Carlos Martínez de Irujo, 1st Marquess of Casa Irujo

Spanish diplomat and politician (1763–1824) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carlos Martínez de Irujo, 1st Marquess of Casa Irujo

Carlos Martínez de Irujo y Tacón, 1st Marquess of Casa Irujo (4 December 1763, in Cartagena – 17 January 1824, in Madrid), was a Spanish prime minister and diplomat, Knight of the Order of Charles III and public official. He was appointed the Spanish chief diplomat to the United States on 25 August 1796.

Quick Facts The Most ExcellentThe Marquess of Casa Irujo, Prime Minister of Spain ...
The Marquess of Casa Irujo
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Portrait by Gilbert Stuart, 1804
Prime Minister of Spain
In office
2 December 1823  17 January 1824
MonarchFerdinand VII
Preceded byVíctor Damián Sáez
Succeeded byNarciso Fernández de Heredia
Personal details
Born
Carlos Martínez de Irujo y Tacón

(1763-12-04)4 December 1763
Cartagena, Murcia, Spain
Died17 January 1824(1824-01-17) (aged 60)
Madrid, Spain
Spouse
Sarah McKean
(m. 1798; died 1824)
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Early life

His father was Manuel Martinez de Irujo y de Erice and his mother Narcisa Tacón y Gamiz (born Beriain, Navarre, 1740). He had two siblings, Narcisa Martínez de Irujo y Tacón and María Rafaela Martínez de Irujo y Tacón.[1]

Career

Casa Irujo (often spelled Yrujo) was the Spanish minister to the United States from 1796 to 1807. Casa Irujo changed positions and became minister at Rio de Janeiro and then Paris.[2]

He was Secretary of state (Prime Minister) of Spain (ministro de estado) three times, first in 1812, then in an interim capacity from 1818 to 1819, and finally for a few weeks from December 1823 until his death in January 1824.

Personal life

Summarize
Perspective

In 1794 while an attaché at the Spanish embassy in London, he had a relationship with Sarah Knight (c.1764–1841), resulting in an illegitimate daughter :

  • Lavinia de Irujo (1794–1866), who had a relationship with Maj. Charles Augustus Jones (father of poet, dramatist and novelist Ernest Charles Jones); from that relationship, Lavinia herself later gave birth to two daughters out of wedlock, Frederika Lavinia Jones (who married Fredrick Ralph Caleb Jutsum) and Frances Augusta Jones.

There are several drawings of Lavinia by the artist Henry Fuseli.[3]

In 1798, Don Carlos married Sarah Theresa McKean (1780–1841), the daughter of Pennsylvania governor Thomas McKean. The couple have been described as "intriguers of the highest order."[4] Together, they were the parents of:

The Marquess died on 17 January 1824, aged 58, in Madrid.

Character

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Sally McKean D'Yrujo

"He was an obstinate, impetuous and rather vain little person with reddish hair; enormously wealthy, endlessly touchy, extremely intelligent and vastly attractive … he liked America, he understood it and enjoyed it; he was tremendously popular at Philadelphia, and at Washington when he condescended to appear there; he was on intimate terms at the President's House. If he lost his temper from time to time, and thought nothing of haranguing the country through the newspapers, he served his King with energetic loyalty; he went about his business with dignity and shrewdness; he never forgot the respect due to his official person, however much he might indulge his democratic tendencies in private intercourse; he was the only Minister of the first rank in America, and consequently the leading figure in the diplomatic corps; he contributed to American society the brilliant qualities of his elegant and felicitous personality; he was a very great gentleman."

— from Aaron Burr, Samuel H. Wandell, Meade Minnigerode, 1925.

Yrujo was doubly and trebly attached to the Administration. Proud as a typical Spaniard should be, and mingling and infusion of vanity with his pride; irascible, headstrong, indiscreet as was possible for a diplomatist, and afraid of no prince or president; young, able, quick, and aggressive; devoted to his King and country; a flighty and dangerous friend, but a most troublesome enemy; always in difficulties, but in spite of fantastic outbursts always respectable,—Yrujo needed only the contrast of characters such as those of Pickering or Madison to make him the most entertaining figure in Washington politics. He loved the rough-and-tumble of democratic habits, and remembered his diplomatic dignity only when he could use it as a weapon against a secretary of state. If he thought the Government to need assistance or warning, he wrote communications to the newspapers in a style which long experience had made familiar to the public and irritating to the Government whose acts he criticized.

- from The First Administration of Thomas Jefferson, Part I, Chapter 17

References

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