Birth Date: | [1] [2] |
Birth Place: | Fregenal de la Sierra, Spain |
Death Place: | Madrid, Spain |
Honorific-Prefix: | The Most Excellent |
Juan Bravo Murillo | |
Party: | Moderate Party |
Profession: | Lawyer |
Office: | Prime Minister of Spain |
Predecessor: | Ramón María Narváez |
Successor: | Federico Roncali |
Office2: | President of the Congress of Deputies[3] |
Predecessor2: | Francisco Martínez de la Rosa |
Successor2: | Francisco Martínez de la Rosa |
Office3: | Member of the Congress of Deputies |
Term End3: | Various non-consecutive terms until 1858.[4] |
Office4: | Minister of Grace and Justice |
Primeminister4: | Carlos Martínez de Irujo, Duke of Sotomayor |
Office5: | Minister of Commerce, Instruction, and Public Works |
Primeminister5: | Ramón María Narváez |
Office6: | Minister of Finance |
Office7: | Minister of Finance and Development |
Office8: | Minister of Finance[5] |
Office9: | President of the Congress of Deputies[6] [7] |
Office10: | Member of Spanish Senate |
Juan Bravo Murillo (24 June 1803 - 11 February 1873) was a Spanish politician, jurist and economist. He was prime minister of Spain from 14 January 1851 to 14 December 1852 during the reign of Isabella II.
Bravo Murillo was born in Fregenal de la Sierra on 24 June 1803. After briefly studying theology,[8] he studied law at the University of Salamanca and the University of Seville, obtaining his licentiate from Seville in 1825. He practiced law for a time in Seville. After the death of Fernando VII in 1833 he was named prosecutor of the Audiencia Provincial of Cádiz, a position he held for two years before moving to Madrid, where he co-published a journal called Boletín de Jurisprudencia. He was also a founder of the conservative newspaper El Porvenir.
He was elected a deputy (member of the lower house of Spain's parliament) in 1837 and 1840 as a member of the Moderate Party. However, his reactionary views kept him out of leadership during the decidedly liberal ascendancy of General Baldomero Espartero, regent during this portion of the minority of Isabella II. He emigrated briefly to France after the Spanish Revolution of 1841, but returned in 1843 after Espartero's fall, the beginning of the década moderada.[9]
In January 1847 he was named Minister of Grace and Justice in the government of Carlos Martínez de Irujo, Duke of Sotomayor. General Ramón María Narváez later named him Minister of Commerce, Instruction, and Public Works, then in 1849 Minister of Finance. He was named President of the Council of Ministers of Spain, effectively prime minister, taking office on 14 January 1851, while serving as his own Minister of Finance. The events of the Revolutions of 1848 throughout Europe led him to propose an anti-parliamentarian, absolutist constitution for Spain in 1852, countering the moderate liberal tendency of the Spanish Constitution of 1845, but it proved unpopular and was rejected. He lost his position as head of government 14 December 1852; the onset of the bienio progresista some 18 months later led him to leave Spain, returning in 1856. He served as President of the Congress of Deputies in 1858, and was named to the Spanish Senate in 1863 as a senator for life.[10]
He is responsible for founding Canal de Isabel II, the public company that still brings water to Madrid,[11] the establishment of civil service exams (oposiciones),[12] the introduction of the metric system into Spain in 1849,[13] the Concordat of 1851 that settled differences between the Spanish government and the Holy See, and the 1852 Canaries Free Ports Act.[14] He was also responsible for a variety of measures in his capacity as minister of finance, and founded what later became the Boletín Oficial del Estado, which remains the Spanish government's official gazette to this day.
The most interesting of his writings were published in six volumes entitled Opúsculos ("Pamphlets", 1863–1874). He died in Madrid on 11 February 1873.
Bravo Murillo was elected to the Congress of Deputies on 12 occasions, and represented constituencies in five different provinces (sometimes two of them at the same time):
Election number | Election date | District | Province | Took office | Left office | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
09 | 22 September 1837 | At large | Seville | 19 December 1837 | 1 June 1839 | |
11 | 19 January 1840 | At large | Ávila | 21 February 1840 | 11 October 1840 | |
14 | 15 September 1843 | At large | Badajoz | 18 October 1843 | 10 July 1844 | |
15 | 3 September 1844 | At large | Badajoz | 14 October 1844 | 31 October 1846 | |
16 | 21 June 1846 | Fregenal de la Sierra | Badajoz | 3 January 1847 | 18 December 1848 | |
16 | 21 June 1846 | Fregenal de la Sierra | Badajoz | 20 December 1847 | 4 August 1850 | |
17 | 31 August 1850 | Fregenal de la Sierra | Badajoz | 6 November 1850 | 7 April 1851 | |
17 | 31 August 1850 | Huelva | Huelva | 6 November 1850 | 15 November 1850 | |
18 | 10 May 1851 | Elche de la Sierra | Albacete | 4 June 1851 | 17 June 1851 | |
18 | 10 May 1851 | Fregenal de la Sierra | Badajoz | 4 June 1851 | 2 December 1852 | |
19 | 4 February 1853 | Fregenal de la Sierra | Badajoz | 15 March 1853 | 10 December 1853 | |
21 | 25 February 1857 | Fregenal de la Sierra | Badajoz | 6 May 1857 | 13 May 1858 |
Source:[15]
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