Luis Felipe Carbo y Amador
Luis Felipe Carbo y Amador (born August 17, 1857 in Guayaquil , † February 25, 1913 ) was an Ecuadorian diplomat and politician .
Life
Luis Felipe Carbo y Amador was the son of Estebanita Amador y Sotomayor Luna and José María Carbo Noboa, the Hacendado of de Pepa Oro and Carmencita two cocoa tree - plantations on the Rio Pijagual and governor of the province of Guayas during the blockade by the Peruvian army under Admiral Ignacio Mariátegui y Tellería 1859.
From 1876 to 1979 Luis Felipe Carbo y Amador began studying law and in 1880 married his cousin, Matilde Noboa Carbo, they had 14 children. He inherited a farm in Daule from his grandfather Francisco Carbo Unzueta , which he managed. He followed his uncle Pedro Carbo as spokesman for the youth organization of the liberal party in Guayaquil.
From 1876 the Noboa, Baquerizo and Carbo families supported President Ignacio de Veintemilla , when he took up his second term as dictator in 1882, he appointed Luis Felipe Carbo y Amador as Minister of the Interior and his brother and cousin Manuel Baquerizo Noboa as Minister of War and Navy, during the Uncle Pedro Carbo went into exile in Lima in protest.
In 1883 troops from Eloy Alfaro and José María Sarasti besieged Guayaquil . Carbo and Noboa received negotiating power from Ignacio de Veintemilla and negotiated the conflict on June 18, 1883 with Manuel Semblantes Alomía and José María Plácido Caamaño on the HMS Constance without result, after which Guayaquil was occupied on July 9, 1883 and Carbo and Noboa spent a few months in Lima spent in exile. When Carbo returned to Guayaquil in 1884, he represented several US companies and a financial institution based in Panama . In November 1885 he published with Francisco Martínez Aguirre and José de Lapierre in the Gómez Hnos printing house . , a satirical weekly El Penco , against President José María Plácido Caamaño. In 1885 he briefly published the opposition magazine Fray Gerundio and in 1886 El Jorobadito, whereupon Caamaño had him expelled from Ecuador.
In early 1889 he became the spokesman for the Sociedad Liberal Republicana , which Antonio Flores Jijón had founded in Quito to drive a wedge between the conservative and Partido Liberal Radical Ecuatoriano of Eloy Alfaro . Later he took over the editing of the party organ of the Sociedad Liberal Republicana the daily newspaper La Reforma from Manuel Martínez Barreiro shortly before the Revolución of June 5, 1895, he gave the editing to Felicísimo López. From March 1889 he published in the daily newspaper La Nación by Juan Bautista de Elizalde Pareja under the pseudonym Isidorito .
predecessor | Office | successor |
---|---|---|
Cornelio Escipión Vernaza | Interior Minister of Ecuador 1882 |
1885: José Modesto Espinosa (December 2, 1833 in Quito; † 1916 there) |
Pablo Herrera González | Foreign Minister of Ecuador June 19, 1895 - September 27, 1895 |
Aparicio Ribadeneira Ponce |
José Plácido Caamaño |
Ecuadorean Ambassador to Washington DC January 15, 1896 - January 12, 1903 |
Alfredo Baquerizo Moreno |
Leonidas Plaza Gutierrez |
Ecuadorean Ambassador to Washington DC May 28, 1906 - February 20, 1907 |
Rafael Maria Arízaga Machuca |
predecessor | Office | successor |
---|---|---|
Pacífico Villagómez | Foreign Minister of Ecuador February 20, 1907 - March 30, 1908 |
Alfredo Monge |
Individual evidence
- ↑ Luis Felipe Carbo y Amador: [1]
- ↑ Ministro de lo interior de Ecuador: PDF ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Cornelio Escipión Vernaza: [2]
- ↑ José Modesto Espinosa: [3]
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Carbo y Amador, Luis Felipe |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Ecuadorian diplomat and politician |
DATE OF BIRTH | 17th August 1857 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Guayaquil |
DATE OF DEATH | February 25, 1913 |