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Juan de la Cierva y Peñafiel

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Juan de la Cierva y Peñafiel
Preceded byÁlvaro de Figueroa y Torres
Succeeded bySegismundo Moret y Prendergast
Preceded byLuis Espada Guntín
Preceded byJosé Estrada y Estrada
Preceded byJosé Marina Vega
Succeeded byJosé Marina Vega
Preceded byLuis de Marichalar y Monreal
Succeeded byJosé Olaguer-Feliú
Preceded byLorenzo Domínguez Pascual
Succeeded byAndrés Mellado Fernández
Preceded byJosé Gómez Acebo
Personal details
Born(1864-03-11)March 11, 1864
Mula, Murcia
DiedJanuary 11, 1938(1938-01-11) (aged 73)
Madrid
Political partyPartido Liberal-Conservador
ProfessionLawyer and politician

Juan de la Cierva y Peñafiel (Mula, Murcia, (1864-03-11)March 11, 1864 - (1938-01-11)January 11, 1938, Madrid) was a Spanish politician and lawyer, who served during the reign of Alfonso XIII as Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts, of the Interior, of War, and of Finance and Development, and in the last government of the monarchy as Minister of Development.

Cierva was the son of lawyer and notary public Juan de la Cierva y Soto, from Murcia. He married a daughter of the banker Eleuterio Peñafiel, who was active between 1860 and 1890.

He graduated in law from the University of Madrid, beginning his political career with the Spanish Partido Liberal-Conservador (Template:Lang-en) as a councillor in 1895, and became the Mayor of Murcia and provincial leader of the Conservatives. In 1896, he was given writ to stand as a deputy congressman for the region of his birth, but failed to be elected. On the next occasion he was elected as an Independent politician, and was continually re-elected from 1923 to 1927.

He was commissioned into the Spanish Civil War as the commander of Madrid, but because of his political views was forced on pain of death to take sanctuary in the embassy of Norway. Because there was no medicine there, and such a deprivation of provisions, his health never recovered, and he died there on January 11, 1938.[1]

Politician

Juan de la Cierva, photograph by Kaulak

From 1902, Cierva built a network of political secret contacts, who mainatained absolute power of the people, in exchange for political loyalty to the royal family. This time is known in Murcia as [csiervismo] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help). Cierva's political hegemony was strained by the class struggle and the establishment of the Spanish Second Republic.

He was the Minister for Education and the Minister for Arts December 16, 1904 and April 8, 19ö5, respectively, in separate governments presided by Marcelo Azcárraga Palmero and Raimundo Fernández Villaverde.

Between January 25, 1907 and October 21, 1909, he was the Minister of Interior. He was also Minister of War twice: from 3 November 1917 to March 22, 1918, where he was in the cabinet of Manuel García Prieto, and from 14 August 1921 to March 8, 1922 in Antonio Maura's government.

Under this government, he would als be the Finance Minister, from April 15 to 20 July 1919.


References

  1. ^ "Juan de la Cierva y Peñafiel". biografiasyvidas.com (in Spanish). Biografías y vidas. Retrieved 6 March 2015.

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