Pedro Blanco Soto
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19 October 1795
Pedro Blanco Soto | |
|---|---|
Portrait by Antonio Villavicencio, Museo de Charcas, Sucre | |
| 5th President of Bolivia | |
| In office 26 December 1828 – 1 January 1829 | |
| Vice President | José Ramón de Loayza |
| Preceded by | José Ramón de Loayza (acting) |
| Succeeded by | José Miguel de Velasco (acting) |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Pedro Blanco Soto 19 October 1795 Cochabamba, Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata (now Bolivia) |
| Died | 1 January 1829 (aged 33) |
| Manner of death | Assassination |
| Party | Independent |
| Other political affiliations | Affiliated with the Gamarraistas Peruvianist Party[1] |
| Spouse | Ana Ferrufino |
| Parent(s) | José Manuel Blanco Vicenta Soto |
| Relatives | Carlos Blanco Galindo (great-grandson) |
| Signature | |
Pedro Blanco Soto (19 October 1795 – 1 January 1829) was a Bolivian soldier and politician and president of the Republic of Upper Peru, an unrecognized entity that emerged in the limits of the department of La Paz and, which claimed the territory of the Republic of Bolivia. He held the position for a short time before being killed by his opponents in a convent called La Recoletta in Sucre on New Year's Day 1829.[2][3] A small plaque now marks the spot in the Museo de la Recoletta. He was well known for his pro-Peruvian stance and this is generally the reason attributed to his assassination. He was also a distinguished officer during the Peruvian War of Independence.
Blanco, son of José Manuel Blanco and Vicenta Soto was born in the city of Cochabamba, Bolivia on October 19, 1795. At the age of 17 he enlisted in the royalist army participating in the campaign against the Argentine patriots in his native Upper Peru, soon He stood out in the cavalry as part of the Mounted Hunters squadron, he was promoted to lieutenant after the battle of Vilcapugio, and to captain after Viluma.[4]
With the landing of the expedition of San Martín, the squadron in which Captain Blanco served was displaced to Lower Peru. It was during the 1823 campaign which would notably distinguish himself to the point of receiving a special mention for his courage in the report of General Jerónimo Valdés, given that during the skirmishes prior to the Battle of Torata, Captain Blanco, in command of only 35 mounted hunters, he had fought against the enemy vanguard, killing an independence officer with his sword. He then dismounted from his horse in the middle of the crossfire to pick up his competitor's sword and hat. For this action, he was given a gift from the hands of Valdés himself in the presence of the entire royalist division. This gift was a beautiful saber that had been taken from the Argentine commander Gregorio Aráoz de Lamadrid during a skirmish in Upper Peru and that Valdez kept to reward the first trait of extraordinary value.[5]