Gregorio José de Toro y Valdés | |
2nd Count of La Conquista | |
More: | no |
Spouse: | Josefa Dumont y Michel |
Issue: | Manuel María de Toro, 3rd Count of La Conquista José de Toro María Nicolasa de Toro, 4th Countess of La Conquista |
Full Name: | Gregorio José de Toro y Valdés |
Honorific-Prefix: | The Most Illustrious |
Honorific-Suffix: | Caballero de Santiago |
Noble Family: | Toro |
Father: | Mateo de Toro Zambrano, 1st Count of La Conquista |
Mother: | María Nicolasa Valdés y de la Carrera |
Birth Date: | 11 March 1758 |
Birth Place: | Santiago de Chile |
Christening Date: | 1758 |
Christening Place: | Santiago de Chile |
Death Place: | Santiago de Chile |
Gregorio José de Toro y Valdés, 2nd Count of La Conquista[1] (March 11, 1758 – July 23, 1816) was a Spanish-Chilean nobleman who commanded Royalist troops during the Chilean War of Independence.
Gregorio José de Toro was born in Santiago, Chile, the second son of Mateo de Toro Zambrano, 1st Count of La Conquista and of his wife, María Nicolasa de Valdés y de la Carrera. He joined the Royal Spanish Army, and on December 30, 1769, he became a captain in the Militia Company of the Prince of Asturias. Shortly afterwards he was sent to Spain to study at the Seminary of Noblemen in Madrid. He continued his military career there until becoming a lieutenant colonel. On August 2, 1783, he was made a knight of the Order of Santiago.
In 1797 he married Josefa Dumont de Holdre y Miquel, daughter of Marshal Teodoro Dumont de Holdre and of Mariana Miquel y Lluis, and they had 3 children: Manuel María, José and María Nicolasa. The family returned to Chile in 1804.
On September 18, 1810, he participated of the open Cabildo (city hall) that resulted in the establishment of the Government Junta of the Kingdom of Chile under the presidency of his father, also known as the First Junta, an action which is generally seen as the first step of the Chilean independence process. From the beginning he was a member of the royalist party, the most conservative group that was against any reform at all and for the maintenance of the status quo.
He inherited the title at the death of his father a few months later, on February 27, 1811. He fought with the Spanish Army against independence, and died in Santiago in 1816. Was in turn succeeded to the title by his eldest son, Manuel María.
. José Toribio Medina . Diccionario Biográfico Colonial de Chile . 1906 . Imprenta Elzeviriana . Santiago, Chile . Spanish . 868–869.