Enrique Cordova

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Enrique Córdova (born March 2, 1881 in Usulután , † April 5, 1966 in San Salvador ) was a Salvadoran politician and diplomat .

Life

He attended the Colegio de don Daniel Hernández in Santa Tecla and received his doctorate in law from the Universidad de El Salvador in 1905 , of which he was later rector.

From 1906 to 1907 he was State Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the government of Pedro José Escalón .

Fernando Figueroa , supported by Pedro José Escalón, emerged from the elections in December 1906 as his successor in the office of President of El Salvador. Luis Alonso Baraona, the intellectual foster father of Enrique Córdova, founder of the Partido Constitucional de El Salvador in 1899 and in exile in Honduras until 1906, was inferior .

After the Taft cabinet had pushed through the overthrow of José Santos Zelaya , Enrique Córdova campaigned with Enrique Borja for José Madriz as President of Nicaragua . This was elected by parliament on December 21, 1909, but was also not recognized by the Taft cabinet.

During the government of Manuel Enrique Araujo (March 1, 1911 to February 9, 1913) he was Minister Resident and Ministre plénipotentiaire in Mexico City from June 18, 1912 .

From October 17, 1915 to 1917, he was State Secretary in the Ministry of War in the government of Carlos Meléndez , and when Luis Alonso Barahona died on October 17, 1915, he replaced him as Ministro de Guerra y Marina (Navy and Minister of War).

In 1928 he was a member of the Comisión Internacional de la Sociedad de las Naciones.

When in 1954 Dr. Miguel Castro Ramirez Padre, the Vice-Director of the Universidad de El Salvador , died, Enrique Córdova was elected as his successor as Dean of Human Sciences on March 10, 1964 .

When Francisco Gavidia died on September 24, 1955, he replaced him as Director de la Academia Salvadoreña de la Lengua , and corresponding member of the Real Academia Española .

Individual evidence

  1. Luis Alonso Baraona
  2. ^ Academia Salvadoreña de la Lengua, Academia Salvadoreña, La Academia, 1964
predecessor Office successor
El Salvadoran Minister Resident in Mexico City
June 18, 1912 to February 9, 1913
Héctor Escobar Serrano
José Luis Salcedo Gallegos
Francisco Imendia
Carlos Antonio Ascencio Girón
Luis Alonso Baraona El Salvadoran Minister of War
October 17, 1915 to 1917
Pío Romero Bosque