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  1. Manuel José Arce

    Manuel José Arce

    President of the Federal Republic of Central America

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  1. Background. Manuel José Arce was the son of Spaniard Bernardo José de Arce, the Colonial Intendant of the Intendancy of San Salvador from 1800 until 1801, and Antonia Fagoaga. He was born in the Intendancy of San Salvador, what is now El Salvador. In 1801 he was sent to Guatemala to continue his education. There he graduated in philosophy ...

  2. Manuel José Arce ( b. 1 January 1787; d. 14 December 1847), the first constitutionally elected president of the United Provinces of Central America. Born in San Salvador to a creole family, he studied at the University of San Carlos in Guatemala but did not graduate. Much influenced by Doctor Pedro Molina and Father José Matías Delgado, Arce ...

  3. Manuel José Arce luchó por la independencia de las colonias de la Corona española y contra el Imperio Mexicano. Nombrado jefe del ejército salvadoreño en 1821, formó parte del Congreso General Constituyente de San Salvador. En 1825, ya constituida la República Federal de Centro América (integrada por Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras ...

  4. leadership of United Provinces of Central America. Manuel José Arce was elected first president in 1825. Manuel José Arce, a liberal Salvadoran army officer, won that election over a moderate Honduran attorney and prominent intellectual, José Cecilio del Valle, despite the appearance that del Valle had more popular votes.

  5. Intendente y Jefe Político Superior, Pacificador del Estado de Nicaragua. Manuel José de Arce y Fagoaga ( San Salvador, 1 de enero de 1787- ibíd., 14 de diciembre de 1847) 1 fue un general y político salvadoreño, primer Presidente de la República Federal de Centroamérica y prócer de la Independencia de El Salvador .

  6. Teniendo como padres a Bernardo José de Arce y Antonia Fogoaga, Manuel José de Arce nace el 1 de enero de 1787 en San Salvador, actual capital de El Salvador. A pesar de haber conseguido el título en la carrera de Filosofía en Guatemala, Arce tenía intereses políticos desde temprana edad. Fue militar y político, haciendo una de sus ...

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  8. 2. This tradition began in 1837 when Alejandro Marure wrote that Arce’s attempts to please both Liberals and Conservatives “caused his ruin and all of the misfortunes which the nation suffered during the period of his administration,” and culminated in 1899 with Ramón Salazar, who thought it regrettable that Arce had not “had the good fortune to have died shortly after independence.”

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