Eduardo Labougle Carranza

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Eduardo Labougle Carranza (born October 31, 1883 in Buenos Aires , † 1965 ) was an Argentine diplomat and writer.

Life

His parents were Luisa Carranza Marmol and Adolfo Labougle Lagraña (* 1858, † 1926). His siblings were Raúl , Ricardo, Alfredo (31-07-1942 a 1-11-1943 Vicerrector of the Universidad de Buenos Aires) and Alejandro Labougle Carranza. He married María Susana Pearson on September 29, 1919. Their children were Graciela, María Magdalena and Delia Astrid Labougle Pearson. Eduardo Labougle Carranza studied law and social sciences at the University of Buenos Aires . He received his doctorate in law . He joined the foreign service in 1905. In 1909 he became Deputy Director of the Africa and North America Department in the Foreign Office. In 1911 he was first class embassy secretary in The Hague . In 1913 he was first class embassy secretary in Washington, DC From 1914 to September 1917 he was first class embassy secretary in Berlin .

In 1924 he presented his book on José Antonio Miralla in Buenos Aires. In 1927 Labougle was the Argentine ambassador to Mexico. He sent the government of Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear an invitation from Plutarco Elías Calles to hold talks with Argentine experts on the promotion of nationalized Mexican oil.

On July 9, 1927, he opened a school center in Mexico DF and introduced Domingo Faustino Sarmineto, after whom the school center was named: Domingo Faustino Sarmineto , Discurso Pronunciado en la inauguracion del centro escolar que lleva el nombre del gran educador Argentino en Mexico DF Mit Based in Berlin, he was also accredited by the governments in Vienna and Budapest.

In 1932, Labougle presented his letter of accreditation to Paul von Hindenburg .

After the handover of power to the NSDAP, Labougle spoke to Adolf Hitler several times .

Argentine Embassy in Berlin

Through the Argentine-German Treaty on Friendship, Trade and Shipping of September 1857, Argentine citizens enjoyed the same rights as German citizens in the German Empire. Argentine citizens were exempt from the repression of the German authorities against Jews . The embassy secretary was Luis Herman Irigoyen . The military attaché was Bernardo Weinstein. Jakob Laub and, following him, were accredited in the consular area of ​​the embassy until Argentina's entry into the war, León Schapiera.

On March 29, 1933 Labougle told the Argentine Foreign Minister Carlos Saavedra Lamas about the boycott of the Nazi Party against Jews.

On June 23, 1938, he informed the Argentine Foreign Minister José María Cantilo about applications for diplomatic protection at the Argentine consulates of Jews expatriated from the German Reich who identified themselves with Argentine passports.

On July 12, 1938, the Argentine Foreign Minister José María Cantilo signed the 11th circular of the year. It instructed the Argentine diplomatic missions abroad to deny entry visas to Argentina to all persons who can be assumed to have left or intend to leave their country of origin because they are viewed as undesirable persons or have been expelled from the country, regardless of Reason for their expulsion.

Inter-American Neutrality Committee

On October 3, 1939, Labougles, Luis A. Podestà Costa represented Argentina at the Inter-American Neutrality Conference of the OAS. At the conference, a cordon sanitaire called "neutrality belt" was defined 300 miles from the American continent. and formed the Inter-American Neutrality Committee . The committee met on January 15, 1940 to May 31, 1940 in Havana. Working groups were set up on the subjects

  • Protection of the western hemisphere
  • the study of the measures necessary to curb the activities of foreign aliens
  • the measures which might be undertaken by the American Republics in the reconstruction of the world order . From January 15 to 28, 1942, after the USA entered the war, the committee met in Rio de Janeiro and founded the Inter-American Defense Board .

Labougle was Director of the Protocol Department of the Foreign Office.

Fonts

  • José Antonio Miralla: poeta argentino: precursor de la independiencia de Cuba, Buenos Aires: Rosso y Cía., 1924.
  • Alemania en la paz y en la guerra: su desarrollo económico, el problema alimenticio, medidas de emergencia. Buenos Aires: Agencia general de librería y publicaciones, 1924.
  • Los utópicos de todos los tiempos, 1926.
  • La Revolution Allemande de 1918., Universitaires de France Paris, Presses, 1928.
  • Misión en Berlin. Buenos Aires: Editorial G. Kraft, 1946.

Individual evidence

  1. Biografía de José Antonio Miralla on Wikisource
  2. ^ Enrique Mosconi, El Petróleo Argentino
  3. Sequence 1: Labougle, Eduardo, Domingo Faustino Sarmiento. [Mexico]: H. Barrales sucr., [1927]. Harvard University Library PDS
  4. los ciudadanos argentinos gozan en Alemania de iguales derechos y garantías que los ciudadanos alemanes - y esto a título de reciprocidad - from: tratado de amistad, comercio y navegación argentino-alemán , de septiembre de 1857
  5. cdi.mecon.gov.ar  ( page can no longer be accessed , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF)@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / cdi.mecon.gov.ar  
  6. Alemania desde el ascenso de Hitler al poder hasta el inicio de la Segunda Guerra Mundial (1933–1939)
  7. La Circular 11 fue derogada . El país, p. 12
  8. ^ Pan America: Two Snooks. In: Time , January 29, 1940, JSTOR 2192837
  9. aaceremonial.com.ar ( Memento of the original from July 25, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.aaceremonial.com.ar
predecessor Office successor
Argentine Chargé d'Affaires in Havana
1919 to 1920
Luis Santiago Luti
Argentine envoy in Bogotá from
1921 to 1922
Argentine envoy in Caracas
1924 to 1925
Luis Santiago Luti Argentine envoy to Mexico City in
1926
Juan Lagos Marmol
Argentine envoy in Stockholm, also accredited to the governments of Norway and Denmark.
1927 to 1930
Ricardo Olivera
Argentine envoy in Stockholm, also accredited to the governments of Sweden and Finland.
1930
Ricardo Olivera
Argentine envoy in Lisbon
1931
Ernesto Restelli Ambassador of Argentina in Berlin, also accredited to the governments in Vienna and Budapest.
August 1932 to 1939
Ricardo Olivera
Carlos Güiraldes Argentine envoy to Santiago de Chile in
1939
Rodolfo Freyre y García Vieyra
Argentine envoy in Sao Paulo
1940