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Juan José Nieto Gil

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Preceded by
  
Juan Antonio Calvo

Party
  
Colombian Liberal Party

Spouse
  
Josefa Teresa (m. 1834)


Name
  
Juan Nieto

Succeeded by
  
Benjamin Noguera

Resigned
  
July 18, 1861

Juan Jose Nieto Gil El presidente negro que fue blanqueado EL UNIVERSAL


Preceded by
  
Mariano Ospina Rodriguez

Succeeded by
  
Tomas Cipriano de Mosquera y Arboleda

Deputy
  
Juan Antonio de La Espriella

Preceded by
  
Jose Antonio Lopez de Tagle y Ortiz Munoz

Role
  
Former President of Colombia

Died
  
July 16, 1866, Cartagena, Colombia

Presidential term
  
January 25, 1861 – July 18, 1861

Previous office
  
President of Colombia (1861–1861)

PRESIDENTE AFRODESENDIENTE DE COLOMBIA JUAN JOSÉ NIETO GIL


Juan José Nieto Gil (24 June 1805 – 16 July 1866) was a Colombian politician, Army general and writer. A Liberal party caudillo of Cartagena, he served interimly as Governor of the Province of Cartagena, and was later elected President of the Sovereign State of Bolívar from 1859 to 1864. In 1861, during the Colombian Civil War, he fought on the side of the Liberal rebels against the Administration of President Mariano Ospina Rodríguez, and acting in rebellion proclaimed himself President of the Granadine Confederation in his right as the Presidential Designate, relinquishing power four months later to the Liberal leader, General Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera y Arboleda, who led a successful coup d'état against the Conservative Government in Bogotá.

Contents

Juan José Nieto Gil httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsaa

Nieto, of mulatto background, was the first Afro-Colombian to rise to politics in the history of Colombia becoming the first Afro-Colombian to become the executive officeholder of a first level administrative division of Colombia. His role, name, and background however, were subjugated to the obscure confines of history until he was rediscovered in the late 1970s by the Colombian historian and sociologist, Orlando Fals Borda.

Juan José Nieto Gil Cultura Juan Jos Nieto Gil nico presidente afrocolombiano de la

Juan jos nieto gill un baranoero en la historia de colombia


Presidency 1861

Juan José Nieto Gil Juan Jose Nieto Gil Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

On 8 May 1860, amid raising tensions between Conservative party politicians in power and the Liberal opposition on the question of federated state's rights and sovereignty, the caudillo and President of Cauca, General Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera y Arboleda, broke relations with the central government and declared civil war against the Administration of President Mariano Ospina Rodríguez. Nieto followed suit and on 3 July broke relations with the central government, soon Mosquera recruited the help of Nieto to overthrow Ospina from power, and sent Ministers Plenipotentiaries to sign a treaty with Bolívar and Nieto as its President; on 10 September, Nieto signed the Treaty of Union and Confederation of the States of Bolívar and Cauca (Tratado de Unión y Confederación de los Estados de Bolívar y Cauca) creating a provisional government and setting the framework for a new republic called United States of New Granada. The treaty also named Mosquera, Nieto and Obando as the First, Second, and Third Presidential Designate respectively.

Personal life

Born 24 June 1804 in the settlement of Cibarco, between the towns of Baranoa and Tubará, in the Province of Santa Marta part of the then Viceroyalty of the New Granada. Born to a humble family of scarce resources, his parents were Tomás Nicolás Nieto and Benedicta Gil, a mason and candlemaker respectively, who lived in the town of Baranoa and moved to Cartagena de Indias in 1811 following the Declaration of Independence of Cartagena Province as part of the larger struggle of the South American Wars of Independence that started in 1810 and gave birth to the Republic of Colombia. On 13 September 1827 he married María Margarita del Carmen Palacio García del Fierro, daughter of José de Palacio y Ponce de León, a Canarian businessman for whom Nieto worked for as a scrivener, and of María Francisca García del Fierro y Velacorte, a Neogranadine lady of reputable family of Cartagena who died during childbirth and related to Rafael Núñez Moledo as his grandaunt. Together they had one son, Ricardo, who died during childhood and shortly after Nieto became a widower as well after the passing of his wife. On 21 April 1834 he remarried this time to Josefa Teresa Plácida de los Dolores Cavero y Leguina, likewise of reputable and influential family and daughter of José Ignacio de Cavero y Cárdenas, a Precursor of the Independence of Colombia of Mexican birth, and María Teresa de Leguina y López Tagle, granddaughter of the Count of Pestagua.

Selected works

  • Nieto Gil, Juan José (September 2001) [Originally published: Kingston, Jamaica: Jacob De Cordova Print, 1844.]. Bernal V, Leticia, ed. Ingermina o la hija de Calamar (Novel). Antorcha y Daga (in Spanish). Germán Espinosa (prologue) (3rd ed.). Medellín: EAFIT University. ISBN 978-958-9041-87-1. OCLC 50150546. 
  • References

    Juan José Nieto Gil Wikipedia