Francisco José de Ovando, 1st Marquis of Brindisi explained

Honorific-Prefix:Don
Francisco José de Ovando
Honorific-Suffix:Marquis of Brindisi
Order:Governor-General of the Philippines
Term Start:July 20, 1750
Term End:July 1754
Primeminister:Marquis of Ensenada
Predecessor:Juan de Arrechederra
Successor:Pedro Manuel de Arandía
Order2:Royal Governor of Chile
Term Start2:June 28, 1745
Term End2:March 26, 1746
Monarch2:Philip V
Primeminister2:Marquis of Ensenada
Predecessor2:José Manso de Velasco
Successor2:Domingo Ortíz de Rosas
Birth Date:1693
Birth Place:Caceres, Spain
Death Place:At sea, Spain
Profession:Brigadier General
Signature:Francisco José de Ovando's signature.svg

Francisco José de Ovando y Solís Rol de La Cerda, 1st Marquis of Brindisi (Spanish; Castilian: Francisco José de Ovando y Solís Rol de La Cerda, primer Marqués de Brindisi) (c. 1693 – December 9, 1755) was a Spanish soldier who served as Governor-General of the Philippines and governor of Chile.

Early life

Francisco José de Ovando was born in the city of Caceres[1] in Extremadura. In 1710, at the age of seventeen, he joined the Spanish Army as a cadet, and in 1717 he transferred to the naval infantry, as a member of which he participated in the capture of Sicily in July 1718, during the War of the Quadruple Alliance.

After a period of several years in which he returned to administrative work within the Spanish Army, he returned to the navy in 1728 as a lieutenant in charge of the frigate Génova. Two years later, he was commissioned to study naval construction at Cádiz. In 1731, he was given the command of the frigate Guipúzcoa, which as part of the fleet under Admiral Cornejo, took part in the attack to Livorno.

Capture of Brindisi

He was promoted to Captain in 1733 and took command of the frigate Galga,[2] which as part of the fleet of the Marquis of Clavijo captured Naples during the War of the Polish Succession. In 1734 he was sent to capture the castle of Brindisi near Tarento. In that opportunity, he personally landed and led a force composed of 200 men from his ship and 100 naval infantry to capture the fortress. After the battle he sailed back to Naples, where he was personally congratulated by the Infante Don Carlos for his outstanding valor and performance in battle, and was rewarded with the title of Marquis of Brindisi[2] (in most literature he appears credited as Marquis of Ovando, which is simply a corruption of his title and his last name), was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and was given the command of the Man-of-war El León, of seventy cannons.

In 1736, Ovando took command of the frigate San Cayetano, which he sailed to Veracruz to join the Windward Fleet (Spanish; Castilian: Flota de Barlovento|links=no), and was sent to the Antilles to root out smugglers and European traders, mainly British and Dutch, who were violating the monopoly of the Spanish Main.[1] In 1740 he participated, with his ship Dragón, in the defense of Cartagena de Indias from the British attack of Admiral Vernon.

The Spanish Prime Minister Marquis of Ensenada promoted Ovando in 1743 to Fleet Commander, charging him with the inspection of all the fortresses, harbors and arsenals in the Viceroyalty of Peru[3] as inspector and commander-in-chief of the Southern Seas' Fleet (3).

As Governor of Chile

Francisco José de Ovando was appointed interim Governor of Chile by his predecessor José Antonio Manso de Velasco, who had been promoted to Viceroy of Peru and whom he had travelled to Valparaíso to escort back to Peru. He took over his position on July 28, 1745 and remained there until March 26 of the following year, when his successor, Domingo Ortiz de Rosas, arrived.[1] He immediately returned to his fleet command on board of the ship San Fermín and departed to chart the Juan Fernández Islands.

On October 26, 1746, he was eyewitness of the devastating Lima-Callao earthquake of which he (and his family) was one of the few survivors.[4]

Other notable acts undertaken during his government were the creation, on March 11, 1747, of the first University in the colonial territory of Chile: the Royal University of San Felipe (Real Universidad de San Felipe), of which the first rector was Tomás de Azúa e Iturgoyen. This university would eventually become today's University of Chile.

As Governor-General of the Philippines

He arrived in Manila on July 20, 1750 and immediately had trouble with the Audiencia and archbishop. He also dealt with Moros. His term ended in July 1754 and died at sea in 1755 on his way back to Acapulco.[5] The town of Obando in the province of Bulacan, which he founded on May 14, 1753, was named after him.[6]

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Medina, José Toribio . Diccionario Biográfico Colonial de Chile . José Toribio Medina . es .
  2. Book: Gómez, Santiago . Historial del navío "Galga" . 11 March 2021 . es .
  3. Book: Somodevilla, Zenón de . Instrucciones al marqués de Ovando . Zenón de Somodevilla y Bengoechea, Marquis of Ensenada . 1743 . AGI, Lima, Legajo 1.489 . es .
  4. https://archive.org/details/semanarioerudito1618vall/page/n247/mode/2up Ovando's letter to a friend, printed in Antonio Valladares Semanario erudito. Madrid : Blas Roman 1799 XVI, S.239-264 (in Spanish)
  5. Blair and Robertson. 1901. Vol 17
  6. Source: http://www.bulacan.gov.ph/obando/history.php