José Ramón de Loayza

Bolivian general and politician

José Ramón de Loayza
1st Vice President of Bolivia
Provisional
In office
26 December 1828 – 1 January 1829
PresidentPedro Blanco Soto
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byJosé Miguel de Velasco (provisional)
Acting President of Bolivia
In office
18 December 1828 – 26 December 1828
Preceded byJosé Miguel de Velasco (acting)
Succeeded byPedro Blanco Soto (provisional)
Personal details
Born(1751-07-26)26 July 1751
La Paz, Viceroyalty of Peru, Spanish Empire
Died8 November 1839(1839-11-08) (aged 88)
NationalityBolivian
Parent(s)Miguel Loayza
María Gertrudis Pacheco Salgado

José Ramón de Loayza Pacheco (26 July 1751 – 8 November 1839) was a Bolivian general and politician who served as the first vice president of Bolivia from 1828 to 1829. He was elected by the Constituent Assembly on 18 December 1828 and served as acting president in the absence of Pedro Blanco Soto until 26 December. Loayza served as provisional vice president for only six days until his arrest and the termination of his mandate on 1 January 1829.[1]

Early life and career

José Ramón de Loayza was born on 26 July 1751 in La Paz then a part of the Viceroyalty of Peru. Heir to a great fortune, he was the son of Miguel Loayza and María Gertrudis Pacheco Salgado. In 1781, during the indigenous uprising of Túpac Katari, he was appointed captain of the rifle company, later commander for the defense of the Yungas province fortified in Irupana, resisting the rebels sieging La Paz until their pacification.

Loayza was instrumental in the success of the La Paz revolution, on 16 July 1809 when group of revolutionaries led by Colonel Pedro Domingo Murillo and other individuals besieged the city barracks and forced the governor, Tadeo Davila and the Bishop of La Paz, Remigio de la Santa y Ortega, to resign.

He was appointed mayor of the city of La Paz in 1810. As mayor, he contributed to the construction of the public jail, founded the women's hospital at his own expense, and did the same in the city of Cochabamba before emigrating to Chile. He returned to Bolivia after the Battle of Ayacucho in 1824. He rose to the rank of colonel and was appointed Prefect of the Department of La Paz.

Vice president (1828–1829)

Loayza supported the Peruvian invasion of Bolivia in 1828. When the Peruvian army, under the command of general Agustín Gamarra, occupied the city of La Paz, Loayza, supported by the invaders, deposed the prefect Baltazar Alquiza, dismissing the authorities. Following the resignation of Antonio José de Sucre, the Constituent Assembly elected Marshal Andrés de Santa Cruz president on 12 August 1828. However, Santa Cruz never arrived to take office forcing the assembly to reconvene to elect new leaders.[2]

On 18 December 1828, the assembly elected Pedro Blanco Soto president with José Ramón de Loayza as vice president. For nine days until 26 December, Loayza held the office of the presidency as acting president in the absence of Soto. Loayza and Soto served as instruments of Gamarra's occupation of the country. On 31 December, both were arrested by Bolivian resistance forces and imprisoned in a convent called La Recoletta in Sucre. While Soto was killed attempting to escape, Loayza was eventually forgiven, being released due to his advanced age and low prestige.

Later years and death

During the administration of President Andrés de Santa Cruz, Loayza was rehabilitated in his public life, being appointed deputy for La Paz. He died on 8 November 1839 at the age of 88, at his Maca Maca farm. He bequeathed his fortune to the women's hospital, which he had established years prior.

References

  1. ^ "Acerca del general José Ramón de Loayza". www.eldiario.net (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  2. ^ "EL LABERINTO HISTÓRICO DE LAS SUCESIONES PRESIDENCIALES EN BOLIVIA | Historias de Bolivia". EL LABERINTO HISTÓRICO DE LAS SUCESIONES PRESIDENCIALES EN BOLIVIA | Historias de Bolivia. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
Political offices
Preceded by
Office established
Vice President of Bolivia
Provisional

1828–1829
Vacant
Title next held by
José Miguel de Velasco
Provisional
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