José María de Pando

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Tertulias
Tertulias
Tertulia
Tertulia
Tertulia
Tertulia
Tertulia
Tertulia

Gender:Male

Ethnic origen: White

Events:

1783  -  Lima  -  Not applicable  -  He was born in Lima.
1823  -  Madrid  -  Unknown  -  He studied at the Real Seminario de Nobles, Madrid, was Secretary of State in 1823 .
1824  -  Peru  -  Unknown  -  He was Minister of finance for Bolívar.
1827-1834  -  Lima  -  Unknown  -  He was editor of Mercurio Peruano, 1827 to 34.
1839-1840  -  Lima  -  Unknown  -  He was editor of Mercurio Peruano 1839 to 40.
1840  -  Madrid  -  Unknown  -  He died in Madrid.

Connections:

Bello opponents
Bolívar friends
Conservatives (Peru)
Hosted independence meetings
Hosted tertulias (men)
Newspaper, Mercurio Peruano
Tertulia, Pando
Writers (men)

Biography:
A politician, and minister of finance for Bolívar (1824) who was Born in Lima, in 1783. As a boy he travelled with his family to Spain where he was a pupil at the Real Seminario de Nobles de Madrid. In 1802 he began his diplomatic career (aged 15) first in Spain and then Rome where he met Bolívar in 1804. He refused to support José Bonaparte as king and from 1809-11 was confined in the fortress Fenestrelle in the Alps. He escaped in 1815 and returned to Spain. He played an active part in the manifesto of 10 March 1820 in which the King of Spain promised to conform to the constitution. In 1823 he agreed to become Secretary of State in Spain on condition that Spain accepted Latin American independence. He arrived in Callao in June 1824 to find the Spaniards still there. After the battle of Ayacucho, the Spanish authorities were ordered to sail to Chile. De Pando offered his respects to Bolívar, and was named Minister of Finance. He accused Andrés Bello of plagiarism. (Romero de Valle, 238)

He wrote "Epístola a Próspero", a poem outlining his political ideology. (Basadre, 141-152)

He was editor of Mercurio Peruano, 1827-34 and 1839-40. (Romero de Valle, 206)

O'Leary claims that his conversations with Bolívar turned the latter into a demagogue rather than a republican. (Humphreys, 28.)

He hosted tertulias that were attended by Andrés Martínez (Gamarra's Minister of Treasury) and Pedro Antonio de la Torre (Peru's first ambassador to Bolivia). Intellectual discussions were held at these tertulias, members were in favour of a strong executive government, Conservatives. He attacked the Liberal-dominated congress through the pages of El Mercurio Peruano when he was its editor. (Wibel, 331)

He died in Madrid in 1840.

References:

Humphreys, R. A. (editor). (1969) The ´Detached Recollections' of General D. F. O'Leary
Basadre, Jorge (1981) Peruanos del siglo XIX
Romero de Valle, Emilia (1966) Diccionario manual de literatura peruana y materias afines
Wibel, John Frederick (1975) The Evolution of a Regional Community Within Spanish Empire and Peruvian Nation: Arequipa, 1780-1845