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Juan Ruiz de Apodaca, 1st Count of Venadito

Juan José Ruiz de Apodaca y Eliza, 1st Count of Venadito, OIC, OSH, KOC (3 February 1754, Cadiz, Spain – 11 January 1835, Madrid, Spain) was a Spanish naval officer and viceroy of New Spain from 20 September 1816 to 5 July 1821, during Mexico's War of Independence.

The Count of Venadito
Ruiz de Apodaca as viceroy of New Spain.
61st Viceroy of New Spain
In office
20 September 1816 – 5 July 1821
MonarchFerdinand VII of Spain
Preceded byFélix María Calleja del Rey
Succeeded byJuan O'Donojú
Colonial Governor of Cuba
In office
1812–1816
MonarchFerdinand VII of Spain
Preceded bySalvador José de Muro, 2nd Marquess of Someruelos
Succeeded byJosé Cienfuegos
Member of the House of Peers
In office
24 July 1834 – 11 January 1835
Personal details
Born
Juan José Ruiz de Apodaca y Eliza Gastón de Iriarte López de Letona y Lasqueti

3 February 1754
Cadiz, Spain
Died11 January 1835(1835-01-11) (aged 80)
Madrid, Spain
Nationality Spanish
Signature

Military career

Ruiz de Apodaca was born in Cádiz into a family of renowned Basque merchants.[1] He began his military career on November 7, 1767 as part of the marine guard, and three years after he was named frigate lieutenant, being continuously promoted until reaching the rank of naval lieutenant on May 23, 1778. At this time he also married Maria Rosa Gaston with whom he had seven children. [2]

He sailed as a junior officer throughout the northern and the southern hemisphere on various ships. He was commissioned to go to Tahiti on the friguate Aguila, where he gathered much info about the area, drawing up charts of the island and its ports. He was promoted to frigate captain in 1781, and he was placed in charge of the Asuncion, joining the squadron led by Luis de Córdova y Córdova. Two years later he happened to be the commander who brought news of the end of the Anglo-French War to the Philippines, on the return trip to Spain taking silver and fruit. [3]

Upon his arrival in Cádiz, he gave a briefing on copper sheathing, and the Ministry of the Navy approved a project to apply to technique to many Spanish ships. It was this in part which led to his promotion to Captain on February 26, 1788, and shortly after to squadron major general under the command of lieutenant general Félix Ignacio de Tejada. He was tasked with repairs and improvements to the docks of Tarragona, a task which took ten years to complete. He also was tasked with informing the government of the progress of the improvements to the port of Alicante. [4]

As viceroy of New Spain

During a moment of great turbulence in the Mexican war of independence, he was named viceroy of New Spain at the beginning of 1816 but he did not take over the office from Félix María Calleja del Rey until September 20. As a new viceroy Apodaca offered amnesty to the rebels. Thousands of insurgents accepted, with only Vicente Guerrero in the south and Guadalupe Victoria and Nicolás Bravo in Veracruz remaining in active rebellion. The viceroy also reversed the harsh policies of Calleja and ordered that in no circumstances were rebel prisoners to be summarily shot.

He banned the flying of kites (as a safety measure, because they were generally flown from rooftops). He closely reviewed the public accounts, finding that Calleja had kept them accurately and carefully. He paid off the public debt, stopped relying on loans to fund the government, and relied instead only on the customs duties, taxes and other fees due the government. He revived the commercial and mining sectors of the economy, insofar as that was possible in a time of war.

On April 17, 1817, Spanish liberal Francisco Javier Mina and 308 volunteers arrived at Soto la Marina, Nuevo Santander, from London and New Orleans. Mina issued a manifesto saying he was not fighting against Spain, but rather against the tyranny of King Ferdinand VII and to restore the constitutional regime. On May 24 his troops began a march into the interior to join with rebels under Pedro Moreno at Fuerte del Sombrero, northeast of Guanajuato. Apodaca sent a strong column against Mina and his allies, under the command of Field Marshal Pascual Liñán. After active fighting, Liñán killed Moreno and took Mina prisoner at the Rancho del Venadito, near Silao on October 27. Mina was executed by firing squad on November 11. As the result of this action, the viceroy received the title of Conde de Venadito, which provoked much ridicule. Once again it looked as though the insurrection might be over.

 
Portrait by Antonio María Esquivel (1834).

