Valentin de Foronda

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Valentin de Foronda y González de Echávarri (14 January 1751, in Vitoria – 24 December 1821), was Spanish general consul in Philadelphia from 1801 to 1807 and Spanish plenipotentiary minister in the U.S. from 1807 to 1809—tense times because of American ships' lack of discipline in trading with Cuba and the U.S.'s support for Francisco de Miranda, who led an attempted revolution for Venezuelan independence from Spain.

He returned to Spain upon the arrival of

Napoleon Bonaparte
.

He taught at the Basque Institutional School, known as

Order of Carlos III in 1801 and was later a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1802.[1]

In November 1799, De Foronda wrote a letter to the then Spanish Secretary of State Mariano Luis de Urquijo, another Basque, concerning the financial crushing of the "Banco de San Carlos", a precursor to the present-day Bank of Spain, where he had invested the proceeds of the sale of his land and farms. Its reception probably resulted in his diplomatic nomination to the Spanish consulate in Philadelphia.

His "Observaciones sobre algunos puntos de la Obra de Don Quijote", Philadelphia (1807), motivated his inclusion on the shortlist of people phobic against seventeenth-century Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes (September 29, 1547 – April 23, 1616).

References

  1. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2021-04-01.

Article by R. Sidney Smith from Duke University, (US), 40 pages in pdf format, Valentin de Foronda, Diplomático y Economista:

http://www.cepc.es/rap/Publicaciones/Revistas/11/RECP_023_005.pdf