Luis Paz

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Luis Paz
Vice President-elect of Bolivia
Did not take office
PresidentBautista Saavedra
Preceded byIsmael Vázquez
José Santos Quinteros
Succeeded byAbdón Saavedra
Minister of War
In office
22 May 1895  19 August 1896
PresidentMariano Baptista
Preceded bySevero Fernández
Succeeded byJorge Oblitas
Minister of Government and Colonization
In office
27 August 1892  22 May 1895
PresidentMariano Baptista
Preceded byTelmo Ichaso
Succeeded byMacedonio Doria Medina
Senator for Tarija
In office
6 August 1892  6 August 1898
Preceded byRosendo Estenssoro
Succeeded byManuel de Argandoña
Personal details
BornLuis Paz Arce
(1854-08-19)19 August 1854
Tarija, Bolivia
Died6 October 1928(1928-10-06) (aged 74)
Sucre, Bolivia
PartyRepublican (1914–1928)
Other political
affiliations
Constitutional (before 1884)
Conservative (1884–1914)
Spouse
Mercedes Vásquez
(m. 1879)
ChildrenSeven
Parent(s)Paulino Paz
Genoveva Arce
EducationUniversity of Saint Francis Xavier
Signature

Luis Paz Arce (19 August 1854 – 6 October 1928) was a Bolivian historian, journalist, jurist, lawyer, and politician who served on the Supreme Court of Justice of Bolivia for twenty-three years, an associate justice from 1905 to 1919 and as the president from 1919 until his death in 1928. A conservative, Paz held a lengthy political and academic background, serving in various legislative and ministerial positions from the early 1880s to the mid-1890s, including as minister of war from 1895 to 1896, minister of government from 1892 to 1895, and senator for Tarija from 1892 to 1898. In 1921, the National Convention selected him to be vice president under Bautista Saavedra, but he rejected the position, preferring to remain on the High Court.

Luis Paz was born on 19 August 1854[1] in Tarija to Paulino Paz, an Argentine,[2] and Genoveva Arce. On his father's side, he was a descendant of the Argentine general José María Paz. Paz attended the University of Saint Francis Xavier, where he studied law, graduating with the title of advocate on 22 October 1874.[3][4] He married Mercedes Vásquez, with whom he had seven children.[5] Paz began his career at the National School of Tarija, where he worked as a professor in the Faculty of Law and served as the chair of History and Literature. In 1881, he became the first chancellor of the institution.[5] In addition, he worked as a journalist for the newspapers La Industria of La Paz as well as El Cruzado and La Capital in Sucre. Later, he founded the publications El Pueblo and El Trabajo in his home city of Tarija.[2]

Political and judicial career

Publications

References

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