Francisco María Oreamuno Bonilla
{{short description|Costa Rican politician}}
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{{Expand Spanish|topic=gov|date=October 2009|Francisco María Oreamuno Bonilla}}
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{{Family name hatnote|Oreamuno|Bonilla|lang=Spanish}}
{{Infobox officeholder
|name = Francisco María Oreamuno Bonilla
|image = Francisco María Oreamuno Bonilla.JPG
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|vicepresident =
|predecessor = José María Alfaro Zamora
|successor = Rafael Moya Murillo
|order2 = Head of State of Costa Rica
|term_start2 = 21 November 1844
|term_end2 = 17 December 1844
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|birth_date = {{birth date|1801|10|4|df=y}}
|birth_place = Cartago, Costa Rica
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|death_date = {{death date and age|1856|5|23|1801|10|4|df=y}}
|death_place = San José, Costa Rica
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Francisco María Oreamuno Bonilla (4 October 1801, Cartago, Costa Rica – 23 May 1856) was a Costa Rican politician and the Head of State of Costa Rica from November to December 1844.{{Cite book |last=Carbonell |first=Jorge Francisco Sáenz |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yol2uQ83O7wC&dq=Francisco+Mar%C3%ADa+Oreamuno+Bonilla&pg=PA49 |title=Francisco María Oreamuno |date=1994 |publisher=EUNED |isbn=978-9977-64-582-7 |language=es}}
Personal life
Oreamuno was the son of Isidro de Oreamuno y Alvarado and Justa de Bonilla y Laya-Bolívar. He studied Latin with Hipólito Calvo Rosales and philosophy with Rafael Francisco Osejo. On June 7, 1827, Oreamuno married Nicaraguan Agustina Gutiérrez y La Peña-Monjehija, the daughter of Agustín Gutiérrez y Lizaurzábal and Josefa de La Peña-Monje y La Cerda. The couple had four children: María Esmeralda, Francisco José, Jesús María and Salvador.
Political career
Oreamuno became involved in politics in 1821. He served as a judge in Minas del Aguacate (1824), the third mayor of Cartago (1826), a legislator for Cartago (1826-1828), a member of the Court of Auditors (1826-1827), and was regidor and interim Municipal President of Cartago (1831). He also held the roles of Federal Customs Administrator of Puntarenas (1831-1838), General State Administrator (1838 and 1842), Commissioner of Costa Rica in Nicaragua (1838), Trial Court Justice of Cartago (1841), Constituent Assembly member (1843-1844), Vice Chief of Staff (1843-1844), Minister of Finance, Public Education and the Navy (1847), Governor of Cartago (1849-1850), Vice President of the Republic (1850-1856) and President of Congress (1850-1856).
In the 1844 Costa Rican elections, the first that used a direct voting system, he achieved an overwhelming victory against the provisional Head of State, José María Alfaro Zamora, and 28 other candidates. He started his tenure on 21 November 1844 and was supposed to continue in the role until 1848. However, he resigned and returned to Cartago; his resignation was not accepted. He was temporarily replaced by Rafael Moya Murillo (1844-1845) and José Rafael Gallegos (1845-1846).
In April 1845, the legislature suspended him from office, declared that there was cause for proceedings against him and ordered that criminal proceedings be opened against him for abandoning his post, but he remained the titular head of state until 7 June 1846 when a military coup ended the constitutional government.
In 1850, he became Vice President of Costa Rica under President Juan Rafael Mora Porras.
Later life and death
He was a wealthy landowner and raised coffee and livestock in Cartago. He also wrote for the weekly publication La Paz y el Progreso.
In 1856, a severe cholera epidemic swept through Costa Rica, killing 10% of the population. Oreamuno caught cholera and died on 23 May 1856.
Legacy
In 1914, one of the cantons of Cartago province was named Oreamuno after him. His son-in-law Jesús Jiménez Zamora and his grandson Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno were both Presidents of Costa Rica.
References
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{{succession box
|title=Head of State of Costa Rica
|before=José María Alfaro
|years=Nov-Dec 1844
|after=José Rafael Gallegos
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{{CostaRicaPresidents}}
{{Presidents of the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Oreamuno Bonilla, Francisco Maria}}
Category:People from Cartago Province
Category:Presidents of Costa Rica
Category:Vice presidents of Costa Rica
Category:19th-century Costa Rican people
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