Mariano Ignacio Prado
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Full Title: | President of Peru |
Term in Office: | April 25, 1865 – June 24, 1865
November 28, 1865 – January 7, 1868 August 2, 1876 – December 23, 1879 |
Predecessor: | Juan Antonio Pezet – (1865)
Pedro Diez Canseco – (1865) Manuel Pardo – (1876) |
Successor: | Juan Antonio Pezet – (1865)
Pedro Diez Canseco – (1868) Nicolás de Piérola – (1879) |
Date of Birth: | 1826 |
Date of Death: | 1901 |
Political party: | None - Army |
Profession: | Army General |
Mariano Ignacio Prado (1826-1901) was twice the President of Peru, from (1865-68, 1876-79). Born in Huánuco in 1826, he entered the army at an early age and served in the provinces of Southern Peru.
After a coup which overthrew Juan Antonio Pezet's government, Prado assumed the dictatorship of the country in 1865. He only served in that position for two months, leaving Pedro Diez Canseco as a provisional president for less than a month. Prado's intentions were to participate in that year's elections which, surprisingly, he won. He successfully defended Peru against Spanish aggression at the Battle of Callao on May 2, 1866. His first presidency lasted until 1868 when he had to resign under pressure from the Peruvian Congress.
After Manuel Pardo's presidential term ended in 1876, Prado was elected president again on August 2 of that year. His second term was marked with the War of the Pacific (1879-1884) which broke out with Chile. Prado took active measures to prepare for defence by leaving for Tacna and later Tarapaca (where he met Bolivian president Hilarión Daza), with the intention of taking command of the armies assembling there. He assessed Peru was not ready for the war and decided to go back to Lima to prepare and send back new re-enforcements.
In the course of these deliberations, Prado left his vice-president La Puerta in charge and decided to leave for Europe to buy more armament and obtain more money for the war. Prado wrote a manifesto to the nation explaining the difficulties of the war and that those "circumstances forced him to leave the country to acquire armament to defend the honor of the Homeland." Many Peruvians took this as an excuse for his inability to govern in the middle of the war, which led Nicolás de Piérola to stage a successful coup d'etat and later declared himself commander-in-chief in December 23, 1879. Prado did not return to Peru until the end of the war.
He later moved back to Europe and died in Paris, France in 1901.
Preceded by: Juan Antonio Pezet |
President of Peru April 1865 – June 1865 |
Succeeded by: Juan Antonio Pezet |
Preceded by: Pedro José Calderón |
Prime Minister of Peru November 9, 1865 – June 1867 |
Succeeded by: Pedro J. Saavedra |
Preceded by: Pedro Diez Canseco |
President of Peru November 1865 – January 1868 |
Succeeded by: Pedro Diez Canseco |
Preceded by: Manuel Pardo |
President of Peru August 1876 – December 1879 |
Succeeded by: Nicolás de Piérola |
[edit] See also
San Martín | Luna Pizarro | La Mar | Bernardo de Tagle | Riva Agüero | Sucre | Bernardo de Tagle | Bolívar | Santa Cruz | Salazar y Baquíjano | La Mar | Gutiérrez de la Fuente | Gamarra | Luna Pizarro | Orbegoso | Bermúdez | Salaverry | Santa Cruz | Gamarra | Menéndez | Torrico | Vidal | Figuerola | Vivanco | Nieto | Castilla | Elías | Menéndez | Figuerola | Menéndez | Castilla | Echenique | Castilla | San Román | Castilla | Diez Canseco | Pezet | Diez Canseco | Prado | Diez Canseco | Balta | Gutiérrez | Diez Canseco | Zevallos | Pardo | Prado | Piérola | García Calderón | Montero | Iglesias | Arenas | Cáceres | Morales Bermúdez | Borgoño | Cáceres | Piérola | Romaña | Candamo | S. Calderón | Pardo y Barreda | Leguía | Ponce | Sánchez Cerro | Elías Arias | Jiménez | Samanez Ocampo | Sánchez Cerro | Benavides | Prado Ugarteche | Bustamante y Rivero | Odría | Noriega | Odría | Prado Ugarteche | Pérez Godoy | Lindley | Belaúnde | Velasco | Morales Bermúdez | Belaunde | García | Fujimori | Paniagua | Toledo | García