Ignacio Figueroa y Mendieta

Ignacio Figueroa y Mendieta
Born22 April 1808 Edit this on Wikidata
Llerena Edit this on Wikidata
Died11 March 1899 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 90)
Madrid Edit this on Wikidata

Joaquín Ignacio Figueroa y Mendieta (22 April 1808 – 11 March 1899) was a Spanish politician and businessman.

Biography

Born in Llerena on 22 April 1808,[1] the only son of Luis Figueroa y Casaus (an afrancesado who moved to Marseille after May 1808 and made a considerable fortune investing in mining companies dedicated to lead extraction in Andalusia)[2] and Luisa Mendieta.[3] Ignacio would inherit his father's companies.[4] He received an education in Paris, and, after working for a time as the representative of the interests of his father in Spain, he settled in Madrid in 1845.[5]

In 1852, he married Ana de Torres, viscountess of Irueste, forming a union between an affluent bourgeois—him—and an aristocrat in economic hardship,[6] so he got to enter aristocratic circles.[4] He earned a seat at the Congress of Deputies for the first time in 1865, replacing the vacant seat left by Manuel García Barzanallana in the district of Guadalajara.[1] He renewed his seat during the reign of Isabella II in 1865[7] and 1867.[8] He became senator for the first time in the 1867–1868 period.[9] Durante the reign of Amadeo I , Figueroa was elected as deputy in representation of Puentedeume at the 1872 election.[10]

Following the Bourbon Restoration, he was elected member of the Congress in the first election that took place in the new regime in 1876, in representation of Guadalajara; appointed as Senator he renounced to his deputy seat in 1877.[11] He served at the Senate until 1899.[9]

He died in Madrid on 11 March 1899.[1][9]

He was the father of Francisca de Paula,[12] José,[13] Álvaro (the Count of Romanones), Gonzalo[13] and Rodrigo, spawning one of the most influential families in Spain during the Restoration period.[14]

References

Citations
Bibliography