José Joaquín Pesado Explained

José Joaquín Pesado Pérez
Order:Minister of Interior and Exterior Relations
Term Start:14 November 1838
Term End:10 December 1838
President:Anastasio Bustamante
Predecessor:Luis Gonzaga Cuevas
Successor:Manuel Gómez Pedraza
Birth Date:9 February 1801
Birth Place:Palmar de Bravo, New Spain
Death Place:Mexico City, Mexico
Party:Conservative
Signature:José Joaquín Pesado (signature).svg

José Joaquín Pesado Pérez (Palmar de Bravo, Puebla, New Spain, 9 February 1801 — Mexico City, 3 March 1861) was a Mexican writer, journalist, poet and politician.[1] He was born in San Agustín del Palmar, Puebla, in 1801 and died in Mexico City in 1861. In 1822, he married María de la Luz de la Llave y Segura, and Juana Segura Argüelles twenty years later.

Pesado was Secretariat of Foreign Affairs (es:Secretario de Relaciones Exteriores, Gobernación y Policía), Interior Minister (es: Ministerio del Interior), Foreign minister (es:Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores), and Governor of Veracruz (es: Gobernador de Veracruz). He joined the nineteenth-century literary society the Academia de Letrán. He was also a member of the Academia Mexicana de la Lengua and professor of philosophy. He published in El Radical and El Año Nuevo. He was editor of El Mosaico Mexicano, El Recreo de las familias, El Nuevo Año and La Cruz.[2]

References

  1. Book: Pesado, José Joaquin. Poesias originales y traducidas de d. José Joaquin Pesado. Cumplido. 1849. Mexico City.
  2. Book: Roa Bárcena, José María. Biografía de D. José Joaquín Pesado. Editorial Jus. 1962. Mexico City. 405458.

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