José María Obando
José María Obando | |
---|---|
Secretary of War and Navy | |
In office 1831–1831 | |
President | Domingo Caycedo |
Preceded by | José Miguel Pey |
Succeeded by | José Hilario López |
Personal details | |
Born | José María Ramón Obando del Campo August 8, 1795 Neogranadine |
Political party | Liberal |
Spouse(s) | Dolores Espinosa de los Monteros Mesa (1824–1833) Timotea Carvajal Marulanda (1837–1861) |
José María Ramón Obando del Campo (August 8, 1795 – April 29, 1861) was a
Personal life
Born out of wedlock to Ana María Crespo on August 8, 1795, in the town of Güengüé, municipality of
Despite his humble beginnings, Obando received a formal education in the Real Seminario de Popayán thanks to his adoptive family who were well-off merchants from
The Army and his rise to power
During the Wars of Independence the South was still very loyal to Spain, and specially Pasto were Obando joined the
Simón Bolívar dismissed the
Bolívar's actions had angered more than just Obando, the level of opposition was such that he resigned in 1830 after surviving an assassination attempt by his political enemies in the north. The political vacuum and struggle for power left by his resignation led to a
Vice presidency 1831–1832
Following the vacuum of power left by the resignation of Bolívar, the dissolution of the Gran Colombia, the struggle of power between Urdaneta and Caycedo, and the larger contention between federalists and Centralists, a National
As provisional acting president, Obando sanctioned on February 29, 1832, the
Return to Nariño
While the Constituent Assembly was drafting the constitution a conflict was developing in the south, the Congress of Ecuador had issued a Decree annexing the province of Cauca to their territory and sent in President Juan José Flores to enforce it.[15] In response to Ecuador's actions the Neogranadine assembly issued a decree of territorial integrity and dispatched General López to keep Ecuador at bay. López managed to secure the provinces of Choco and Popayán, but the provinces of Cauca and Buenaventura remained under the military control of Ecuador. Obando, who had stayed behind in Bogotá as head of the provisional government was sent immediately by Vice President Márquez upon taking power to defend the territory, and once all the diplomatic options were exhausted, Márquez sent in reinforcements and support to aid Obando who was the commander of the 1st Army Division to take the Cauca by force.[13] From Popayán Obando marched to Pasto with 1,500 soldiers and was able to take the Pasto with no struggle or conflict as the invading army had left in anticipation.[16]
Election of 1837
The
War of the Supremes
In 1839 Obando was thrust into a war of religious and political ramification that threatened to tear the country apart. The conflict began when Congress passed a law to suppress small convents and monasteries and re-appropriate the land in Pasto, the law was not intended to punish the Church as the places in question were indeed small and sparingly occupied by mostly Ecuadorian clergy, but the deeply Roman Catholic province went up in arms at the involvement of the government in their religious affairs, even after the Bishop of Popayán had approved of the measure.[20] Obando who had returned to private life in his hacienda of Las Piedras near Pasto was divided on the issue as he was not pro-clergy but was torn on supporting his people. In Bogotá the opposition party, made up of those who supported Santander, wanted President Márquez to appoint Obando to quell the uprisings, but he chose to appoint Generals Mosquera and Pedro Alcántara Herrán instead. Obando tried to remain out of the conflict and moved to Bogotá to prove his non-complicity. The tide turned for Obando when he was implicated in the assassination of Sucre after Herrán captured José Erazo, a guerrilla soldier that fought in Obando's division. According to Erazo, Obando had ordered him to carry out the assassination, and with his testimony a judge in Pasto issued an arrest warrant for Obando. The implications were largely believed to be political since Obando was the most likely candidate for the following presidential elections, and his enemies wanted him out of the race. Obando willing to clear his name traveled to Popayán to clear his name but it was clear that by then the conflict had become political and when he arrived to Popayán he led a short revolt against the government that quickly ended in an agreement with General Herrán and Obando continued on his way to Pasto.
Once in his political and military stronghold, Obando entered in open rebellion declaring himself "Supreme Director of the War in Pasto, General in Chief of the Restoring Army, and Protector of the Religion of Christ Crucified", and calling for a revert to
Exile and return
With Obando defeated, the War of the Supremes quickly ended in favour of the government, Obando decided to go into exile and fled to
He remained in exile until January 1, 1849, when then President Mosquera gave amnesty to all those who committed political crimes. Obando returned to New Granada on March 13 of that same year and asked Mosquera to open a trial for him to be judged for his alleged involvement in the death of Sucre.[21] Mosquera refused and the matter was passed to Congress where a proposed decree was introduced that allowed individuals to give up their immunity to stand trial. This resolution passed in the Chamber of Representatives but it was voted down in the Senate, where allies of Obando also voted to prevent this to happen fearing that he would be found guilty.[21]
In 1849 his good friend
He was appointed leader of the Liberal forces in the Colombian Civil War of 1851 and was able to defeat the Conservative rebels.
