Juan Nepomuceno Ravelo

Juan Nepomuceno Ravelo
Born(1815-05-15)May 15, 1815
DiedDecember 24, 1885(1885-12-24) (aged 70)
Known forFounder of La Trinitaria
SpouseAltagracia Abreu Razón
1842
(date missing)
Children6

Juan Nepomuceno Ravelo (May 15, 1815 – December 24, 1885) was a Dominican activist and politician. He participated in the founding of the La Trinitaria, a secret society that initiated the Dominican War of Independence. He designed the Dominican flag, adopted in 1844.

Biography

He was born in Santo Domingo in 1815. He was one of the founders of the secret independence organization La Trinitaria, and a Colonel in the liberation army in 1844.

On May 19, 1842, he married Altagracia Abreu Razón, with whom he had 6 children: 2 girls and 4 boys.[1]

In 1843, he was linked to the Reform Revolution movement, led by Haitian liberals seeking to end the Boyer dictatorship. He was imprisoned in Haiti while there. Although a Trinitarian, he soon distanced himself from that patriotic group to become involved in internal political struggles.

After the independence proclamation of February 27, 1844, Ravelo served indistinctly the governments of Pedro Santana, Manuel Jiménes and Buenaventura Báez occupying the Ministry of War and Navy, and Public Prosecutor of the Court of First Instance of Santo Domingo, among other public offices.

In 1861, he supported the annexation to Spain, being among those who in 1865, after the Dominican triumph of the Dominican Restoration War, left the Dominican Republic with the Spanish troops to go and live in Cuba, where he died in 1885.

See also

References

  1. ^ Fray Cipriano de Utrera (1952), "Genealogía de Ravelo" (PDF). Boletín del Archivo General de la Nación (in Spanish). 75. Santo Domingo: Archivo General de la Nación: 441–442 (documento original) / 9–10 (archivo pdf). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2014. Retrieved 28 September 2014.