José Laureano Pineda Ugarte | |
Office: | Supreme Director of Nicaragua |
Leader: | José Trinidad Muñoz |
Termend3: | 4 August 1851 |
Termstart3: | 5 May 1851 |
Termend2: | 2 November 1851 |
Termstart2: | 4 August 1851 |
Termend: | 1 April 1853 |
Termstart: | 11 November 1851 |
Predecessor3: | Justo Abaunza |
Predecessor2: | Justo Abaunza |
Predecessor: | Fulgencio Vega |
Successor: | Fruto Chamorro |
Successor2: | Fulgencio Vega |
Successor3: | Justo Abaunza |
Birth Date: | 4 July 1802 |
Birth Place: | Potosí, Rivas, Captaincy General of Guatemala |
Death Place: | Managua, State of Nicaragua |
Party: | Democratic |
Occupation: | Politician, lawyer |
Parents: | Pedro Benito Pineda Juana Rufina Ugarte Selva |
Spouse: | Dolores Sacasa Méndez |
José Laureano Pineda Ugarte (4 July 1802 – 17 September 1853) was a Nicaraguan lawyer and politician who, as a Senator in the Legislative Assembly and member of the Democratic Party, was appointed to serve as 7th and later 8th Supreme Director of the State of Nicaragua on three occasions. originally elected on 1 April 1851, later in dissidence in Honduras after being removed from office as a result of a military coup led by José Trinidad Muñoz, and finally alongside Fulgencio Vega from 11 November the same year.[1]
He was born in Potosí on 4 July 1802, He was son of Pedro Benito Pineda, head of State of Nicaragua (1826-1827) and Juana Rufina Ugarte Selva.
He married Dolores Sacasa Méndez, daughter of Crisanto Sacasa y Parodi, the first Nicaraguan conservative leader, and María Méndez Díaz de Figueroa, daughter of Nicaraguan military leader Bernardo Méndez de Figueroa.
In 1825 he graduated in Law from the Royal University of León, of liberal ideology, from a young age he supported the Independence of Central America from Spain.
In 1835 he wrote the First Penal Code of Nicaragua which was approved by the National Assembly in 1839. He also served Minister of Government under Supreme Director José León Sandoval.
He was elected deputy to the Constituent Assembly of 1848 and was one of the few who refused to sign the Treaty of Cuba which was imposed by the British Empire after invading and reaching Lake Nicaragua. The treaty took effect the same year and Nicaragua ceded the port city of San Juan del Norte to the Mosquito Coast.
Pineda won the 1851 elections on 1 April, but could not take office. In his place Senator Justo Abaunza was appointed office until 5 May when Pineda finally took that position.[2]
On 4 August 1851 General Commander José Trinidad Muñoz staged a military coup against Pineda, overthrowing him and reappointing Abaunza as interim Supreme Director in León, José Francisco del Montenegro in Granada and forcing Pineda and his cabinet into exile in Honduras, where he would declare himself as Supreme Director in dissidence.[3]
Montenegro would die 6 days after taking office on 11 August, and he would be subsequently replaced by José de Jesús Alfaro.
Pineda, with military support from Honduran President Juan Lindo, returned to Nicaragua setting out to lay siege to León. The troops were led by brigadier general Fruto Chamorro. The city capitulated on the condition that Pineda grant Abaunza amnesty, but this decision was overturned by the Nicaraguan parliament, which found that Abaunza already had parliamentary immunity.[4] According to Francisco Castellón, the Bishop of San Salvador, Jorge de Viteri y Ungo, was behind these intrigues.
Initially, Pineda shared power with Fulgencio Vega, but later he was in power alone. He carried out an administrative reform in the country and, together with Vega, made Managua the capital of the country once and for all on 15 February 1852 in order to eliminate the confrontation between Granada and León.[5]
He died on 17 September 1853. His government administration was progressive, he created schools, improved roads and reformed the administrative structure of the State. He is considered one of the best rulers of Nicaragua in the 19th century, before the Filibuster War.