José Miguel Arroyo

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

José Miguel Arroyo (* 1810 - June 17, 1867 in Acatita de Baján ) was a Mexican ambassador and foreign minister .

Life

José Miguel Arroyo negotiated the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo signed on February 2, 1848 with Nicholas Trist . José Miguel Arroyo was Oficial Mayor Encargado OME (executive officer of a ministry) in numerous government cabinets .

Arroyo was from June 2-4, 1853 Minister of War in the cabinet of the government of Antonio López de Santa Anna . From June 14, 1863 he was Foreign Minister in this government. From June 27, 1863 to July 2, 1864, José Miguel Arroyo was Subsecretario (State Secretary).

As head of the Ministerio de Negocios y Marina , José Miguel Arroyo had the Peruvian ambassador and critic of the French intervention in Mexico , Manuel Nicolás Corpancho , expelled on August 20, 1863. He died while trying to escape from the ship that was supposed to deport him. At the beginning of Emperor Maximilian's tenure from June to July 1864, José Miguel Arroyo headed the Mexican Foreign Ministry. On July 15, 1866, José Miguel Arroyo became Puente with a number of other public figures including General José Rojo, Agustín Zires , José de la Parra, Padre Ordonez, Mesas, Fellicino Chavarria, Wampher, Pedro Echevaria, Augustin Cruz and Manuel Morales Arrested in Mexico City on charges of conspiracy with Antonio López de Santa Anna .

Publications

  • Que considerando que ningun gobierno tiene el derecho de oprimir á los pueblos, Mexico, José Miguel Arroyo, Ministerio de Relaciones Interiores y Esteriores, 1853
  • Memoria de la segretaria de estado y negocios estranjeros
predecessor Office successor
Manuel Diez de Bonilla Mexican ambassador to Guatemala
March 3, 1832 to June 3, 1833
Mariano Macedo
Manuel Diez de Bonilla Appointed Mexican ambassador to San José
on January 22, 1833
Francisco Díaz Covarrubias
Manuel Diez de Bonilla Appointed Mexican ambassador to Managua
on January 22, 1833
Francisco Díaz Covarrubias
Manuel Diez de Bonilla Appointed Mexican ambassador to San Salvador
on January 22, 1833
Mariano Macedo
predecessor Office successor
Manuel Diez de Bonilla Mexican ambassador to Bogotá
January 23, 1833 to February 25, 1834
Federico Falqués
Joaquín María del Castillo y Lanzas Head of the Ministerio de Negocios y Marina
February 2, 1859 to 1860
José Fernando Ramírez,
Martín Castillo,
Luis de Arroyo,
Juan N. Pereda
Tomás Murphy
Ignacio Luis Vallarta

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Nathan Covington Brooks, A complete history of the Mexican War: its causes, conduct, and consequences , 558 pp. 396, 1849
  2. Mexico. Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores , Luis Jesús Weckmann Muñoz , Las relaciones franco-mexicanas: 1839-1867, Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, 1962
  3. ^ Donald Fithian Stevens, Origins of instability in early republican Mexico
  4. http://www.senado2010.gob.mx/docs/bibliotecaVirtual/11/2731/3.pdf  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. José Miguel Arroyo (Tercer periodo) Oficial Mayor Encargado del Despacho en el Gobierno del general don Antonio López de Santa-Anna, del 2 de junio al 4 del mismo mes, del ano de 1853 (2 dias), Ernesto de la Torre Villar, Correspondencia diplomática Franco-mexicana, 1808-1839: Indice de los documentos. Memoria de las revoluciones de Mexico. Noticia histórica acerca de la República de Mexico. Apéndice, France. Archives des affaires étrangères, Colegio de México, 1957 424 S p. 373@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.senado2010.gob.mx  
  5. Friedrich von Hellwald, Maximilian I. Kaiser von Mexico: his life, work and death, p. 161
  6. ^ Sergio Guerra Vilaboy, Benito Juárez en América Latina y el Caribe
  7. United States. Dept. of State, Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States , Part 3
  8. Embajadores de México
  9. Embajadores de México
  10. Embajadores de México
  11. Embajadores de México
  12. MANUEL GÓMEZ PEDRAZA ( Memento from June 20, 2009 in the Internet Archive )