The United States and Britain, which after the Napoleonic Wars were no longer war-time allies of Spain, and France were all interested in the commercial advantages they would gain by supporting the rebels in the Spanish possessions. Spanish agents received news that Britons Thomas Cochrane and Wilson were preparing an expedition against New Spain, and that Mexican insurgents in New York had bought a gunboat, which they based in Matagorda Bay to attack coastal trading in the Gulf of Mexico. Therefore, Apodaca was given instructions to redouble the vigilance on the coasts. The insurgents managed to capture an armed trading ship from Veracruz and executed the captain. American William Robinson managed to occupy Altamira and Tampico, hoping to give new impetus to the revolution, but Robinson was taken prisoner in Tampico and sent to Cádiz. He escaped to Gibraltar, with the assistance of the British. Later, Spain and the United States signed the Adams-Onís Treaty on February 22, 1819. The treaty established boundaries between the United States and New Spain, which had been in dispute since the Louisiana Purchase. The U.S. obtained Florida and renounced its claim to Texas. Spain renounced its claim to the Oregon Country.

The previous viceroy, Calleja, had established a fort in the old tobacco warehouse in Mexico City, named La Ciudadela. Apodaca converted it into a storehouse for arms and munitions, but these were slowly being pilfered. He ordered Brigadier Francisco Novella to take charge of La Ciudadela and stop the thievery. Novella considered that task beneath his dignity, and was able to enlist the support of the Audiencia. The incident made Novella an enemy of Ruiz de Apodaca, and it was Novella who later deposed and replaced him in 1821.

The Plan de Iturbide

On January 1, 1820, Colonel Rafael del Riego rose in rebellion in Andalusia, Spain, demanding the restoration of the Constitution of 1812. Ferdinand VII was forced to reinstate the constitution on March 9, 1820 in Spain and all of the Spanish possessions. When the order arrived in New Spain, Apodaca delayed its publication pending the outcome of secret negotiations being carried out in the church of La Profesa. On March 7, 1821, the negotiators agreed on a declaration of independence for New Spain, accompanied by an offer to Ferdinand VII to rule as an absolute monarch, without mention of a constitution.[citation needed]

For this plan to succeed, the support of the military was necessary. To that end, the viceroy chose General Agustín de Iturbide to represent the cabal, at the same time freeing him from a court case involving accusations of misbehavior at El Bajío. The plan, ironically as it turned out, became known as the Plan de Iturbide.[citation needed] Iturbide had been given command of royalist troops in the south of the country on November 9, 1820. In the meantime Apodaca instituted the Constitution of 1812 on May 31, 1820.

The Plan de Iguala

In pursuit of his own ambitions, Iturbide corresponded with and then met with the insurgent general he was sent to fight, Vicente Guerrero on February 10, 1821. The two of them agreed to declare the independence of Mexico. This agreement was announced March 2, 1821, in the town of Iguala in the present state of Guerrero.

This agreement became known as the Plan de Iguala. It invited Viceroy Ruiz de Apodaca to become leader of the independence movement. The viceroy rejected the offer, and declared Iturbide a traitor and an outlaw. He sent troops against him, but everywhere the troops rebelled and went over to Iturbide. Lieutenant Colonel Antonio López de Santa Anna, for example, endorsed the Plan de Iguala in Xalapa on May 29, 1821.

The overthrow of Ruiz de Apodaca

The royalists, led by Brigadier Buceli, declared Apodaca inept and deposed him on July 5, 1821. Apodaca was sent to Spain to face charges, but he was absolved and returned to duty. He was captain general of the Spanish navy at the time of his death in 1835.

The city of Apodaca in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico, is named for him.

General Francisco Novella was made interim viceroy until the arrival of Ruiz de Apodaca's replacement, Superior Political Chief Juan O'Donojú, a short time later. The 300-year rule of Mexico by Spain was nearly at an end.

