José Ignacio María del Corazón de Jesús de Santa Clara Francisco Javier Juan Nepomuceno Antonio de Padua Pavón Jiménez (11 August 1791 – 25 May 1866), known as José Ignacio Pavón, was a Mexican civil servant, and briefly, for two days, interim President of Mexico during the final months of a civil war, the War of Reform, being waged between conservatives and liberals, in which he served as president for the Conservatives, in opposition to President Benito Juarez, head of the Liberals.
Biography
Pavón was born in Veracruz, where he began his studies. He continued his education in the Colegio de San Ildefonso in Mexico City, where he studied philosophy and law (cánones y leyes).
He was an honorary city councilman of Mexico City in 1818 and secretary of the censorship committee in 1820. After Mexico gained its independence in 1821, and political parties emerged supporting either a republic or a monarchy, Ignacio tended to keep his distance from both factions, though he leaned towards the republicans. [1]
As the First Mexican Empire fell in 1822, he rejoiced in the fall of the monarchy and took an active role in politics, hoping that the installation of a new congress could proceed quickly. The governing junta that now gained power gave him the task of writing the criminal code. He was a member of the economic society Amigos del País (friends of the nation) and was in charge of the treasury for the Academy of Jurisprudence, and an honorary member for a child welfare organization. He was also an associate of the Mexican Atheneum. From 1822 to 1823 he was juez de hecho (legal expert) on the law of the press for the municipal government of Mexico City.[2]
In April 1823 the Supreme Executive Power assigned him a senior post within the Department of the Treasury, and also made him interim governor of the State of Tabasco. In 1825, he was placed in charge of the Department of Foreign Relations, and negotiated British recognition of Mexican independence. [3]
His appointment to the presidency during the War of Reform, in August of 1860, was a simple bureaucratic formality. As the tide of the war turned against the conservatives, Miramón asked the conservative government for a vote of confidence. He resigned, and in the meantime, Ignacio Pavón, as president of the supreme court, was assigned the position of interim president. The government voted to support Miramón, and Ignacio Pavón's only presidential act was publishing the results of that election.[6]
^Rivera Cambas, Manuel (1873). Los Gobernantes de Mexico: Tomo II. Aguilar Ortiz. p. 587.
^Rivera Cambas, Manuel (1873). Los Gobernantes de Mexico: Tomo II. Aguilar Ortiz. p. 587.
^Rivera Cambas, Manuel (1873). Los Gobernantes de Mexico: Tomo II. Aguilar Ortiz. p. 587.
^Jaques, Tony, ed. (2007). Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty-first Century (3 volumes ed.). Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 5. ISBN978-0-313-33536-5.
^Leatherwood, Art (June 9, 2010). "Alcantra, Battle of". Handbook of Texas Online. The Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved August 23, 2014.
^Rivera Cambas, Manuel (1873). Los Gobernantes de Mexico: Tomo II. Aguilar Ortiz. p. 588.