Marcelo Azcárraga Palmero | |
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13th Prime Minister of Spain | |
In office 23 October 1900 – 6 March 1901 |
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Monarch | Alfonso XIII |
Preceded by | Francisco Silvela y de le Vielleuze |
Succeeded by | Práxedes Mateo Sagasta |
Minister of Royal Spanish Navy | |
In office 1892–1893 |
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Preceded by | Florencio Montojo Trillo |
Succeeded by | José María Beránger Ruiz de Apodaca |
Personal details | |
Born | September 1, 1832 Manila, Spanish East Indies (now Philippines) |
Died | May 30, 1915 Madrid, Spain |
(aged 82)
Political party | Conservative |
Alma mater | University of Santo Tomas Bachelor of Laws |
Marcelo Azcárraga Palmero (1832–1915) was the thirteenth Prime Minister of Spain following the restoration of the Spanish monarchy. Azcárraga was also the only Spanish Prime Minister of Filipino descent.
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Azcárraga was born in 1832, in Manila, Philippines, to General Jose Azcárraga, a native of Vizcaya, Spain, a bookshop owner in Escolta, and to María Palmero, a Mestiza from Albay.
General José Azcárraga had many sons and daughters. Azcárraga was the second of the family's children. He studied law in the University of Santo Tomas in Manila then entered the Nautical School, where he was awarded the first prize in Mathematics. He was sent to Spain by his father to enter the military academy and soon earned the rank of Captain in three years. Due to his services against the O'Donnell revolution in Spain, he was promoted to Major.
At the age of 23, he was awarded the Cross of San Fernando, which is a pension grant. He was sent to various colonies of Spain, including Mexico, Cuba, and Santo Domingo. Afterwards, he returned to Cuba and married one of the daughters of the wealthy Fesser family, owner and founder of Banco y Casa de Seguros Fessner, who allegedly gave him £20,000 on the day of his marriage.
In 1868, on the deposal of Isabella II as queen of Spain, he returned to Spain, hastened the restoration of the Bourbons, and became Lieutenant-General on the coronation of Alfonso XII as king. He was then elected to the Senate of Spain as a senator for life. He was the Minister of War under Antonio Cánovas del Castillo, whose assassination on August 8, 1897 effectively made him the interim Prime Minister of Spain until October 4 of that same year.
He went on to become Prime Minister of Spain twice again in two more separate incidents.
On his retirement at the age of 72, he was given the Toison de Oro, or Golden Fleece, the highest possible distinction given to a person in Spain, for his tirelessly defending the Spanish Monarchy and for keeping Spain in relative peace. Earlier, he received the Cross of San Fernando which already entitled him to a pension. Don Marcelo Azcárraga died in Cuba.
On his mother's side, Azcárraga descends from the Filipino mestizo Lizarraga family, heirs of the fallen Conde de Lizarraga. His maternal uncles' families, collectively known as the "Palmero brothers" or "Hermanos Palmero" were active in Philippine politics before World War II. He was also an uncle to the self-styled Conde de Albay, also known as Senor Govantes.
The major road stretching from the districts of Tondo to San Miguel, both in the city of Manila was named after Azcárraga. However, it was changed after Filipino independence in 1945 to Claro M. Recto Avenue. Nevertheless, the street is still known as Calle Azcárraga in the transportation sector and among commuters.