Bartolomé Carbajal y Rosas

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Bartolomé Carbajal y Rosas (born September 12, 1875 in Guadalupe de los Reyes Cosalá Sinaloa , † 1940 ) was a Mexican ambassador and foreign minister .

Life

Bartolomé Carbajal y Rosas studied law and practiced the profession of lawyer . He was ambassador for the government of Porfirio Díaz in Buenos Aires from December 14, 1904 to May 15, 1906 and at the same time accredited to the government of Uruguay , Paraguay and Brazil . From July 31, 1908 to May 22, 1911 he was accredited as Ambassador to the Government of Costa Rica in San José .

During his tenure in Nicaragua , from June 11, 1909 to May 22, 1911, the US military intervention in Nicaragua began 1909–1925 . In 1909, Bartolomé Carbajal y Rosas asked the governor of Chihuahua , Enrique Creel Cuilty , to go to Washington, DC , and negotiate matters related to Nicaragua there. In early December 1906, the US government landed US marines on Nicaragua's Caribbean coast . On December 17, 1909, José Santos Zelaya resigned as President of Nicaragua and went into exile via Mexico to New York City . On May 9, 1911, Adolfo Díaz , former accountant for the US mining company The Rosario and Light Mines Co., came to the presidency of Nicaragua, whose ambassadors were also received by the US government . Bartolomé Carbajal y Rosas helped de-escalate the conflict in Nicaragua.

From June 26 to November 6, 1911, Bartolomé Carbajal was foreign minister in the cabinet of his friend Francisco León de la Barra .

From November 26, 1912 to April 19, 1913, Bartolomé Carbajal y Rosas was Francisco Madero's ambassador to the government of Nicholas II (Russia) .

Victoriano Huerta appointed him ambassador to London on February 27, 1913 , where he was accredited as Ambassador to the Court of St James’s on July 21, 1913 . From the fall of Victoriano Huerta, from July 15, 1914 to 1925, no Mexican envoys were accredited; they remained Agentes Confidenciales.

From 1923 to 1927 Bartolomé Carbajal y Rosas was accredited in Washington, DC and represented the Mexican government at the Comisión General de Reclamaciones entre México y los Estados Unidos

Individual evidence

  1. Carmen Collado Herrera: Nicaragua . Instituto de Investigaciones Dr. José María Luis Mora, 1989, p. 146.
  2. Archive link ( Memento from September 3, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  3. ^ Ernesto de la Torre Villar: Correspondencia diplomática franco-mexicana, 1808-1839 . France. Archives des affaires étrangères, Colegio de México, 1957, p. 380.
predecessor Office successor
Francisco Leon de la Barra Mexican chargé d'affaires in Buenos Aires
on December 14, 1904, relieved of business on May 15, 1906.
Manuel J. de Lizardi
Francisco Leon de la Barra Mexican Chargé d'affaires in Asuncion
December 14, 1904 to May 14, 1906
Manuel de Lizardi
Francisco Leon de la Barra Mexican Chargé d'affaires in Rio de Janeiro
February 23, 1905 to August 14, 1906
Manuel de Lizardi
Federico Gamboa Mexican Ambassador to San José
July 31, 1908 to May 22, 1911
Luis G. Ricoy
predecessor Office successor
Federico Gamboa Mexican Ambassador to Panama City
April 22, 1908, accredited July 31, 1908 to June 11, 1911
Eduardo Ruiz
Federico Gamboa Mexican Ministro Residente en Nicaragua
Accredited June 11, 1909 to May 22, 1911 in office
Luis G. Ricoy
Victoriano Salado Álvarez Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores
June 26th to November 6th 1911
Manuel Calero y Sierra
Carlos Américo Lera Mexican Ambassador to Saint Petersburg
November 26, 1912 to April 19, 1913
Miguel Covarrubias Acosta
predecessor Office successor
Miguel Covarrubias Acosta Mexican agent Confidencial in London
Appointed on February 27, 1913 to stay in London from July 21, 1913 to September 17, 1914
Miguel Covarrubias Acosta