Daniel García-Mansilla
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Daniel García-Mansilla | |
|---|---|
| Ambassador of Argentina to Spain | |
| In office 1927–1937 | |
| Preceded by | Roberto Levillier |
| Succeeded by | Ramón Luis de Oliveira Cézar |
| Ambassador of Argentina to the Holy See | |
| In office 1914–1926 | |
| Preceded by | Ángel de Estrada |
| Succeeded by | Alberto Blancas |
| Chargé d'affaires of Argentina to Chile | |
| In office 1896–1897 | |
| Preceded by | Baldomero García Sagastume |
| Succeeded by | Norberto Piñero |
| Personal details | |
| Born | October 12, 1867 Paris, France |
| Died | June 23, 1957 (aged 89) Buenos Aires, Argentina |
| Spouse | Adela Rodríguez Larreta |
| Parent(s) | Manuel García Eduarda Mansilla |
| Awards | Order of Isabella the Catholic (Grand cross) Cross of Naval Merit (1935) |
Daniel García-Mansilla (Paris, October 12, 1867 — Buenos Aires, June 23, 1957) was an Argentine diplomat, doctor of laws, poet, writer, and priest. He was decorated with the Legion of Honour, the grand cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic, the grand cross of the Order of the Spanish Republic; the great cross of the Order of Naval Merit, among others.
García-Mansilla was born at 11 Rue de Chateaubriand in Paris, part of a diplomatic family and a member of its third generation, being registered at the Argentine Legation in the city. During this period, his father was then serving as secretary of the legation. He was the son of Manuel Rafael García Aguirre, who replaced Domingo Faustino Sarmiento as Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States, and Eduarda Mansilla, a pioneer of Argentine women's literature. He was the maternal grandson of Agustina Ortiz de Rozas and the independence warrior, General Lucio Norberto Mansilla. He was the paternal grandson of Manuel José García, several times minister in the governments of Juan José Viamonte, Juan Gregorio de Las Heras, Bernardino Rivadavia, Juan Lavalle, Juan Manuel de Rosas, among others, and of Manuela Aguirre and Alonso de Lajarrota, founder of the Charity of Buenos Aires.
He began his studies as a boarder at the College of Saint Francis Xavier in Vannes, Brittany, France, a Jesuit educational establishment, which had marked literary tendencies; he later received a Bachelor of Arts and Sciences, a diploma from the Paris School of Moral and Political Sciences, to complete them at the historic University of Paris – La Sorbonne.
