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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
José de Santiago Concha y Salvatierra, 1st Marquess of Casa Concha (Lima, Peru, October 30, 1667[2] – Lima, Peru, March 11, 1741[3]) was a Spanish politician and Royal Governor of Chile.
José de Santiago Concha | |
---|---|
Royal Governor of Chile | |
In office December 1716 – 17 December 1717 | |
Monarch | Philip V |
Preceded by | Juan Andrés de Ustariz |
Succeeded by | Gabriel Cano de Aponte |
Personal details | |
Born | Lima, Viceroyalty of Peru | October 30, 1667
Died | March 11, 1741 73–74) Lima, Viceroyalty of Peru | (aged
Spouse | Ángela María Roldán Dávila[1] |
He studied at the National University of San Marcos,[4] and then at the University of Salamanca for a Bachelor of Canon Law.[5] He received the title of Knight of the Order of Calatrava due to his noble lineage.[6] He later served as a magistrate in Lima, later serving in a somewhat similar capacity as an oidor in the Real Audiencia of Chile from 1709 to 1710. He then returned to Lima to perform his old duties, until the King named him interim governor of Chile.
Santiago Concha arrived in Chile in Valparaiso on March 5, 1717,[7] and officially took power on the 20th of the same month.[8] He took up a long-standing royal order to found settlements, with the goal of grouping inhabitants in determined areas. Thus, in November he went to the Aconcagua River valley and personally founded the city of Quillota.[9]
In December 1717, he left his temporary post and returned to Lima, where he died a few years later. Philip V granted him the title of Marquis of Casa Concha in 1718 in honor of his service to the crown.
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