Bolivian and Peruvian coastline territories President Daza would decide to personally take command of the army and left Bolivia in the process where Guerra assumed the position of Acting President as the President of the Council of Ministers that had been left in charge of the country 4 Daza led the army to Tacna and after the Chilean landing in Pisagua he marched south to support the Peruvian Army stationed in Iquique After staying in Arica briefly he continued marching However after three days of marching along the Camarones ravine he announced to Peruvian President Mariano Ignacio Prado that his troops refused to continue due to the harsh conditions of the desert opting to return to Arica Daza s telegram to Prado on November 16 read Desert overwhelms army refuses to move forward verbatim 16 19 20 This decision significantly affected the direction of the war leaving Peru virtually alone in the conflict Daza was overthrown in a coup in December 1879 however Guerra did not witness any of these events as he died in office on September 10 of that year aged 69 21 References edit House United States Congress State United States Department of 1880 Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States transmitted to Congress with the Annual message of the President 1880 US Government Print Office p 75 Monguio Luis Don Jose Joaquin de Mora in Spanish University of California Press p 200 Guerra Pedro Jose 1843 Reimpresion de un papel que ha aparecido en el publico en forma de circular dirijida al cuerpo diplomatico in Spanish Imprenta del Estado p 4 a b Rojas Casto 1917 Bocetos La Paz Imprenta Velarde pp 239 407 Exteriores Peru Ministerio de Relaciones 1976 Peru y Bolivia 1840 1843 in Spanish Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores del Peru p 143 Cortes Manuel Jose 1861 Ensayo sobre la historia de Bolivia Sucre Imprenta de Beeche p 181 Bolivia Sanjines Jenaro 1848 Coleccion oficial de leyes decretos ordenes y resoluciones vigentes in Spanish Litografias e imprentas unidas p 273 Justicia Bolivia Corte Suprema de 1860 Gaceta judicial de Bolivia in Spanish Imprenta Bolivar p 581 Guerra Pedro Jose de 1859 Informe sobre la ley del procedimiento criminal in Spanish Guerra Pedro Jose de 1862 Queja que hace ante la Asamblea Nacional contra los majistrados de la Corte Suprema Manuel Sanchez de Velasco Felipe Echazu Anjel Aguirre Manuel Escobar y conjuez Anjel M Fernandez Alonso in Spanish Impr Boliviana Paz Luis 1910 La Corte suprema de justicia de Bolivia su historia y su jurisprudencia in Spanish Impr Bolivar de M Pizarro p 103 Bolivia 1874 Anuario de Leyes Y Disposiciones Supremas in Spanish p 89 Bolivia POLITICAL INSTABILITY AND ECONOMIC DECLINE 1839 79 countrystudies us Retrieved 2022 10 19 Rossi Christopher R 2017 04 27 Sovereignty and Territorial Temptation Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 18353 7 General Hilarion Daza El crimen de Uyuni in Spanish Imp de La Tribuna 1894 a b Farcau Bruce W 2000 The Ten Cents War Chile Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 96925 7 Basadre Jorge 1946 Historia de la republica del Peru in Spanish Editorial Cultura Antartica s a distribuidores exclusivos Libreria Internacional del Peru s a Bolivia FROM THE WAR OF THE PACIFIC TO THE CHACO WAR 1879 1935 countrystudies us Retrieved 2022 10 19 Phillips Richard Snyder 1989 Bolivia in the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 University of Virginia Calvo Roberto Querejazu 1995 Aclaraciones historicas sobre la Guerra del Pacifico in Spanish Libreria Editorial Juventud Ochoa Jose Vicente 1899 Diario de la campana del ejercito boliviano en la guerra del Pacifico in Spanish Tipografia y Libreria Economica pp 138 139 Political offices Preceded byHilarion Daza President of Bolivia1879 Succeeded bySerapio Reyes Ortiz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pedro Jose de Guerra amp oldid 1212647722, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.