Antonio de Quintanilla facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Antonio de Quintanilla
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Royal Governor of Chiloé | |
In office 1820–1826 |
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Monarch | Ferdinand VII |
Preceded by | Ignacio María Justiz y Urrutia |
Personal details | |
Born | 1787 Pámanes, Spain |
Died | 1863 Almería, Spain |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Spain |
Rank | Brigadier |
Battles/wars | |
Antonio Quintanilla (Pámanes, Spain; 1787 - † Almería, Spain; 1863) was a Spanish brigadier and Governor of Chiloé from 1820 to 1826. He was the last royalist to hold the position.
Background
Quintanilla was the son of Francisco de Quintanilla and Teresa Herrera y Santiago, who were members of distinguished families in the Spanish region of Pámanes. He was born November 14, 1787.
He married Antonia Álvarez de Garay, the daughter of Captain Francisco alvarez and Bartola Garay.
Governor of Chiloé
As a governor of Chiloé, Quintanilla ordered in 1824 the construction of Fuerte Real de San Carlos. He is also noted for defeating General Ramón Freire's first attempt to liberate Chiloé in 1825 after he dissolved the Chilean congress by force. By January 1826, Quintanilla finally surrendered and became the last Spanish official to withdraw from Chile. He came back to Spain and served as a brigadier of the Santander barracks then the deputy general of La Mancha police.
Quintanilla was the father of Antonio de Quintanilla Alvarez, a Spanish official given the Carlist title of Marquis de Quintanilla.
See also
In Spanish: Antonio de Quintanilla para niños