Ramón de Santillán

Portrait of Ramón de Santillán González by José Gutiérrez de la Vega, from the art collection of the Bank of Spain.[1]

Ramón de Santillán González (30 August 1791 November (?) 1863) was a Spanish soldier, politician, and Minister of Finance.

Life

Santillán was born in Lerma (province of Burgos). He came from a relatively poor family. He matriculated in law at the University of Valladolid in 1805; his studies were interrupted by the Peninsular War.[2] He enlisted in 1809 as a corporal[3] in the army led by the priest Jerónimo Merino fighting for Spanish independence.[2] He soon rose to the rank of lieutenant, and obtained the rank of captain in 1812.[3] He remained in the Spanish Army until 1824, when he was purged from the ranks after the end of Trienio Liberal for his support of the liberal regime, despite his not having originally been an enthusiast of the uprising that brought it to power.[4]

Nonetheless, in 1825 he was hired by the Ministry of Finance, and in the 1830s occupied responsible positions under Juan Álvarez Mendizábal. Shortly before the fall of the regent Maria Christina of the Two Sicilies, during the minority of Queen Isabella II, he was named Minister of Finance, serving from April to July 1840,[3][5] at which time the Progressive general Baldomero Espartero became regent. Despite being removed as minister, he remained at the ministry,[3] where he worked with the Progressive finance ministers Agustín Fernández Gamboa and Pedro Surrá y Rull and later with their Moderate Party successor Juan José García Carrasco Romero, as well as with colleagues Alejandro Mon y Menéndez and Pita Pizarro.[3][5]

Although the Spanish tax reform of 1845 is often attributed solely to Mon,[6] Santillán was his close collaborator.[3][7][8] He was named a senator for life in the legislature of 1845-46.[9] He served briefly again as Minister of Finance (28 January 1847 – 28 March 1847),[3][5] and was responsible for major improvements in the public banking system of Spain through the 1849 unification of the Bank of San Fernando with the Bank of Isabella II into a single entity, of which he was the first governor. This merged bank initially retained the name of the Bank of San Fernando.[10]

In 1854, months before the end of the década moderada, Santillán was dismissed for refusing the demands of the Spanish Treasury.[10] However, during the ensuing bienio progresista, when the Bank of San Fernando became the Bank of Spain in January 1856, he was named its first governor;[10][11][12] he remained in the post until his death in Madrid in November 1863.[12]

Ideology

Santillán's views fell within the range of the Spanish liberalism of his time. In general, he was a conservative liberal, aligned with the Moderate Party rather than with the Progressives,[4][13] but he was not a party militant. In the 1850s, he aligned with the Liberal Union, which attempted to steer an intermediate course between those two factions.

Use of image on banknotes

Santillán's image was on the 1000-peseta banknote of 1949.[14]

Works

Notes

  1. History of a Central Bank, Banco de España, p. 7, 22 (p. 9, 24 of PDF). Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  2. 1 2 José Ramón de Santillán, El Levantamiento y la Guerra de la Independencia en la provincia de Burgos, Revista Arbil nº 65. ISSN 1697-1388. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Ramón Santillán González, Base documental d'Història Contemporània de Catalunya. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  4. 1 2 María Dolores Saíz, La «Gaceta Patriotico del Egercito Nacional» (1820), 127:146 in Estudios Políticos, Number 38, March/April 1984. p. 129–130 (p. 3–4 of PDF). Retrieved 2010-03-03
  5. 1 2 3 Governs d' Isabel II. Les Regencies (1833-1843) and Governs d' Isabel II. Dècada Moderada, Base documental d'Història Contemporània de Catalunya, xtec.es, retrieved 2010-02-28 are useful for the dates and full names of ministers. Los Gobiernos del Reino de España 1833 - 1868, www.elisanet.fi/daglarsson generally confirms this and adds some information (e.g. it gives precise dates, and adds minister of Commerce, Instruction and Public Works) but seems to be a personal site privately maintained by an individual; it has not been used here as a source.
  6. See, for example, Brief History of the Ministry of the Treasury, Ministerio de Economía y Hacienda, official site. Retrieved 2010-03-03
  7. Enrique Collazo Pérez, Luis María Pastor, exponente del liberalismo económico en el siglo XIX, La Ilustración Liberal, Number 13-14, December 2002. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  8. Carlos Dardé, Capítulo II: Introducción, p. 7 of 15, in Liberalismo y Romanticismo en Tiempos de Isabel II, Sociedad Estatal de Conmemoraciones Culturales, 2004. ISBN 84-95486-84-9. TOC. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  9. Expediente personal del senador vitalicio D. Ramón Santillán González, official site of the Spanish Senate. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  10. 1 2 3 History of a Central Bank, Banco de España, p. 6 (p. 8 of PDF). Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  11. Governors of the Banco de España at the Wayback Machine (archived April 5, 2008), Banco de España official site. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  12. 1 2 Gobernadores del Banco de España, Banco de España official site. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  13. José Luís García Ruiz, Luis María Pastor: Un economista del España de Isabel II, 205:227 in Revista de Historia Económica, Year 14, winter 1996, Number 1, p. 208 (p. 4 of PDF). Retrieved 2010-03-04.
  14. GOBIERNO GENERAL FRANCO- 1936/1975 Monumentos y Personajes, Billetes Españoles, http://webs.ono.com/rafaele/. Retrieved 2010-03-03.

References

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