Baldomero Espartero

Baldomero Espartero
Espartero in 1865
Regent of Spain
In office
17 October 1840 – 23 July 1843
MonarchIsabella II
Preceded byMaria Christina
Prime Minister of Spain
In office
18 August 1837 – 18 October 1837
MonarchIsabella II
Preceded byJosé María Calatrava
Succeeded byEusebio Bardají
In office
11 September 1840 – 10 May 1841
MonarchIsabella II
Preceded byVicente Sancho
Succeeded byJoaquín María Ferrer
In office
18 July 1854 – 14 July 1856
MonarchIsabella II
Preceded byÁngel Saavedra
Succeeded byLeopoldo O'Donnell
Personal details
Born
Joaquín Baldomero Fernández-Espartero y Álvarez de Toro

(1793-02-27)27 February 1793
Granátula de Calatrava, Spain
Died8 January 1879(1879-01-08) (aged 85)
Logroño, Spain
Resting placeCo-Cathedral of Logroño
Political partyProgressive Party
Spouse
(m. 1827; died 1878)
Signature

Baldomero Fernández-Espartero y Álvarez de Toro (27 February 1793 – 8 January 1879) was a Spanish marshal and statesman. He served as the Regent of the Realm, three times as Prime Minister and briefly as President of the Congress of Deputies. Throughout his life, he was endowed with a long list of titles such as Prince of Vergara, Duke of la Victoria, Count of Luchana, Viscount of Banderas and was also styled as "the Peacemaker".

A "self-made man", Espartero was an exceptional case of social mobility.[1] With a humble origin, son of a cart-maker from a small village, he was originally destined to the priesthood yet he finally opted for a military career, taking part in the Peninsular War. He would become a champion for the Liberals after taking credit for the victory in the First Carlist War and replaced Maria Christina as regent of Spain in 1840.

Associated with the Progressive Party, he was one of the so-called espadones ("big swords"), general-politicians who dominated much of the political life of the country during the reign of Isabella II. He was ousted from the regency in 1843, temporarily distancing from politics. He was called to government after the 1854 revolution, opening the two-year period known as the Bienio Progresista.

Despite retiring from political life after his exit from government in 1856, Espartero maintained a cult following largely nurtured by the popular classes throughout the 1860s and, following the 1868 Glorious Revolution and subsequent overthrow of Isabella II, he emerged as popular candidate to become the head of state of the country, either as president of a republic or as king.[2]

  1. ^ Fernández Urbina 1979, p. 53.
  2. ^ Shubert 2015, pp. 211–213.

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