Notes and references

  1. ^ Azcona Pastor, Juan (2004). Possible paradises: Basque emigration to Latin America. Nevada, United States: University of Nevada Press. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-87417-444-1.
  2. ^ Rivera Cambas, Manuel (1873). Los Gobernantes de Mexico: Tomo I (in Spanish). J.M. Aguilar Cruz. p. 599.
  3. ^ Rivera Cambas, Manuel (1873). Los Gobernantes de Mexico: Tomo I (in Spanish). J.M. Aguilar Cruz. p. 599.
  4. ^ Rivera Cambas, Manuel (1873). Los Gobernantes de Mexico: Tomo I (in Spanish). J.M. Aguilar Cruz. p. 599.
  • García Puron, Manuel, México y sus gobernantes, v. 1. Mexico City: Joaquín Porrua, 1984.
  • Orozco L., Fernando, Fechas Históricas de México. Mexico City: Panorama Editorial, 1988, ISBN 968-38-0046-7.
  • Orozco Linares, Fernando, Gobernantes de México. Mexico City: Panorama Editorial, 1985, ISBN 968-38-0260-5.

Further reading

  • Anna, Timothy E. (1978). The Fall of Royal Government in Mexico City. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-0957-6.
  • Pastor, Juan Azcona (2004). Possible paradises: Basque emigration to Latin America. Nevada: University of Nevada Press. ISBN 978-0-87417-444-1.
  • Archer, Christon I. (1989). "La Causa Buena: The Counterinsurgency Army of New Spain and the Ten Years' War". In Jaime E. Rodríguez O (ed.). The Independence of Mexico and the Creation of the New Nation. UCLA Latin American Studies. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center Publications. ISBN 978-0-87903-070-4.
  • Christon I. Archer, ed. (2003). The Birth of Modern Mexico. Willmington, Delaware: SR Books. ISBN 0-8420-5126-0.
  • Hamnett, Brian R. (1986). Roots of Insurgency: Mexican Regions, 1750–1824. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-32148-8.
  • Ruíz de Apodaca, Juan (2000). "An Update for the Minister of War on the Military Occurrences of the Kingdom of New Spain During the Month of March 1818". In Christon I. Archer (ed.). The Wars of Independence in Spanish America. Jaguar Books on Latin America. Wilmington, Delaware: SR Books. ISBN 0-8420-2468-9.

External links

  Media related to Juan Ruiz de Apodaca at Wikimedia Commons

Government offices
Preceded by
Salvador de Muro y Salazar
Spanish Governor of Cuba
1812 - 1816
Succeeded by
José Cienfuegos
Preceded by Viceroy of New Spain
1816 - 1821
Succeeded by

