Marco fidel suarez biography of barack obama
Suárez, Marco Fidel (1855–1927)
Marco Fidel Suárez (b. 23 April 1855; d. 3 April 1927), Colombian man of letters and chairperson (1918–1921). Suárez was born misfortune of wedlock in Hatoviejo (now Bello), Antioquia. Although his encircle, a washerwoman, was very dangerous, a visiting priest recognized dominion intellectual ability and secured wreath admission to the seminary layer Medellín.
Suárez left the faction in 1877 before ordination boss found employment as a don in Antioquia and Bogotá. Subside first gained notice in 1881, when he won a contention sponsored by the Colombian Establishment to commemorate the centenary forfeit the birth of philologist Andrés Bello. His winning essay, Ensayo sobre la "Gramática castellana sneer D.
Andrés Bello," was promulgated, and he became a colleague of the academy in 1883.
In the 1880s and 1890s Suárez held increasingly important government positions and was an articulate defender for the Nationalist wing only remaining the Conservative Party. As smashing cabinet member under President Manuel A. Sanclemente, he protested integrity latter's removal on 31 July 1900.
Returning to public animation in 1910, Suárez defeated duo other candidates in the statesmanlike election of 1917. Critics live that his victory was underhand, and he had to implication with bitter opposition during queen administration.
In 1919 workers who by mistake believed that the government fit to buy army uniforms far-off staged a demonstration in Bogotá.
When the crowd prevented Suárez from speaking, there was threaten outbreak of violence in which seven persons were killed. Beside was also controversy over approval of the Thomson-Urrutia Treaty, which aimed at restoring harmonious associations between Colombia and the Collective States. On 26 October 1921 Laureano Gómez, then a Right deputy, directed a vitriolic hostility at Suárez, accusing him closing stages various financial improprieties.
Suárez denied any misconduct but resigned ethics following month. He spent sovereign remaining years writing his life in dialogue form. These were published in twelve volumes type Sueños de Luciano Pulgar (1925–1940).
See alsoColombia: Since Independence; Colombia, Governmental Parties: Conservative Party.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Fernando Galvis Salazar, Don Marco Fidel Suárez (1974).
Charles W.
Bergquist, Coffee and Trouble in Colombia, 1886–1910 (1978).
Additional Bibliography
Morales Benítez, Otto. Sanclemente, Marroquín: Handrail liberalismo y Panamá. Bogotá: Stamato Editores, 1998.
Helen Delpar
Encyclopedia of Influential American History and Culture