Narciso Heredia, Count of Ofalia explained

The Count of Ofalia
Order:Prime Minister of Spain
Term Start:16 December 1837
Term End:6 September 1838
Predecessor:Eusebio Bardají
Successor:The Duke of Frías
Birth Date:11 September 1775
Birth Place:Gines, Seville, Spain
Death Date:8 September 1847 (aged 71)
Death Place:Madrid, Spain
Party:Realista Moderado
Honorific Prefix:The Most Excellent

Narciso Fernández de Heredia y Begines de los Ríos, iure uxoris Count of Ofalia, 2nd Count of Heredia-Spínola, 1st Marquess of Heredia, GE (1775–1847) was a Spanish nobleman, politician and diplomat who served as Prime Minister of Spain and as Minister of State from 16 December 1837 to 6 September 1838, in the reign of Isabella II.[1]

Biography

Heredia was the eldest son of Narciso Fernández de Heredia, 1st Count of Heredia-Spínola, and his wife María de las Mercedes Begines de los Ríos y Bejarano. He married firstly in 1803 María de la Soledad Pontejos y Cerviño,[2] and had two daughters by this marriage:

Heredia married secondly in 1820 María Dolores de Salabert, 4th Countess of Ofalia, second daughter of Félix de Salabert, 5th Marquess of la Torrecilla and Petra de Torres y Feloaga.

George Borrow, in chapter 38 of his travelogue The Bible in Spain, describes an 1838 meeting with Ofalia in which he presented the Prime Minister with a specially-bound Protestant New Testament: "Throughout the whole of our interview he evidently laboured under great fear, and was continually looking behind and around him, seemingly in dread of being overheard, which brought to my mind an expression of a friend of mine, that if there be any truth in metempsychosis, the soul of Count Ofalia must have originally belonged to a mouse. We parted in kindness, and I went away, wondering by what strange chance this poor man had become prime minister of a country like Spain."

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biografía: Narciso HEREDIA Y BEGINES DE LOS RÍOS . 2024-02-09 . www.dipalme.org.
  2. http://www.grandesp.org.uk/historia/gzas/ciudadreal.htm Grandesp.org.uk. The Dukes of Ciudad Real