Severo Fernández

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Severo Fernández
Severo Fernández - 2.jpg
24th President of Bolivia
In office
19 August 1896 – 12 April 1899
Vice PresidentRafael Peña de Flores (1st)
Jenaro Sanjinés (2nd)
Preceded byMariano Baptista
Succeeded byJosé Manuel Pando
10th Vice President of Bolivia
First Vice President
In office
11 August 1892 – 19 August 1896
PresidentMariano Baptista
Preceded byJosé Manuel del Carpio
Succeeded byRafael Peña de Flores
Other offices
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Worship
In office
11 March 1922 – 14 December 1922
PresidentBautista Saavedra
Preceded byRicardo Jaimes Freyre
Succeeded by (acting)
In office
15 August 1892 – 15 October 1892
Acting
PresidentMariano Baptista
Preceded byJosé Manuel del Carpio
Succeeded by
Minister of War
In office
20 November 1893 – 22 May 1895
PresidentMariano Baptista
Preceded byPedro Vargas
Succeeded byLuis Paz
In office
4 November 1889 – 14 August 1893
PresidentAniceto Arce
Mariano Baptista
Preceded byJulian López
Succeeded byPedro Vargas
Personal details
Born
Severo Fernández Alonso Caballero

(1849-08-15)15 August 1849
Sucre, Bolivia
Died12 August 1925(1925-08-12) (aged 75)
Potosí, Bolivia
Political partyConservative
Spouse(s)Filomena Perusqui Aramayo
ParentsÁngel Fernández
Casimira Caballero
EducationUniversity of Saint Francis Xavier
Signature

Severo Fernández Alonso Caballero (15 August 1849 in Sucre – 12 August 1925) was a Bolivian lawyer and politician who served as the 24th President of Bolivia from 1896 to 1899 and as the 10th Vice President of Bolivia from 1892 to 1896. He is best remembered as the last president of the 15-year period of Conservative Party hegemony (1884–99).

Political career[]

Presidency[]

Like his predecessor, Mariano Baptista, Fernández was a more conciliatory and legalist[clarification needed] breed of Conservative. He presided over the collapse of Conservative Party rule and its loss of power in the aftermath of the 1899 Civil War against the Liberal Party. A disgruntled Liberal Party had become increasingly frustrated during the many years of Conservative dominance, often attained by electoral fraud. After 1894, led by the combative José Manuel Pando, a former military hero in the War of the Pacific, the Liberals' calls for anti-government rebellions became more strident, but they were always neutralized by a loyal military establishment.

All of this changed radically with the emergence of a new, and very polarizing, wedge issue: the simmering displeasure in the cities of Sucre and Potosi, dating back to the days of President Andrés de Santa Cruz (1829–39), regarding the de facto takeover by the city of La Paz as the seat of the Bolivian government. The regional conflict also had much to do with the emergence of a new tin-mining elite based in La Paz and Oruro, to the detriment of the old silver-mining establishment based in Sucre and Potosi, as symbolized by Conservative leaders such as Arce and Pacheco (both silver tycoons). To add fuel to the fire, the Liberals called for a federal decentralization of power, thus garnering further support from outlying regions of the country.

Civil War (often called the "Federal Revolution") exploded when Chuquisaca and Potosi parliamentarians in Sucre passed a "Law of Confinement," which ordered the President to reside in Sucre and issue decrees from there, rather than from La Paz. For their part, La Paz-Oruro-Cochabamba lawmakers associated with Pando's Liberal Party introduced a motion calling for the official transfer of the seat of Government to La Paz, legalizing what had in fact been customary practice for decades. When this motion was prevented from being voted on by the Conservatives, the Liberal congressmen left Sucre and established themselves permanently in La Paz. At this point President Fernández himself led an army to La Paz, in order to "restore order." The ensuing bloodbath culminated in the crushing defeat of the Conservatives at the hands of General Pando, who emerged triumphant from the Battle of the Second Crucero, even taking President Fernández prisoner.

Subsequently, Fernández was allowed to go into exile in Chile, but returned to Bolivia in his declining years, where he died in August 1925, a few days before his 76th birthday.

References[]

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