Presidency 1853–1854
At the time of the
The first order of business for President Obando was to sanction the
Coup
Bogotá became the heated stage of conflicts between the artisan class and the merchant class. In 1853 a group of artisans had petitioned the government to increase import taxes to protect the national economy, they argued that many of these imports were goods that could be manufactured in the country. A bill was drawn up and passed the Chamber of Representatives, but the measure died in the Senate. An angry crowd gathered outside congress and a violent altercation erupted between artisans, merchants and politicians. The crowd was dispersed but the animosity between these groups only grew in the following months, different public events seemed to be a stage for confrontations between these groups which had come to be known as the ruanas (
Obando's disbelief and inaction catalysed the events which occurred in the morning of April 17, 1854. General Melo arrived at his door and informed President Obando that he would mount a coup and invited him to suspend government and establish a provisional dictatorship to resolve the problems of the country. Obando baffled by the well announced and warned event that was taking place could not believe what was happening, he who after all had fought the dictatorships of Bolívar and Urdaneta, and who had fought against the regimes of Márquez, Herrán and Mosquera was now faced with the decision to become a dictator or a deposed president. President Obando declined him, and said he refused to take any power than that which was legitimately given to him by the people, and willingly and quietly accepted his fate to go down rather than to betray his convictions, thus a successful bloodless coup d'état had been launched by Melo. Obando was taken prisoner along with most members of his cabinet and many congressmen, some were able to escape and took refuge in the Legation of the United States.[26]
Post Presidency
In 1860 Obando was commissioned to suppress a revolution in Cauca, and died in defending the Federal system against the Centralists.[27] He was killed with six spears in the back, four in his chest and a contusion in the head. When he was dead his upper lip was cut off by Sebastían Tobar with a knife in order to remove his signature moustache.[28] He was buried on May 1, 1861, in the Cemetery of Funza. He was survived by his second wife Timotea and his eight children. On August 19, 1869, his remains were exhumed and reburied in the family estate of El Empedradero in Popayán, and afterwards they were moved to the ossuary of the church of San Agustín, where they remained until they were moved once again through the lobbying of Antonio José Lemos Guzmán to the Pantheon of the Forefathers (Panteón de los Próceres).[28]
References
- ^ Vice President of New Granada in charge of the Executive branch of the Provisional Government. See Vice presidency 1831–1832 for more info.
- ^ "José María Obando". Encyclopædia Britannica (Encyclopædia Britannica Online ed.). 2010. Retrieved 2010-02-17.
- Viceroyalty of the New Granadaat the time.
- ^ Luís Ángel Arango Library. Archived from the originalon 2009-08-08. Retrieved 2010-02-15.
- OCLC 16133577.
- OCLC 1460605.
- ^ Arismendi Posada, Ignacio (1983) [1980]. Gobernantes Colombianos [Rules of Colombia] (in Spanish) (2nd ed.). Bogotá: Interprint Editors, Ltd. p. 55.
- OCLC 255629151. Retrieved 2010-02-16.
- OCLC 6228247.
- ^ OCLC 318322171.
- OCLC 318238194.
- OCLC 247345155.
- ^ OCLC 9505458. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
- OCLC 123452331. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
- OCLC 6213056.
- OCLC 28262328. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
- ^ OCLC 25009607.
- ^ a b (Bushnell 1993, p. 288)
- OCLC 186195116.
- ^ (Bushnell 1993, p. 91)
- ^ OCLC 523336. Retrieved 2010-03-02.
- ^ a b (Henao Melguizo & Arrubla 1920, pp. 524–525)
- ISBN 978-0-559-91847-6. Retrieved 2010-03-04.
- Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes. Retrieved 2010-03-04.
- ]
- OCLC 12896012. Retrieved 2010-03-04.
- ^ One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
- ^ OCLC 777239.
Further reading
- Paz Otero, Víctor (2005). El edipo de sangre, o, De la vida tormentosa de José María Obando [The Oedipus of blood, or, From the stormy life of José María Obando]. Colección Dorada (1st ed.). Bogotá: Villegas Asociados. OCLC 123452331. Retrieved 2010-02-18.
- Cruz Cárdenas, Antonio (1997). "José María Obando". Grandes oradores colombianos [Great Colombian Orators] (DOC). Biblioteca Familiar Presidencia de la República (in Spanish). Bogotá: Imprenta Nacional de Colombia. OCLC 246074231. Archived from the originalon 2009-08-22. Retrieved 2010-02-17.