Emilio Alcalá-Galiano, 4th Count of Casa Valencia explained

Don Emilio Alcalá-Galiano y Valencia, 4th Count of Casa Valencia and 2nd Viscount of the Pontón (7 March 1831, in Madrid, Spain – 12 November 1914, in San Sebastián, Spain) was a Spanish noble and politician who served as Minister of State in the reign of King Alfonso XII.

Biography

In 1876, he was elected senator for Granada and in 1877, as a member of the Liberal Conservative Party, senator for life.

In 1879, he entered the Royal Spanish Academy and was appointed Minister Plenipotentiary in Lisbon. In 1895, he became Spanish Ambassador to the United Kingdom, a position he held until 1897 when he resigned when the Liberal Party came to power.[1]

After approval by the House of Commons in London, on March 9, 1908, she called for women's suffrage, arguing that "Women in Spain can be queens but not voters"; eight days later the first debate on women's suffrage was held in the Congress of Deputies.[2]

The palace he built on Paseo de la Castellana in Madrid is currently the headquarters of the Ministry of the Interior. He also owned the palace of Ayete in San Sebastian.

References

Geneall.net Emilio Alcalá Galiano, 4th Count of Casa Valencia

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Notes and References

  1. https://dbe.rah.es/biografias/8829/emilio-alcala-galiano-y-valencia Real Academia de la Historia
  2. Semblanza de Clara Campoamor en La revolución española vista por una republicana, edición y traducción de Luis Español Bouché, Espuela de Plata, Madrid, 2018, p. 12.