Domingo Esguerra Plata Explained

Domingo Esguerra Plata
Ambassador From:Colombia
Country:United Kingdom
Term Start:28 June 1948
Term End:7 June 1950
Predecessor:Darío Echandía Olaya
Successor:Rafael Sánchez Amaya
Office2:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Term Start2:5 May 1947
Term End2:21 March 1948
President2:Mariano Ospina Pérez
Predecessor2:Luis López de Mesa
Successor2:Laureano Gómez
Ambassador From3:Colombia
Country3:Brazil
Term Start3:27 December 1938
Term End3:16 January 1940
Predecessor3:Position established
Successor3:Carlos Lozano y Lozano
Office4:Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Colombia to Brazil
Term Start4:8 December 1936
Term End4:27 December 1938
President4:Alfonso López Pumarejo
Successor4:Position abolished
Office5:Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Colombia to Japan
Term Start5:28 April 1934
Term End5:4 September 1936
President5:Enrique Olaya Herrera
Successor5:Alfredo Michelsen Mantilla
Office7:Minister of Finance and Treasury
Term Start7:26 May 1909
Term End7:10 June 1909
President7:Rafael Reyes Prieto
Predecessor7:Nemesio Camacho Macías
Successor7:Fidel Cano Gutiérrez
Birth Date:28 March 1875
Birth Place:Santana, Tolima, United States of Colombia
Death Date:1965
Death Place:Bogotá, D.C., Colombia
Nationality:Colombian
Party:Liberal
Spouse:Paulina Rueda Vargas (1908-1946)
Susana Flórez Mariño (1948-1965)
Alma Mater:Republican University of Colombia (JD, 1896)

Domingo Esguerra Plata (28 March 1875  - 1965) was a Colombian lawyer who served as Minister of Foreign Affairs of Colombia, Ambassador of Colombia to Brazil, and Ambassador of Colombia to the United Kingdom.

Career

Graduated Juris Doctor from Universidad Repúblicana in Bogotá (now the Free University of Colombia) on 26 June 1896,[1] his graduate thesis La Doctrina Monroe was a comprehensive account of the Monroe Doctrine and was held in high regard by his contemporaries.

On 4 September 1906, Esguerra was named First Secretary of the Colombian Legation in United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland working under Ignacio Gutiérrez Ponce, the Colombian Envoy to His Britanic Majesty's Government.[2] On 8 October 1908, he was promoted to the rank of Counselor ad honorem, but was instead transferred a few days later on 13 October to the legation in the German Empire still maintaining the same rank, this was at the behest of his friend Gutiérrez who now served as Envoy to His Germanic Imperial and Royal Majesty's Government.[3]

He returned to Colombia in the early months of 1909, and was named Colombian Minister of Finance and Treasury by President Rafael Reyes Prieto in replacement of Nemesio Camacho Macías for a very short period, the appointed was intended to fulfill protocol as President Reyes's term ended a few weeks later. The next year, Esguerra was named Financial Agent of the diplomatic missions in Europe at London. With the inauguration of the League of Nations in Geneva, Esguerra was named Counselor of the Colombian Legation to the First Conference of the League of Nations on 16 January 1920.[4] [5] In 1922, he returns to London this time as Consul General.

For his exemplary conduct and diplomatic labour in the name of Colombia, Esguerra was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure by the Government of Japan, the Order of the Southern Cross by the Government of Brazil, the Order of the Liberator by the Government of Venezuela, the Order of Merit by the Government of Ecuador, and the Order of Boyacá by his own, the Government of Colombia.[6] He was also a member and 3 times President of the Sociedad Bolivariana de Colombia, and an Honorary Member of the Real Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislación of Madrid.[6]

In October 1933 he was appointed as the 1st Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Colombia to Japan by President Enrique Olaya Herrera with the mission of establishing direct diplomatic ties with The Land of the Rising Sun. He travelled from London to Washington, D.C. to meet his colleague Fabio Lozano Torrijos, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Colombia to the United States and afterwards travelled to Montreal where he travelled by train to Vancouver and sailed off to Japan by way of Honolulu. He arrived to the port of Yokohama, Japan on 20 April 1934 and travelled from there to Tokyo, where on 28 April 1934 he presented his Letters of Credence to Emperor Hirohito.[7]

Personal life

Born 28 March 1875 in the town of Santana de las Lajas (now Falán) then part of the State of Tolima, United States of Colombia. His parents were Domingo Esguerra Ortiz and Dolores Plata Bernal, but was raised in the home of his paternal uncle Nicolás following the murder of his father in 1897, and remained there after his mother died in 1901. He married on 8 March 1905 to Paulina Rueda Vargas, who died in 1946, and remarried in June 1948 to Susana Flórez Marino who survived him when he died on in Bogotá, D.C., he had no succession from either marriage.[8] [9]

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. 1963 . Doctor Domingo Esguerra . Revista Bolivariana . 71 . 50 . Bogotá . . Sociedad Bolivariana de Colombia . es . 4910951 . 2011-05-19 .
  2. October 1907 . Sección Diplomática: Agentes Diplomáticos de Colombia. Boletin del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores . 1 . 2 . 48 . Bogotá . . Carlos . Tamayo . es . 6574047 . 2011-05-19.
  3. November 1908 . Nombramiento de Consejeros de Legación. Boletin del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores . 2 . 3 . 129 . Bogotá . . Carlos . Tamayo . es . 6574047 . 2011-05-19.
  4. 1947 . La Hidalguía Colombiana Está Representada con Justeza en su Canciller Doctor Esguerra. Veritas Argentina . 17 . 204 . 1819 . Buenos Aires . Veritas Editorial . Francisco Antonio . Rizzuto . Francisco Antonio . Rizzuto Jr.. es . 0042-3955 . 1508610 . 2011-05-20 .
  5. Koebel . William Henry . Anglo-South American Handbook . The South American Handbook: A Guide to the Countries and Resources of Latin-America, Inclusive of South and Central America, Mexico, and Cuba . 2011-05-20 . 1922 . . New York City . 0309-4529 . 1766070 . 257.
  6. Book: Percy Alvin . Martin . Manoel da Silverira . Soares Cardozo . Who's who in Latin America: a biographical dictionary of notable living men and women of Latin America . 2011-05-20 . 3rd rev. . 3 . 1946 . 1935 . . Stanford . 562723266 . 21.
  7. 251–254 . Revista de América . 9–12 . Recuerdos del Japón . . Domingo . Esguerra Plata . 1945 . 4 July 2013 . 1714202 . Germán . Arciniegas . Germán Arciniegas . es .
  8. Book: Restrepo Sáenz . José María . Rivas . Raimundo . José . Restrepo Posada . Genealogías de Santa Fe de Bogotá. 2011-05-18 . 1993 . Editorial Presencia . Bogotá . es. 28546996 . 162–163.
  9. Book: López de Mesa Gómez . Luis . Luis López de Mesa . Historia de la cancillería de San Carlos. 2011-05-18 . 1942 . Imprenta del Estado Mayor General . Bogotá . es . 11113042 . 83 . 2.