Nicanor Molinas

Nicanor Molinas (August 1823 - July 1892) was an Argentine lawyer, politician and prominent official during the last years of the Argentine Confederation.

Nicanor Molinas
BornAugust 1823
Corrientes, Argentina
DiedJuly 1892
NationalityArgentine
OccupationLawyer
Known forPublic official

Early years

Nicanor Molinas was born in Corrientes, Argentina in August 1823, the son of a Spanish immigrant. He studied at the Jesuit college of Buenos Aires, becoming a lawyer in 1845 and a doctor in 1847. Shortly after he went to Barcelona to visit his father's family, but the ship he was traveling in sank off Santa Catarina Island, in Brazil. He settled in Montevideo, and enlisted as a cadet in the army of the city. Molinas moved to Entre Ríos Province, where he dedicated himself to medicine and was appointed a judge of the criminal court and a civil court adviser. Molinas represented Corrientes and Entre Ríos Provinces to the government of Paraguay in 1850, to resolve conflicts caused by years of military expeditions from that country against Corrientes and Misiones Province.

Urquiza official

In 1851 Molinas represented governor Justo José de Urquiza to the Corrientes government, to coordinate legal and public steps that both governments would make before and after Urquiza's "statement" against the dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas. Molinas also represented Urquiza to the government of Domingo Crespo, who succeeded Rosa's supporter Pascual Echagüe as governor of Santa Fe Province shortly before the Battle of Caseros.

After Caseros he was Uquiza's representative to the new governor of Corrientes, Juan Gregorio Pujol. Under President Urquiza he took many different public offices, especially in the area of public finances. He was also appointed Minister of the Supreme Court of the Confederacy, but never worked as such. On 18 March 1857 governor Francisco Domingo Díaz of San Juan Province was overthrown in a revolution. The former governor Nazario Benavídez assumed the position of interim Governor.[1] Nicanor Molinas was appointed head of a commission that arrived in April 1857, and Molinas took over as acting governor while arranging elections.[2] On 6 September 1857 Manuel José Gómez Rufino was elected governor.[3]

Under the government of Molinas's friend Santiago Derqui he was foreign minister. During the federal intervention in Córdoba Province he was temporary Minister of Interior. After the Battle of Pavón (17 September 1861) he remained loyal to Urquiza, and was a member of the Entre Ríos provincial legislature. He was also general minister of Entre Ríos under the governments of Urquiza and José María Domínguez.

Last years

On the death of Urquiza in 1870, Molinas went to Santa Fe. He was accused of being a supporter of the caudillo Ricardo López Jordán, for which he was arrested. He settled in Santa Fe, and devoted himself to the practice of medicine, leaving politics forever. Molinas died in Buenos Aires in July 1892.

gollark: Probably slightly!
gollark: You can't *prove* something is morally correct unless you're assuming some kind of objective morality.
gollark: I want 2019 back.
gollark: You could always go to Madagascar.
gollark: Space is not really a very nice place to *live*.

References

Citations

Sources

  • Archivo del brigadier general Nazario Benavides Tomo V: En tiempos de la Confederación, 1855–1858. effha. 2007. p. 81. ISBN 978-950-605-499-1. Retrieved 8 November 2012.
  • Bosch, Beatriz, Historia de Entre Ríos, Ed. Plus Ultra, Bs. As., 1991. ISBN 950-21-0108-1
  • Cutolo, Vicente, Nuevo diccionario biográfico argentino, 7 volúmenes, Ed. Elche, Bs. As., 1968-1985.
  • "Nazario Benavídez". Revisionistas. Retrieved 2012-11-08.
  • Scobie, James, La lucha por la Consolidación de la Nacionalidad Argentina, Ed. Hachette, Bs. As., 1965.
  • Yanzi Ferreira, Ramón Pedro (1995). "LA APLICACIÓN DEL ESTADO DE SITIO EN SAN JUAN (1861)". Archived from the original on 2012-12-09. Retrieved 2012-11-08.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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