Welcome to hypercone.com on July 6 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Ambrosio O'Higgins, Marquis of Osorno

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Don
 Ambrosio O'Higgins
 Marquis of Osorno
Ambrosio O'Higgins, Marquis of Osorno

In office
May 1796 – March 1801
Monarch Charles IV
Prime Minister Manuel de Godoy
Preceded by Francisco Gil de Taboada
Succeeded by Manuel Arredondo y Pelegrín

In office
May 1788 – May 1796
Monarch Charles IV
Prime Minister Count of Floridablanca
Preceded by Ambrosio de Benavides
Succeeded by José de Rezabal y Ugarte

Born c.1720
Ballynary, County Sligo, Ireland
Died March 19, 1801 (aged 81)
Lima, Peru
Children Bernardo O'Higgins
Religion Catholic

Ambrosio O'Higgins, 1st Marquis of Osorno, 1st Baron of Ballynary (c. 1720, Ballynary, County Sligo, Ireland - March 19, 1801[1], Lima, Peru) born Ambrose O'Higgins (Ambróis Ó hUigínn, in Irish), was an Irish-born Spanish colonial administrator. He served the Spanish Empire as captain general (i.e., military governor) of Chile (1788–1796) and viceroy of Peru (1796–1801). Chilean independence leader Bernardo O'Higgins was his illegitimate son.

Contents

[edit] Genealogy and Early life

Ambrose O'Higgins was the son of Charles O'Higgins, of Ballynary, County Sligo (son of Roger O'Higgins, of Ballynary, County Sligo, and wife Margaret Brehan), and wife and cousin Margaret O'Higgins (daughter of William O'Higgins and wife Winnifred O'Fallon).

Charles O'Higgins' grandfather, Sean Duff O'Higgins, held the Gaelic territorial title of Tiarna or Lord of Ballinary, and he was married to Margaret O'Conor, who was of the Royal House of O'Conor of Ballintuber Castle, which ruled Ireland until the year 1000.

The O'Higgins family had owned great expanses of land in the Irish counties of Sligo, Westmeath and Mayo, but with the expropriations of Catholics by Oliver Cromwell, and the deportation of tenants to County Sligo after the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, the O'Higgins' lands became smaller and smaller.

Due to this encroachment into their land, the O'Higgins family emigrated to County Meath, where they became lowly tenant farmers and worked in the service of the Rowley-Langford family. In fact Ambrose is said to have been employed by Lady Jane Rawley.

In 1751, Ambrose arrived at Cádiz, where he dedicated himself to commerce as an employee of the Butler Trading House. As an Irishman and a Catholic, he was able to emigrate legally to Spanish America in 1756.

[edit] Governor of Chile

After enrolling in the Spanish Imperial Service, he moved to La Plata Colony, in present day Argentina, where he tried some commercial ventures. Later he enrolled as draughtsman and then engineer for the Spanish Imperial Service.

It was there that John Garland, another Irish engineer at the service of Spain, convinced him to move to the neighbouring, and less established, colony of Chile. Now in his late thirties, he was initially commissioned as a junior subaltern in the Spanish army. He rose quickly and eventually became military governor (Capitán General) of Chile.

During this time he had a relationship with Isabel Riquelme, a criolla whose family was a member of the Spanish ruling class. From this unofficial union a son was born, Bernardo O'Higgins, who would later lead Chile to its independence from the Spanish Empire.

Though Ambrose never officially recognised this son as his legal heir, he paid for his education in England and left him his possessions in Peru and Chile.

As governor of Chile, one of the most problematic, poor and remote Spanish outposts, O'Higgins was extremely active, promoting the construction of a definitive road between the capital Santiago and the port of Valparaiso (part of the layout of which is still in use today), the building of the Palacio de la Moneda in Santiago, and the establishment of a reliable postal service between La Plata colony and the General Captaincy of Chile.

[edit] As Viceroy of Peru

In 1796, O'Higgins was appointed Viceroy of Peru, comprising present-day Peru, Chile, Bolivia, northwest Argentina and parts of western Brazil.

Peru was the richest colony of the whole Empire and thus the Viceroyship the most prominent post in all of Spanish America. He occupied it until his death in 1801.

[edit] Legacy

There are various towns, bays, and other Spanish discoveries in the Americas were named after his birthplace during his time as Viceroy, such as Vallenar (originally named San Ambrosio de Ballenary, later Hispanizised to Vallenar) in Chile or Vallenar Bay in Alaska[1].

[edit] References

[edit] Sources

[edit] External links

Government offices
Preceded by
Ambrosio de Benavides
Royal Governor of Chile
1788-1796
Succeeded by
José de Rezabal
Preceded by
Francisco Gil de Taboada
Viceroy of Peru
1796-1801
Succeeded by
Manuel Arredondo

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.

Personal tools

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs