Juan de Canaveris
Juan de Canaveris | |
---|---|
Portero decano of the Tribunal Mayor de Cuentas de Buenos Aires | |
In office 1777–1810 | |
Apoderado legal at the service of the Provinces of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata | |
In office 1772–1800 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Giovanni Antonio Domenico Canaveri 1748 Saluzzo, Piedmont, Kingdom of Sardinia |
Died | August 22, 1822 Buenos Aires, United Provinces of the River Plate |
Resting place | Church of La Merced |
Nationality | Italian |
Political party | Bureaucrat - until 1810 Patriot Federalist |
Spouse | Catalina Bernarda de Esparza |
Occupation | government executor politician farmer |
Profession | jurist accountant |
Signature | |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Savoy-Sardinia - until 1770 Republic of Genoa - 1771 Spanish Empire - until 1810 United Provinces of the River Plate |
Years of service | 1806-1810 (Buenos Aires) |
Battles/wars | British invasions of the Río de la Plata May Revolution |
Juan de Canaveris (or Canaverys) (1748–1822) was an Italian lawyer and politician, who served during the viceroyalty of Río de la Plata as accounting officer in the Tribunal de Cuentas de Buenos Aires.[1] He had achieved a high social status in the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, where he supported the revolutionary movements of May, being the only neighbor (founding fathers of Argentina) of Italian origin who attended in the Open Cabildo, of May 22, 1810.[2]
Juan Canaverys was the founder of the Canavery family in Argentina, and the direct ancestor of prominent military, revolutionaries, lawyers, notaries, politicians and priests of Buenos Aires. He had a long career in Buenos Aires, serving as attorney-in-fact of Francisco Maciel and Victorián de Villava. In 1798 he was appointed as representative of the City Council of Santiago del Estero.[3] During the May Revolution he integrated the sector proposed by Pascual Ruiz Huidobro and Feliciano Chiclana, political group that proposed the destitution of the Viceroy and the assumption of the government by the Cabildo de Buenos Aires, in form of a provisional government.[4]
Early years
Giovanni Antonio Domenico de Canaveris was born near the year 1748 in Saluzzo (Principality of Piedmont),[5] during the end of the War of the Austrian Succession. His parents were Gabriel Antonio Canaveris and Margherita Jugluns, belonging to a noble family from Verzuolo. He arrived at Río de la Plata about 1770, in times of the Bourbon Reforms in the Spanish Empire. He probably had lived and studied in Genoa, in the census of 1807 and 1809 is indicated as of Genoese origin.[6]
His first registered public intervention dates from the year 1772. Is probable that his first works in Buenos Aires were related to commercial activities. In 1776, he was appointed to exercise the position of "portero" of the Real Tribunal de Cuentas of Buenos Aires,[7] an institution created by order of the Viceroy Pedro Antonio de Cevallos and José de Gálvez, Minister of the Indies.[8]
He was employee of the Contaduría de Retasas of the Tribunal de Cuentas during the entire period of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, leaving his post of portero accountant for a brief period in 1795 and 1799.[9]
In 1785 Canaveris was employed interim of the Junta Montepío de Ministros, an institution established for assistance to widows and families of government employees.[10] Although the work of "portero" (accounting officer) was not a hierarchical position, Canaveris was the oldest officer in the Court of Auditors. He earned five hundred pesos a year, the same amount as a Senior Accountant.[11]
As an officer of the Court of Auditors he was in charge of protocol matters, clerk and responsible for the key of the Camara de Sesiones (Chamber of Sections) of the Court.[12] For his services rendered to the Court of Accounts Juan Canaveris received an increase in his salary by Real Order on June 8, 1799.[13]
He had an active participation as a legal agent of distinguished colonial authorities, including his actions as proxy of Manuel Arredondo y Pelegrín,[14] Juan de Dios Salas,[15] Mariano Tristán,[16] Bernabé González Bueno,[17] Martín Grandoli,[18] and Joseph Medianero, a Spanish official who served in the Fuerte de Floridablanca.[19] He also served as a attorney of the Council of Santiago del Estero, on behalf of the elected aldermen of the City Council Juan Joseph de Erquicia and Juan Joseph de Iramain. He presented a writ in defense of aldermen to the Viceroy Antonio de Olaguer y Feliú, to avoid annulment the elections, held in that province in July 20, 1796.[20]
His most recognized work was as a representative of Victorián de Villava, the Protector Guardian of Natural resources and Indians in the village of San Pablo, Capinota Province, Bolivia. In his name he had obtained permission from the viceroyal authorities to build four windmills in a site known as "Cucumí".[21]
He also provided his services as a lawyer to Joseph de la Cruz, a soldier of the Regimiento Fijo de Buenos Aires, who served on the orders of Félix de Azara,[22] and as the legal agent of the family of José de Zárate,[23] a well-known Captain of the Cuerpo de Blandengues de Buenos Aires.[24]
He was involved in the establishment of the Hospital de Caridad, the first public hospital in Montevideo, Uruguay.[25] In 1796 he was appointed as legal representative of Francisco Antonio Maciel to manage the approval, the Diocesan of Buenos Aires, for the construction of a public hospital in Montevideo.[26]
He maintained a solid social and economic position in the Provinces of the Río de la Plata, owned several homes, barracks, lands, jewelry, and servants. Among his neighbors was María Cristina Ross,[27] daughter of Guillermo Ross, born in the Scottish Highlands.[28] In 1777 he sold a property located in the neighborhood of San Nicolás (Buenos Aires) to Ángel Castelli,[29] a well-known doctor born in Greece and of Venetian Italian origin.[30]
Juan Canaveris also was involved in several legal disputes, in 1791, he appointed through the notary Gregorio Ramon de Merlo, to Don Martín Joseph de Segovia, a lawyer who was in charge of his legal matters in the territory of the Río de la Plata.[31] In 1792, he hired to Justo José Cosio, to take charge of the judicial proceedings of the Esparza Sánchez family in the Court of Madrid.[32]
English Invasions and May Revolution
It is possible who Juan Canaveris has provided some military service in Piedmont or Genoa before settling in Buenos Aires. A man with his last name is registered as a soldier who served in the Regiment of Hibernia or Regiment of Saboya, and who participated in the Second Cevallos expedition to the Río Grande.[33] He and his family had a prominent participation in the defense and reconquest of Buenos Aires during the English invasions. He and his colleagues from the Court of Accounts refused to take oath to Beresford[34] and participated in secret meetings organized by residents of the city.[35]
He also collaborated with the money donations organized by the Cabildo of Buenos Aires, chaired by Martín de Alzaga.[36] His sons, José,[37] Mariano, Manuel, and Joaquín participated in the defense of Buenos Aires in the regiments — Quinteros and Labradores, Húsares of Pueyrredón, Cántabros Montañeses and Tercio de Vizcaínos.[38] In 1808, his son Mariano Canaveris, hero of the reconquest and second lieutenant graduated from the 1st Battalion of Husares, requested permission to join the ranks of the Escuadrón de Carabineros de Carlos IV.
The Friar Martin Esparza, a relative of Canaveris's wife, was killed by British troops during the second invasion in the interior of Convent of Santo Domingo.[39]
His granddaughter, Apolinaria Linera Canaveris was born during the English occupation of the city,[40] and the sister of this, Mercedes Clara Linera Canaveris on August 12, 1807, anniversary of the reconquest.[41]
Juan de Canaveris is recognized for being one of the neighbors who were invited to attend the open Cabildo of May 22 of 1810 (May Revolution), event that gave rise to the Argentine Republic. He belonged to the moderate group that wanted the cabildo to assume the government until it could be returned to the Spanish Crown.[42] He reproduced the vote of Feliciano Chiclana in favor of dismissing the Viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros.[43] His wife was a distant relative of Antonio Beruti and Domingo French, two of the leaders of the revolution.[44]
Its political action is unknown after the events of May and the Argentine Independence, but possibly its political ideology corresponded to the cause of the Confederation.[45]
Like many patricians of the time, he also dedicated himself to the purchase of land and the administration of farms, one of them located in the town of Quilmes.[46] He also was the owner of a farm in the town of San Isidro, located in the vicinity of the hacienda of Juan Martín de Pueyrredón and Miguel de Azcuénaga, personal friend of Canaveris and his family.[47]
Family
Juan Canaveris was married to Catalina Bernarda de Esparza, a noble maiden,[48] daughter of Juan Miguel de Esparza and María Eugenia Sánchez.[49] His wedding was celebrated on May 4, 1772 in the Cathedral of Buenos Aires by José Antonio Acosta, a distinguished parish priest of the city.[50]
He and his wife lived in the neighborhood of San Nicolás, had twelve children, six boys and six girls, born between 1773 and 1797, María Ramona Canaveris, María Antonia Canaveris, María Dominga Canaveris, Juan Miguel Canaveris (1778-1803), godson of Mariano Olier, Juan Joseph Canaveris, María Eugenia Canaveris, Mariano Canaveris,[51] Manuel Canaveris,[52] Joaquín Canaveris, Juana Josefa Canaveris, José Mariano de la Cruz Canaveris and María de la Encarnación Canaveris, married to Alejo Menchaca, native of Biscay.[53]
The house of Juan Canaveris was located was located on Calle de la Piedad No. 21 and 27 (between the current 25 de Mayo and Leandro N. Alem),[54] in the vicinity of the Fonda de los Tres Reyes, the main inn in the city in early 1800.[55] He and his wife were fervent catholics, belonged to the Orden de la Merced, and were the founders of a chaplaincy in the city.[56] His daughters, María Antonia and Dominga Canaveris, belonged to the religious order of Saint Dominic.[57]
Juan Canaveris and Bernarda Catalina de Esparza were the grandparents of Sinforoso Amoedo, a medical doctor, who died during the yellow fever epidemic of 1871, and Ángel Canaveris, a prestigious doctor in psychiatry, head of the mental Hospital Vilardebó in 1879.[58] His family also was related to Domingo Matheu, member of the Primera Junta, who was godfather of María del Carmen, María de la Candelaria, Mariano Domingo and María Antonia Bayá Canaveris.[59]
Cristina Francisca Axa Canaveris, a great-granddaughter of Juan Canaveris, was married to Pedro Vicente Acevedo Echevarria, grandson of Vicente Anastasio Echevarría, secretary of the Assembly of the Year XIII.[60]
Juan de Canaveris died on August 22, 1822, being buried in the Iglesia de la Merced.[61] His wife, Bernarda Catalina de Esparza died several years later. The last noble branches were the Canavery-Páez, Canavery-Andrade, Canavery-Alvarado Périchon, Canavery-Flores, Canavery-Segrestan, Canavery-Pelliza, Canaveris-Luna, Canaveris-Gutiérrez, Canaveris-Trillo, Canaveris-Panelo and Canavery-Castillo.[62]
His last name is directly and indirectly linked to families Acevedo, Argerich,[63] Bayá, Casablanca, Cuyar, Lagleyze, Lamela, Lezcano, Luna, Martínez Dizido, Marull, Medina, Michelena, Morel, Pelliza, Peralta Ramos, Saravi, Trillo, Ugarteche and Vitón. It is through his daughter María Eugenia Canaveris de Bayá (ancestor of Gloria María Bayá), that his genealogy traces an illustrious connection with the General Justo José de Urquiza, president of the Argentine Confederation between 1854 and 1860.[64]
Legacy
Giovanni Canaveri had emigrated from the Province of Cuneo, Piedmont to Republic of Genoa in times of Charles Emmanuel III, and settled possibly in Provence, later in Spain and then in Buenos Aires during the reign of Charles III, who implemented the Bourbon reforms in the Spanish colonies.
Juan de Canaveris used a large number of variants of his original surname, signing documents such as Canavero, Canavé, Canaven, Canaberis, Canavery and others. Canaveris, Canaveriis o Canaveri is a toponymic surname, present in antiquity in North Italy and France, including the regions of Turin and Rhône.[65]
His family were related to the beginnings of Argentine education, pioneers in adopting the Lancasterian teaching system in the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata.[66] Some of his descendants were also involved the establishment of the railways in Buenos Aires (public deeds), including the Great Southern Railway[67] and Lacroze Railroad.[68]
General Enrique Mosconi, a maternal great-grandson of Juan Canaveris, and whose father engineer took part in the construction of Central Argentine Railway, was president of Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales, and served between 1906 and 1908, in the German Army as Captain in the 1st Battalion of Pioners of Westphalian.[69]
His descendants took part in most of the political and military events in Argentina and Uruguay, including those that occurred towards the end of the 19th century. Some of them integrated the ranks of the main political parties of the time like the National Autonomist Party, Unión Cívica Radical, National Party and National Civic Union.[70]
His caste also took an active part in the birth of the economic institutions of Argentina, including the Bank of the Province of Buenos Aires,[71] Casa de Moneda de la República Argentina and Buenos Aires Stock Exchange.[72] Members of his family also participated in the colonization of La Pampa,[73] and the Argentine Patagonia, providing police, military and political services, and related to the arrival of immigrants (possibly Welsh) in the region of Santa Cruz Province.[74]
Pedro Canaveri and Zoilo Canavery, great-great grandchildren of Juan Canaveris were precursors of the Argentine soccer. Another member of the family linked to the sport was Carlos M. Canaveris, who integrated the First Directive Commission of the Club Atlético y Tiro Federal of Puan in 1907.[75]
Possibly Juan Canaveris was a descendant of Irish Catholic families established in southern France and northern Italy in the mid to late 17th century. It is through several of his descendants that his lineage is linked to traditional Argentine families of Irish, British and Americans roots,[76] such as Armstrong, Cilley, Clark, Cullen, Bradley,[77] Halliburton-Wright, Hogg, Kennedy, Lynch, Newbery Purcell, Reynolds-Newton,[78] Rogers,[79] Ross, Terry, Thompson, Tornquist, Walker, Warnes and Yateman's.[80]
Stephen Achinelly (1800-1845), linked to the Bayá Canaveris and Thompson-Cunningham families, is registered as a founding partner of British Hospital of Buenos Aires in 1844.[81]
Juan Canaveri's house was located on the site currently occupied by the building of the Ministry of the Interior of Argentina, built for the Central Argentine Railway in 1901.[82] It was left in inheritance to his son Juan José Canaveris,[83] and later inherited by his grandson Juan Manuel Canaveris, who lived in it until his death in 1868.[84]
It is also interesting to emphasize that Juan Canaveris also lived in the house of his mother-in-law María Eugenía Sanchez,[85] and later in the house of Sebastiana de Esparza, who allowed her to build a house on her farm located one block from the Plaza Mayor, in the current corners of Calle Reconquista and Bartolomé Mitre (to the east).[86] In this property was founded a Chaplaincy by Juan de Canaveris and María Eugenia Sánchez, testamentary executors of Leonor and Sebastiana Esparza.[87] These lands were subsequently acquired by the Pueyrredón family, and was later the headquarters of the Banco Británico de la América del Sud.[88]
Juan Canaveris also owned land in the current town of La Lucila. These lands were sold by his son Joaquín Canaveris to Lorenzo Antonio Uriarte, who in turn sold them to Martina Monasterio de Llavallol, wife of Felipe Llavallol.[89]
So far no record is found about the genealogy of his parents Gabriel Canaveris and Margarita Jugluns, but apparently was a mixed family ancestry of the Piedmontese aristocracy, the French bourgeoisie, and an family of Irish soldiers, who served in France, Northern Italy or Spain towards the 17th or 18th century.[90]
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External links
- 1748 births
- 1822 deaths
- People from Saluzzo
- People from the Kingdom of Sardinia
- People from Buenos Aires
- Italian notaries
- Italian people of French descent
- Italian people of Sardinian descent
- People of Ligurian descent
- Italian people of Irish descent
- Italian expatriates in Argentina
- Italian emigrants to Argentina
- French emigrants to Argentina
- Spanish emigrants to Argentina
- Argentine legal professionals
- Canaveri family
- Males belonging to haplogroup R-M269