juan, ruiz, apodaca, count, venadito, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, october, 2012, learn, when, remove, this. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Ruiz de Apodaca and the second or maternal family name is Eliza Juan Jose Ruiz de Apodaca y Eliza 1st Count of Venadito OIC OSH KOC 3 February 1754 Cadiz Spain 11 January 1835 Madrid Spain was a Spanish naval officer and viceroy of New Spain from 20 September 1816 to 5 July 1821 during Mexico s War of Independence The Most ExcellentThe Count of VenaditoOIC OSH KOCRuiz de Apodaca as viceroy of New Spain 61st Viceroy of New SpainIn office 20 September 1816 5 July 1821MonarchFerdinand VII of SpainPreceded byFelix Maria Calleja del ReySucceeded byJuan O DonojuColonial Governor of CubaIn office 1812 1816MonarchFerdinand VII of SpainPreceded bySalvador Jose de Muro 2nd Marquess of SomeruelosSucceeded byJose CienfuegosMember of the House of PeersIn office 24 July 1834 11 January 1835Personal detailsBornJuan Jose Ruiz de Apodaca y Eliza Gaston de Iriarte Lopez de Letona y Lasqueti3 February 1754Cadiz SpainDied11 January 1835 1835 01 11 aged 80 Madrid SpainNationalitySpanishSignature Contents 1 Military career 2 As viceroy of New Spain 3 The Plan de Iturbide 4 The Plan de Iguala 5 The overthrow of Ruiz de Apodaca 6 Notes and references 7 Further reading 8 External linksMilitary career EditRuiz de Apodaca was born in Cadiz into a family of renowned Basque merchants 1 He began his military career on November 7 1767 as part of the marine guard and three years after he was named frigate lieutenant being continuously promoted until reaching the rank of naval lieutenant on May 23 1778 At this time he also married Maria Rosa Gaston with whom he had seven children 2 He sailed as a junior officer throughout the northern and the southern hemisphere on various ships He was commissioned to go to Tahiti on the friguate Aguila where he gathered much info about the area drawing up charts of the island and its ports He was promoted to frigate captain in 1781 and he was placed in charge of the Asuncion joining the squadron led by Luis de Cordova y Cordova Two years later he happened to be the commander who brought news of the end of the Anglo French War to the Philippines on the return trip to Spain taking silver and fruit 3 Upon his arrival in Cadiz he gave a briefing on copper sheathing and the Ministry of the Navy approved a project to apply to technique to many Spanish ships It was this in part which led to his promotion to Captain on February 26 1788 and shortly after to squadron major general under the command of lieutenant general Felix Ignacio de Tejada He was tasked with repairs and improvements to the docks of Tarragona a task which took ten years to complete He also was tasked with informing the government of the progress of the improvements to the port of Alicante 4 As viceroy of New Spain EditDuring a moment of great turbulence in the Mexican war of independence he was named viceroy of New Spain at the beginning of 1816 but he did not take over the office from Felix Maria Calleja del Rey until September 20 As a new viceroy Apodaca offered amnesty to the rebels Thousands of insurgents accepted with only Vicente Guerrero in the south and Guadalupe Victoria and Nicolas Bravo in Veracruz remaining in active rebellion The viceroy also reversed the harsh policies of Calleja and ordered that in no circumstances were rebel prisoners to be summarily shot He banned the flying of kites as a safety measure because they were generally flown from rooftops He closely reviewed the public accounts finding that Calleja had kept them accurately and carefully He paid off the public debt stopped relying on loans to fund the government and relied instead only on the customs duties taxes and other fees due the government He revived the commercial and mining sectors of the economy insofar as that was possible in a time of war On April 17 1817 Spanish liberal Francisco Javier Mina and 308 volunteers arrived at Soto la Marina Nuevo Santander from London and New Orleans Mina issued a manifesto saying he was not fighting against Spain but rather against the tyranny of King Ferdinand VII and to restore the constitutional regime On May 24 his troops began a march into the interior to join with rebels under Pedro Moreno at Fuerte del Sombrero northeast of Guanajuato Apodaca sent a strong column against Mina and his allies under the command of Field Marshal Pascual Linan After active fighting Linan killed Moreno and took Mina prisoner at the Rancho del Venadito near Silao on October 27 Mina was executed by firing squad on November 11 As the result of this action the viceroy received the title of Conde de Venadito which provoked much ridicule Once again it looked as though the insurrection might be over Portrait by Antonio Maria Esquivel 1834 The United States and Britain which after the Napoleonic Wars were no longer war time allies of Spain and France were all interested in the commercial advantages they would gain by supporting the rebels in the Spanish possessions Spanish agents received news that Britons Thomas Cochrane and Wilson were preparing an expedition against New Spain and that Mexican insurgents in New York had bought a gunboat which they based in Matagorda Bay to attack coastal trading in the Gulf of Mexico Therefore Apodaca was given instructions to redouble the vigilance on the coasts The insurgents managed to capture an armed trading ship from Veracruz and executed the captain American William Robinson managed to occupy Altamira and Tampico hoping to give new impetus to the revolution but Robinson was taken prisoner in Tampico and sent to Cadiz He escaped to Gibraltar with the assistance