Joaquín Demetrio Casasús

Joaquín Demetrio Casasús (Frontera, Tabasco, 23 December 1858 – New York, United States, 25 February 1916), was a Mexican Economist, Jurist, politician, Diplomat and Writer. He was a member of the Academia Mexicana de la Lengua, the correspondent academy in Mexico of the Real Academia de la Lengua Española, since 1904. He was the director of the Academy from 1912 until his death in 1916.[1] He was also the Mexican Ambassador to the United States around 1910.[2]

Joaquín Demetrio Casasús
Secretary of Foreign Affairs
In office
1911–1911
Preceded byFrancisco León de la Barra
Succeeded byBartolomé Carvajal y Rosas
Personal details
Born1858
Died1916
NationalityMexican
ProfessionDiplomat

Studies and Academia

He studied Law at the Escuela Nacional de Jurisprudencia of México. After graduating he was made Secretary of State of Tabasco. At the same time, he was a Professor of Law and Economics at the Universidad de México. During his lifetime he participated in the writing of the Mexican Code of Commerce of 1889 and the Law of Creditary Institutions and Monetary Laws .[3]

Career

In 1892 he represented Mexico at the International Monetary Conference held in Brussels (Belgium). In addition, he was a Federal Deputy and in 1902, he was elected president of the Congreso. In 1911, he was designated by President Porfirio Díaz as president of the Arbitration Commission regarding the U.S- Mexican Chamizal dispute. Along with fellow Federal Deputy, Manuel R. Uruchurtu, he managed to win the definite ruling of King Victor Emanuel II of Italy, in favor of Mexico and against the United States, thus establishing that the Río Bravo was Mexican and not part of the border.

During his life he wrote a great deal of books specially in topics of law and monetary economics and politics

Publications

  • La reforma monetaria en Mexico: Informes presentados á la Comisión Monetaria (1905)
  • The Pan-American conferences and their significance (1906)
  • Mexico (1911)
  • Cayo Valerio Catulo: su vida y sus obras (1904) with Victoriano Salado Alvarez
  • Gaius Valerius Catullus (1906)
  • Las reformas a la Ley de Instituciones de crédito (1908)
gollark: You might as well ask why "eat" becomes "ate" in the past tense.
gollark: English does not routinely run on consistently applied rules.
gollark: Fixed it. (oops, I meant to send this in <#426116061415342080> but messed up the channel somehow, sorry)
gollark: Possibly because there seems to be a weird lack of good open-source OCR stuff (Tesseract isn't general enough to work on memes).
gollark: I did try installing something for this once but ML stuff always has horrible dependency issues, and it didn't do OCR.

References

  1. "Esbozo histórico de la Academia Mexicana de la Lengua". Archived from the original on 29 December 2008. Retrieved 13 November 2009.
  2. "United States and Mexico Contest Ruling Over Ownership of Valuable Property in El Paso". New York Times. 16 June 1911. Retrieved 10 January 2011. Joaquin Casasus, former Ambassador to the United States, acted as chief counsel for Mexico, and A. W. C. Dennis, Assistant Solicitor General of the ...
  3. Jesús Silva Herzog. Semblanzas de académicos (ed.). "Nuestros centenarios: humanistas mexicanos". México: Ediciones del Centenario de la Academia Mexicana. p. 313. Retrieved 14 November 2009.
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