Mariano Luis de Urquijo
Portrait by Guillermo Ducker, c. 1800
Prime Minister of Spain
In office
12 February 1799ย โ€“ 13 December 1799
MonarchCharles IV
Preceded byFrancisco Saavedra de Sangronis
Succeeded byPedro Cevallos
In office
7 July 1808ย โ€“ 27 June 1813
MonarchJoseph Bonaparte
Preceded byPedro Cevallos
Succeeded byJuan O'Donojรบ
Personal details
BornMariano Luis de Urquijo y Muga
8 September 1769
Bilbao, Spain
Died3 May 1817(1817-05-03) (agedย 47)
Paris, France
Resting placePรจre Lachaise Cemetery

Mariano Luis de Urquijo y Muga (1769 in Bilbao, Spain[1] โ€“ 1817 in Paris, France) was Secretary of State (Prime Minister) of Spain in 1799, during the reign of Charles IV. He later held the position again between 1808 and 1813 under Joseph Bonaparte.

Biography

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Born to a noble Basque family, he studied law in Madrid and Salamanca. He spent some time living in Ireland before entering the Spanish Foreign Service under the protection of the Count of Aranda and the Count of Floridablanca. It was in 1792, under the Aranda ministry, that he was named High Officer of the Secretary of State (Secretary of the Cabinet). Of progressive ideas, he translated the Death of Caesar of Voltaire, then forbidden by the Catholic Church. Due to this, he was prosecuted by the Holy Office.[2]

Despite his French sympathies,[3] he was appointed First Secretary of State (Prime Minister) on 12 February 1799 and remained in office until 13 December 1799. While in office, he did all he could to limit the power and influence of the Inquisition, which brought upon him the enmity of the Holy See.[4] Taking advantage of the Napoleonic invasion of the Papal States, he initiated what became known as "Urquijo's Schism" (1799), attempting to reclaim the Spanish Church's powers that had previously been assumed by the Pope, including the authority over matrimonial dispensations.[5]

Even though he was supported by some jansenist-leaning clerics such as the bishop of Salamanca, Antonio Tavira, his religious policies caused his fall from power. Manuel Godoy had resented Urquijo's rising influence at court, which had begun to eclipse his own. Aligning with Eusebio Bardajรญ y Azara, an influential figure in his own right, and Napoleon, who feared Urquijo's policies opposing a French intervention in Portugal, they forced Urquijo's dismissal from office.

His brief term also saw several scientific enterprises being initiated: for instance, he helped arrange an audience with Charles IV for Alexander von Humboldt, enabling Humboldt to gain support for his American expedition.[6] He was instrumental in sending Valentin de Foronda as General Consul of Spain in Philadelphia, (1801โ€“1807), and as Spanish Plenipotentiary Minister in the USA 'til the nomination by the "Junta" of Luis de Onis in 1809.

Resenting the conservative and ultra-catholic policies of the Spanish court, he embraced the pro-French government of Joseph Bonaparte once Napoleon invaded Spain and replaced Charles IV with his own brother Joseph as King of Spain. After publicly acknowledging Joseph as the lawful King of Spain, Urquijo was called back to court and to become Prime Minister again. He remained in office from 7 July 1808 to 27 June 1813. However, he was unable to carry out any policies apart from assisting French forces during the Peninsular War.

Following the French defeat, Urquijo fled with King Joseph across the Pyrenees to France, where he went into exile. He died in Paris in 1817.

References

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  1. ^ Romero Peรฑa, Aleix (2011). "Mariano Luis de Urquijo. Biografรญa de un ilustrado", Revista de Cultura e Investigaciรณn Vasca Sancho el Sabio, nยบ 34, p. 56.
  2. ^ Urquijo, Mariano Luis de. La muerte de Cรฉsar. Tragedia francesa de Mr. Voltaire: traducida en verso castellano y acompaรฑada de un discurso del traductor sobre el estado actual de nuestros teatros y necesidad de su reforma. Madrid: Blas Romรกn, MDCCXCI.
  3. ^ Lรณpex CordรณnCortez, M. V. "Un voltarien espagnol ร  la fin du XVIIIe siรจcle: Mariano Luis de Urquijo", Actas du Congrรจs international Voltaire et ses combats, Oxford, 1997, pp. 1251-1261.
  4. ^ Seco Serrano, C. (1988). "La polรญtica exterior de Carlos IV", en Historia de Espaรฑa. Madrid: Espasa Calpe, t. XXXI, pp. 616-617.
  5. ^ Martรญnez Shaw, Carlos (1996). El siglo de las luces. Las bases intelectuales del reformismo, Madrid: Temas de Hoy, p. 69.
  6. ^ Daum, Andreas W. (2024). Alexander von Humboldt: A Concise Biography. Trans. Robert Savage. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. p.ย 51. ISBNย 978-0-691-24736-6.

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