Luis Gonzaga Cuevas

Luis Gonzaga Cuevas Inclán (Lerma de Villada, 10 July 1799 – City of Mexico, 12 January 1867) was a Mexican politician and diplomat. He studied law at the Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso in Mexico City and worked as a lawyer. He began to hold public office at age 25 and in 1826 entered as an official in the Secretariat (Ministry) of Interior and Exterior Relations. He was chargé d'affaires of Mexican embassies in Prussia and Britain, and briefly served as Secretary (Minister) of Foreign Affairs on two occasions during the second government of President Anastasio Bustamante (April–October 1837 and January–November 1838).

Luis Gonzaga Cuevas
Minister of Interior and Exterior Relations
In office
15 November 1848  2 May 1849
PresidentJosé Joaquin de Herrera
Preceded byMariano Otero
Succeeded byJosé María Ortiz Monasterio
In office
7 December 1844  13 August 1845
PresidentJosé Joaquin de Herrera
Preceded byManuel Crescencio García Rejón
Succeeded byManuel de la Peña y Peña
In office
10 January 1838  13 November 1838
PresidentAnastasio Bustamante
Preceded byJosé María Ortiz Monasterio
Succeeded byJosé Joaquín Pesado
In office
21 April 1837  26 October 1837
PresidentAnastasio Bustamante
Preceded byJosé María Ortiz Monasterio
Succeeded byJosé María Bocanegra
Personal details
Born
Luis Gonzaga Cirilo de la Preciosa Sangre Cuevas Inclán

(1799-07-10)10 July 1799
Lerma, New Spain
Died12 January 1867(1867-01-12) (aged 67)
Mexico City, Mexico
Political partyConservative
Alma materSan Ildefonso College
Awards Order of Guadalupe
Order of Pope Pius IX

Appointed plenipotentiary for Bustamante to negotiate with France, he could not end the so-called Pastry War. Also in the presidential cabinet he had to occupy temporarily the Ministry of Interior twice over 1838. Jose Joaquin de Herrera, interim president of the Republic, reappointed him Foreign Secretary in December 1844, a position he held until August the following year.

He defended before the Mexican Congress the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, in which he took part in negotiations as one of the three Mexican representatives and by which peace was agreed on 2 February 1848 after the Mexican–American War. Herrera, already as constitutional president, called him again to exercise the portfolio of Interior and Exterior Relations between November 1848 and May 1849. He was the first Foreign Minister appointed by the interim president Felix Maria Zuloaga, but resigned in July 1858 (six months after taking office) before the confrontation that involved the Reform War. He was prosecuted after the 1861 triumph of the liberal forces led by Benito Juarez. He rejected the appointments and charges for those who had been appointed by Emperor Maximilian I from 1864 and died three years later in Mexico City.

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