Silvestre Selva Sacasa (31 December 1777 – 1855) was a Nicaraguan politician of Basque origin, who, as a senator in the State Legislative Assembly, was appointed by the invading forces of Francisco Malespín to serve as provisional Supreme Director, served from 16 December 1844 to 20 January 1845 with headquarters in the city of Masaya.[1]

Silvestre Selva Sacasa
Supreme Director of Nicaragua
Appointed by Malespín, in Masaya
In office
16 December 1844 – 20 January 1845
Preceded byManuel Pérez
Emiliano Madriz
(Interim, in León, after Pérez)
Succeeded byBlas Antonio Sáenz
(Provisional, in Masaya)
Personal details
Born31 December 1777
Granada, Captaincy General of Guatemala
Died1855
Political partyLegitmist

Biography

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Background

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Born on 31 December 1777 in Granada, he was the illegitimate son of Lieutenant General José Roberto Sacasa Marenco and Ubalda Rosalía Selva del Castillo Mayor.

He was a maternal relative of Roberto Sacasa, the 10th President of Nicaragua.

Malespín's War

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On 25 October 1844 the so-called Guerra de Malespín began when León was besieged by troops from El Salvador and Honduras under the command of General Francisco Malespín, a Salvadoran military ruler and a conservative convinced that he obtained the support of the Granadan legitimists.[1]

José Francisco del Montenegro and Juan Ruiz were the ambassadors sent by Granada and Rivas to Malespín, with the result of the creation of a provisional government in charge of Senator Selva based in Masaya and without the consent of León, the seat of the government of Emiliano Madriz who as Supreme Director directed the defenses of the city, which was finally occupied with the subsequent looting of its churches.[2]

Overthrow of Malespín

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On 2 February 1845 Joaquín Eufrasio Guzmán, the Vice President of El Salvador, with support from much of San Salvador, declared himself President of El Salvador. Malespín, backed by Honduran forces, returned to El Salvador in an attempt to regain his presidency, thus ending the war in Nicaragua.[3] Selva was able to escape from León, where he was stationed after Blas Antonio Sáenz and José León Sandoval formed a counter-government in Masaya, which on 20 January declared Sáenz as provisional Supreme Director, until Sandoval was elected on 4 April.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b Scheina, Robert L. (2003-01-31). Latin America's Wars. Potomac Books, Inc. ISBN 978-1-59797-477-6.
  2. ^ Esgueva Gómez, Antonio. Nicaragua en los documentos Tomo I 1523-1857, Número 10 de Talleres de historia. Instituto de Historia de Nicaragua y Centroamérica, Universidad Centroamericana, 2006. Capítulo 6 Del militarismo a la Guerra Vivil de 1854, pág. 103
  3. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1887). "XII, Republic of Nicaragua 1838-1855". 1887 History of Central America.
  4. ^ Justin Wolfe: The everyday nation-state: community & ethnicity in nineteenth-century Nicaragua
Preceded by
Manuel Pérez
Emiliano Madriz
(interim, in León, after Pérez)
Supreme Director of Nicaragua
(appointed by Malespín, in Masaya)

1844 – 1845
Succeeded by
Blas Antonio Sáenz
(provisional, in Masaya)