José Ramón Basavilbaso

José Ramón de Basavilbaso (1764-c.1840) was an Argentine jurist and politician, who served as Escribano Mayor of the Government of Buenos Aires.[1] He performs legal tasks during the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata and United Provinces of the Río de la Plata.[2]

José Ramón de Basavilbaso Ross
Escribano Mayor de Gobierno de las Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata
Personal details
BornAugust 31, 1764
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Died1830s
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Nationality Argentine
Spouse(s)María Lorenza Ferrín
OccupationGovernment
ProfessionNotary
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Spain — until 1810
United Provinces of the River Plate
Years of service1806-1810
RankLieutenant
Battles/warsBritish invasions of the River Plate
May Revolution

Biography

He was born in Buenos Aires on August 31, 1764 and baptized the following day in the Metropolitan Cathedral as Joseph Ramón Basavilbaso Ross, being his godparents Domingo de Basavilbaso and María Basavilbaso.[3] José Ramón was the first son of Francisco Antonio Basavilbaso and María Aurelia Ross del Pozo Silva, a noble woman, belonging to a family of Scottish and Creole origin.[4] In 1790, he was married to María Lorenza Ferrín y Pizarro, daughter of Julián Ferrín Monteagudo, born in Galicia, and María Lorenza Pizarro Rubio, born in the city.[5]

Basavilbaso had held the position of interim notary in several periods during the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, being appointed as Notary of Government on September 19, 1791.[6] After the May Revolution, he continued to serve as the Notary of Government. In the exercise of his office, suppressed the paseo of Real Estandarte (royal standard), a ceremony held on St. Martin of Tours day.[7]

José Ramón Basavilbaso also was Notary Public of Government of Juan Manuel de Rosas, position he held until the middle of 1830s.[8]

gollark: I'm sure I can figure out some way to make python do that
gollark: OH REALLY?
gollark: I prefer Rust.
gollark: ```perl -wlne'END{print$n}eof&&$n++;/<title>([^<]+)/i&&$n--' *Contents 1 Interpretation 2 Implementations 2.1 In Perl 2.2 In shell scriptsInterpretationThe code in question (from the collection "The road to Perligata") is a lament over the coming apocalypse, an expression of the author's Weltschmerz and the futility of all human endeavors. Let us take it step by step:-wlne' The world is near its end.END{print$n} At the end the sum of all our sins and virtues will be reckoned and the judgement revealed.eof&&$n++; As the evil of mankind ends, perhaps the end itself is a positive thing./<title>([^<]+)/ We are preoccupied with fame and titlesi And insensitive to the suffering of others.&&$n-- All this is for nought, and only hastens our demise.' * For in the end, we are but stardust. ```
gollark: They'll probably say "lambdas are evil" because python hates functional programming a lot of the time.

References

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