Bartolomé Carbajal y Rosas
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
- ↑ Carmen Collado Herrera: Nicaragua . Instituto de Investigaciones Dr. José María Luis Mora, 1989, p. 146.
- ↑ Archive link ( Memento from September 3, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
- ^ 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 |
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Carbajal y Rosas, Bartolomé |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Mexican ambassador |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 12, 1875 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Guadalupe de los Reyes Cosalá Sinaloa |
DATE OF DEATH | 1940 |