Quintero, Ángel (1805–1866)
Quintero, Ángel (1805–1866)
Ángel Quintero (b. 1805; d. 2 August 1866), Venezuelan politician. Quintero earned a doctorate in law from the University of Caracas in 1835. He began his political activity as a member of the Constituent Congress of 1830. Associated with the Conservative Party, he became secretary of the interior and of justice in 1839. Quintero opposed the government of José Tadeo Monagas, founded the periodical El Espectador, and joined José Antonio Páez in his revolution against Monagas. The revolution defeated, he was seized and expelled from the country. Quintero returned shortly after the outbreak of the Federal War (1859–1863) and again joined Páez, but when Páez proclaimed his dictatorship, Quintero again left the country. He returned after the war and remained at the margin of political activity until his death.
See alsoVenezuela: Venezuela since 1830 .
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Francisco González Guinán, Historia contemporánea de Venezuela, vol. 4 (1954).
Additional Bibliography
Carvallo, Gastón. Próceres, caudillos y rebeldes: Crisis del sistema de dominación en Venezuela, 1830–1908. Caracas: Grijalbo, 1994.
Zahler, Reuben. Honor, Corruption, and Legitimacy: Liberal Projects in the Early Venezualan Republic, 1821–50. Ph.D. diss., University of Chicago, 2005.
InÉs Quintero