Jovino Novoa Vidal

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Succeeded byBenicio Álamos González
Preceded byRelations reestablished
Succeeded byPatricio Lynch
Jovino Novoa
Minister Plenipotentiary of Chile to Peru
In office
18811886
Preceded byJosé Francisco Vergara
Succeeded byBenicio Álamos González
Minister Plenipotentiary of Chile to Spain
In office
18821884
Preceded byRelations reestablished
Succeeded byPatricio Lynch
Minister of Finance
In office
October 3, 1859  October 1, 1861
Preceded byMatías Ovalle [es]
Succeeded byManuel Rengifo [es]
Personal details
Born1822
DiedFebruary 14, 1892
Political partyLiberal Party
Alma materUniversity of Chile

Jovino Novoa Vidal (Concepción, 1822Santiago, February 14, 1892) was a Chilean lawyer, diplomat and liberal politician. He served several times as a parliamentarian, in addition to having been mayor of the province of Valparaíso from 1858 to 1860 and, then Minister of Finance between 1859 and 1861, both during the administration of President Manuel Montt. During the War of the Pacific (1879), he served as minister plenipotentiary in Lima, for which he signed the Treaty of Ancón, remaining in office until 1886. Simultaneously he functioned as ambassador of Chile to the Kingdom of Spain, signing the 1883 Chilean–Spanish Treaty, which put an end to the state of war between both nations in force since the Spanish–South American War (1864-1866).[1]

Novoa was born in 1822 in Concepción, the son of Manuel Fernando Vásquez de Novoa López and Carmen Vidal Gómez. He married Mercedes Risopatrón and in his second marriage he became engaged to his cousin Carolina Novoa Arteaga, having children.[2]

His secondary studies were completed at the National Institute; and he continued with his law degree at the University of Chile, being sworn in as a lawyer on March 8, 1845.[2]

Professional career

Political career

References

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