- Félix Berenguer de Marquina
Félix Berenguer de Marquina (1736,
Alicante ,Spain —October 10 ,1826 , Alicante) was a Spanish naval officer, colonial official and, fromApril 30 ,1800 toJanuary 4 ,1803 , viceroy ofNew Spain .Origins and early career
Berenguer de Marquina was born in Spain of humble origins in 1736. He joined the navy at a very young age. On
April 30 ,1754 he took the midshipman examination. Thereafter he served on ships of war in the Mediterranean and the Atlantic.He was studious, and became a teacher of mathematics and astronomy in the Naval Academy at Cartagena (1757-69). In 1789 he was named director of the organization of pilots of the fleet.
From
July 1 ,1788 toSeptember 1 ,1793 he was governor of thePhilippines . OnAugust 15 ,1789 by royal decreeManila became an open port to all but European products. He proposed plans for reform of the government.Berenguer returned to Spain in 1795 to take up a position in the administration of the navy. In 1799 he was promoted to lieutenant general of the navy.
As viceroy of New Spain
He was in command of a squadron in the Spanish navy when, on
November 8 ,1799 , King Charles IV named him viceroy and captain general of New Spain and president of theAudiencia . During the voyage fromCuba toVeracruz , he was taken prisoner by the British nearCape Catoche ,Yucatán Peninsula (Quintana Roo ). He was conducted toJamaica . He was treated with much courtesy and later allowed to continue on his way in the schooner "Kingston", with his secretary.He accepted the transfer of authority into his offices
April 29 ,1800 , in the Villa de Guadalupe, and made his formal entry intoMexico City the following day.In this period. the British dominated both coasts of New Spain. They smuggled huge amounts of merchandise into the colony from the United States and the islands of the Caribbean and captured the Spanish ships in the coastal trade. Berenguer supplied more resources to Spanish naval forces, but they were unable to do much to improve the situation. He also formed the Regiment of Grenadiers, consisting of twelve companies drawn from six provincial forces. Fearing British raids, he reinforced the garrisons at Veracruz and ordered that the valuables of the port be moved to Jalapa and guarded. He also reinforced the presidios in the north, to repulse American encroachment.
On
October 1 ,1800 , Spain retroceded the territory of Louisiana to France, which soon sold it to the United States.Conspiracies and Indian rebellions
On
January 1 ,1801 ,Indio Mariano began an insurrection in the mountains ofTepic . Mariano, who had many followers, was trying to reestablish theAztec empire. The rebels fought under a banner displaing the colors of the Virgin of Guadalupe. When Fernando Abascal, president of the Audiencia of Guadalajara, took notice of the rebellion, he sent Captain Salvador Hidalgo (or "Fidalgo") of the navy and Captain Leonardo Pintado of the militia against them. The rebels were defeated. Many prisoners were taken, and many other Indians were forced up into the mountains, but Mariano escaped. He was never captured by the Spanish. His followers who were taken prisoner were transferred to Guadalajara, but most were soon released.Also, in January 1801, Francisco Antonio Vázquez, a naval official, was denounced for conspiracy, but nothing could be proven.
In Teocelo, Veracruz, Pedro Martín led another Indian rebellion. There were also attempted rebellions by the indigenous in
Nayarit ,Durango ,Guanajuato ,Jalisco andSonora .uppression of Philip Nolan
Berenguer suppressed the American smugglers under
Philip Nolan in the north of the colony. Nolan was born about 1771, probably in Kentucky. He was a close associate of U.S. general and adventurerJames Wilkinson , a co-conspirator ofAaron Burr . Beginning after 1791, Nolan began trading/smuggling activities in New Spain. He also imported wild horses from Texas into the United States. He was regarded by the Spaniards as a spy and a rebel. They sent troops to arrest him in 1801. He was killed in battle near the present city ofWaco , Texas. His band was taken captive and sent to work the mines in northern New Spain.Nolan County, Texas is named for him.Edward Everett Hale used his name for the protagonist in his story "The Man Without a Country ".Later administration in New Spain
Berenguer extended to the entire colony the requirement that no one be admitted into meetings of the guilds or confraternities without being decently dressed. He permitted women to work in jobs consistent with decency, even if the ordinances prohibited it.
On
October 5 ,1801 , an earthquake inOaxaca destroyed the new church of the Jesuit convent of La Concepción.In June 1801, Spain made peace with
Portugal , and in 1802 with Britain. (The news of peace with Britain was published in Mexico onSeptember 9 ,1802 ). Thanks to the peace, prices of European goods dropped. In 1802, the payment of tribute to Spain was renewed.Berenguer was persevering, honorable and valiant, but with little ability to govern. His public works in Mexico City were very limited — one fountain that never gave water, and the completion of
Manuel Tolsá 's equestrian statute of Charles IV.Berenguer, disgusted with the disallowance of some of his measures, resigned. He turned over the government to his successor,
José de Iturrigaray in January 1803. He returned to Spain, where he took part in the war with France. He died in the city of his birth in 1826.References
*es icon "Berenguer de Marquina, Félix," "Enciclopedia de México", v. 2. Mexico City: 1996, ISBN 1-56409-016-7.
*es icon García Puron, Manuel, "México y sus gobernantes,", v. 1. Mexico City: Joaquín Porrua, 1984.
*es icon Orozco L., Fernando, "Fechas históricas de México". Mexico City: Panorama, 1988, ISBN 968-38-0046-7.
*es icon Orozco Linares, Fernando, "Gobernantes de México". Mexico City: Panorama Editorial, 1985, ISBN 968-38-0260-5.External links
*es icon [http://mx.geocities.com/yaimemx/55virrey.html Short biography]
* [http://www.zamboanga.com/html/Spanish_governors_of_the_philippines.htm List of governors of the Philippines]
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