Derqui, Santiago (1809–1867)
Derqui, Santiago (1809–1867)
Santiago Derqui (b. 19 June 1809; d. 5 September 1867), Argentine president. Trained as a lawyer, Derqui took an active role in the politics of his home province of Córdoba until, in the mid-1830s, it came firmly under the control of the dictatorship of Juan Manuel de Rosas. He then joined the Unitarist general José María Paz in the struggle against Rosas. After Rosas fell, Derqui served in the Constituent Convention of 1853 and collaborated with Justo José de Urquiza in the government of the Argentine Confederation. He succeeded Urquiza as president in 1860, just as rivalry between the Confederation and the secessionist province of Buenos Aires came to a head in armed conflict. Defeated, he resigned the presidency in November 1861.
See alsoUrquiza, Justo José de .
BIBLIOGRAPHY
William H. Jeffrey, Mitre and Argentina (1952), pp. 141-158.
James R. Scobie, La lucha por la consolidación de la nacionalidad argentina, 1852–1862 (1964).
Ana Rosa Ferías De Foulkes, Después de la derrota—Derqui, desde el Pacto de San José de Flores hasta la batalla de Pavón (1859–1861) (1970).