Ana Paredes Arosemena
{{Short description|Former First Lady of Ecuador}}
{{Infobox President
|name=Ana Paredes Arosemena
|image=Ana_Paredes_Arosemena_01.jpg
|birth_name=Ana Paredes y Arosemena
|birth_date={{birth date|1854|05|25|df=y}}
|birth_place=Panama City, Province of Panama, Republic of New Granada
|death_date={{death date and age|1920|05|25|1854|03|02|df=y}}
|death_place=Panama City, Panama
|spouse={{marriage|Eloy Alfaro|1872}}
|order=
|office=First Lady of Ecuador
|term_start=16 January 1906
|term_end=12 August 1911
|predecessor=Diana Plaza Gutiérrez
|successor=Lastenia Gamarra Menéndez
|office1=
|term_start1=5 June 1895
|term_end1=31 August 1901
|predecessor1=Clementina Cordero Dávila
|successor1=Diana Plaza Gutiérrez
}}
Ana Paredes Arosemena (2 March 1854 – 25 May 1920) was the wife of Eloy Alfaro, the president of Ecuador on two occasions. She was therefore First Lady of the Nation, first between 1895 and 1901, and second between 1906 and 1911.
Biography
Paredes was born in Panama City, (then part of Colombia), on 2 March 1854. From a family of aristocrats, her father was José María Paredes Arce and her mother Catalina Arosemena Quesada. She met who would be her husband while he was in exile in the city. Alfaro had arrived in Panama after a failed revolt against the then president Gabriel García Moreno, and he prosperously dedicated himself to commerce.{{cite web|title=La vida íntima de Alfaro|url=http://portal.redecuatoriana.com/foros/la-vida-intima-de-alfaro|language=es|date=21 June 2005|accessdate=1 April 2015|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402134104/http://portal.redecuatoriana.com/foros/la-vida-intima-de-alfaro|archivedate=2 April 2015}} The couple married on 10 January 1872, when Paredes was 18 years old.{{cite web|work=Diario El Comercio|title=Los últimos días de Alfaro|publisher=Documentos para el debate (cuaderno 3)|year=2012|url=http://especiales.elcomercio.com/2012/01/eloy_alfaro/docs/Los_ultimos_dias_de_Alfaro_cuaderno3.pdf|accessdate=1 April 2015}}
When Alfaro returned to Ecuador in 1875, his wife and his children remained in the Panamanian capital. In 1878, she had to advocate before the Consul of Colombia so that he interceded for her husband, who had been arrested in Ecuador. The act favorably achieved the freedom of General Alfaro after 97 days in prison, returning immediately to his family in Panama. After going through economic hardships, and again suffering the departure of her husband to lead the Liberal Revolution, Ana and her children first set foot on Ecuadorian soil in 1895, becoming the nation's First Lady.
Alfaro and Paredes had a total of nine children, of which only five would reach adulthood, three women and two men.
Death
References
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Category:People from Panama City