of the British Later Spain and the United States signed the Adams Onis Treaty on February 22 1819 The treaty established boundaries between the United States and New Spain which had been in dispute since the Louisiana Purchase The U S obtained Florida and renounced its claim to Texas Spain renounced its claim to the Oregon Country The previous viceroy Calleja had established a fort in the old tobacco warehouse in Mexico City named La Ciudadela Apodaca converted it into a storehouse for arms and munitions but these were slowly being pilfered He ordered Brigadier Francisco Novella to take charge of La Ciudadela and stop the thievery Novella considered that task beneath his dignity and was able to enlist the support of the Audiencia The incident made Novella an enemy of Ruiz de Apodaca and it was Novella who later deposed and replaced him in 1821 The Plan de Iturbide EditOn January 1 1820 Colonel Rafael del Riego rose in rebellion in Andalusia Spain demanding the restoration of the Constitution of 1812 Ferdinand VII was forced to reinstate the constitution on March 9 1820 in Spain and all of the Spanish possessions When the order arrived in New Spain Apodaca delayed its publication pending the outcome of secret negotiations being carried out in the church of La Profesa On March 7 1821 the negotiators agreed on a declaration of independence for New Spain accompanied by an offer to Ferdinand VII to rule as an absolute monarch without mention of a constitution citation needed For this plan to succeed the support of the military was necessary To that end the viceroy chose General Agustin de Iturbide to represent the cabal at the same time freeing him from a court case involving accusations of misbehavior at El Bajio The plan ironically as it turned out became known as the Plan de Iturbide citation needed Iturbide had been given command of royalist troops in the south of the country on November 9 1820 In the meantime Apodaca instituted the Constitution of 1812 on May 31 1820 The Plan de Iguala EditIn pursuit of his own ambitions Iturbide corresponded with and then met with the insurgent general he was sent to fight Vicente Guerrero on February 10 1821 The two of them agreed to declare the independence of Mexico This agreement was announced March 2 1821 in the town of Iguala in the present state of Guerrero This agreement became known as the Plan de Iguala It invited Viceroy Ruiz de Apodaca to become leader of the independence movement The viceroy rejected the offer and declared Iturbide a traitor and an outlaw He sent troops against him but everywhere the troops rebelled and went over to Iturbide Lieutenant Colonel Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna for example endorsed the Plan de Iguala in Xalapa on May 29 1821 The overthrow of Ruiz de Apodaca EditThe royalists led by Brigadier Buceli declared Apodaca inept and deposed him on July 5 1821 Apodaca was sent to Spain to face charges but he was absolved and returned to duty He was captain general of the Spanish navy at the time of his death in 1835 The city of Apodaca in Monterrey Nuevo Leon Mexico is named for him General Francisco Novella was made interim viceroy until the arrival of Ruiz de Apodaca s replacement Superior Political Chief Juan O Donoju a short time later The 300 year rule of Mexico by Spain was nearly at an end Notes and references Edit Azcona Pastor Juan 2004 Possible paradises Basque emigration to Latin America Nevada United States University of Nevada Press p 73 ISBN 978 0 87417 444 1 Rivera Cambas Manuel 1873 Los Gobernantes de Mexico Tomo I in Spanish J M Aguilar Cruz p 599 Rivera Cambas Manuel 1873 Los Gobernantes de Mexico Tomo I in Spanish J M Aguilar Cruz p 599 Rivera Cambas Manuel 1873 Los Gobernantes de Mexico Tomo I in Spanish J M Aguilar Cruz p 599 Garcia Puron Manuel Mexico y sus gobernantes v 1 Mexico City Joaquin Porrua 1984 Orozco L Fernando Fechas Historicas de Mexico Mexico City Panorama Editorial 1988 ISBN 968 38 0046 7 Orozco Linares Fernando Gobernantes de Mexico Mexico City Panorama Editorial 1985 ISBN 968 38 0260 5 Further reading EditAnna Timothy E 1978 The Fall of Royal Government in Mexico City Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 0957 6 Pastor Juan Azcona 2004 Possible paradises Basque emigration to Latin America Nevada University of Nevada Press ISBN 978 0 87417 444 1 Archer Christon I 1989 La Causa Buena The Counterinsurgency Army of New Spain and the Ten Years War In Jaime E Rodriguez O ed The Independence of Mexico and the Creation of the New Nation UCLA Latin American Studies Los Angeles UCLA Latin American Center Publications ISBN 978 0 87903 070 4 Christon I Archer ed 2003 The Birth of Modern Mexico Willmington Delaware SR Books ISBN 0 8420 5126 0 Hamnett Brian R 1986 Roots of Insurgency Mexican Regions 1750 1824 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 32148 8 Ruiz de Apodaca Juan 2000 An Update for the Minister of War on the Military Occurrences of the Kingdom of New Spain During the Month of March 1818 In Christon I Archer ed The Wars of Independence in Spanish America Jaguar Books on Latin America Wilmington Delaware SR Books ISBN 0 8420 2468 9 External links Edit Media related to Juan Ruiz de Apodaca at Wikimedia Commons Government officesPreceded bySalvador de Muro y Salazar Spanish Governor of Cuba1812 1816 Succeeded byJose CienfuegosPreceded byFelix Maria Calleja del Rey 1st Count of Calderon Viceroy of New Spain1816 1821 Succeeded byFrancisco Novella Azabal Perez y Sicardo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Juan Ruiz de Apodaca 1st Count of Venadito amp oldid 1135338393, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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