Fernando del Portillo y Torres

Fernando del Portillo y Torres was a Roman Catholic archbishop in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

He was the archbishop of Archdiocese of Santo Domingo from 1788 to 1798 and archbishop of "Santafé en Nueva Granada" (now known as the Archdiocese of Bogotá) from 1798 to 1804.

From a wealthy family, he entered the Dominican Order in 1743 at Málaga, Spain, teaching philosophy during 1751–1756, theology, 1756–1758, and Holy Scriptures, 1758–1761. He moved to Cádiz, the seafaring gate of trade to the American Spanish Empire and earned a doctorate of divinity in nearby Jerez de la Frontera in 1767 He became a prior to sieges of the Dominican Order in Málaga, Almería, Cabra, Ciudad Real and Doña Mencía, training teachers of Christianity, dictionary editors and administrative tutors in aboriginal American Indian languages, North and South America, after the middle of the 16th Century.

In 1788 Charles III of Spain proposed to Pope Pope Pius VI that Portillo be chosen as Archbishop of Santo Domingo, the primate siege of America, created in 1546.

Difficulties on the Island of Hispaniola around 1798 led him to move the supposed remains of seafarer and discoverer Christopher Columbus to La Habana, Cuba, being kept at the Convent of San Juan de Letrán. Portillo was proposed by the Spanish Crown to the Roman Pope in 1798 as a Bishop of Trujillo, Peru, but instead Portillo became Archbishop of Bogotá, a much higher position. Del Portillo y Torres died in 1804, aged around 75.

References

  • A Turbulent time: the French Revolution and the Greater Caribbean By David Barry Gaspar, David Patrick Geggus, Indiana University Press, 1997; ISBN 0-253-33247-8.
  • Los Dominicos y el Nuevo Mundo, siglos XVIII-XIX: actas del IVo Congreso ... By José Barrado Barquilla; Editorial San Esteban, 1995; ISBN 84-87557-76-7.
  • Familias hispanoamericanas, Volume 1 By Emilio Rodríguez Demorizi; Editora Montalvo, 1959.
  • Rasgos biográficos de dominicanos célebres By José Gabriel García; Editora del Caribe, 1971.
  • The Dominican Republic: a national history By Frank Moya Pons; Markus Wiener Publishers, 1998; ISBN 1-55876-192-6.
  • Cuba: economía y sociedad, Volume 9 By Leví Marrero; Editorial San Juan, 1985; ISBN 84-359-0128-9.
  • History of Colombia By Jesús María Henao, Gerardo Arrubla, James Fred Rippy; The University of North Carolina Press, 1938.
  • Cuban convents in the age of Enlightened Reform, 1761-1807 By John James Clune; University Press of Florida, 2008; ISBN 0-8130-3217-2.
  • Historia ecclesiastica, Part 4 By Juan Manuel Pacheco;Ediciones Lerner, 1971.
  • Historia eclesiástica de la Arquidiócesis de Santo Domingo ..., Volume 3 By Américo Lugo; Editora de Santo Domingo, 1979.
  • Haïti 1804—lumières et ténébres: impact et résonances d'une révolution By Léon-François Hoffmann, Frauke Gewecke, Ulrich Fleischmann; Iberoamericana Editorial, 2008; ISBN 84-8489-371-5.

External links and additional sources

  • Cheney, David M. "Archdiocese of Santo Domingo". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved March 25, 2018. (for Chronology of Bishops)self-published
  • Chow, Gabriel. "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Santo Domingo". GCatholic.org. Retrieved March 25, 2018. (for Chronology of Bishops)self-published
  • Chow, Gabriel. "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Santo Domingo". GCatholic.org. Retrieved March 25, 2018.
  • Franchina, Miriam (2021). "From Slave to Royal Vassal: Jean-François's Negotiation Strategies in the Haitian Revolution". Slavery & Abolition. 42 (4): 777–802. doi:10.1080/0144039X.2021.1903324. S2CID 233699824. Retrieved February 25, 2022.
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Ordinaries of the Archdiocese of Bogotá
Archbishops of Santafé
en Nueva Granada
Juan de los Barrios
Luis Zapata de Cárdenas
Alfonso López de Avila
Bartolomé Martinez Menacho y Mesa
Bartolomé Lobo Guerrero
Juan Castro
Pedro Ordóñez y Flórez
Hernando de Arias y Ugarte
Julián de Cortázar
Bernardino de Almansa Carrión
Cristóbal de Torres
Juan de Arguinao
Antonio Sanz Lozano
Ignacio de Urbina
Francisco de Cosío y Otero
Francisco del Rincón
Antonio Álvarez de Quiñones
Juan de Galavís
Diego Fermín de Vergara
Pedro de Azúa e Iturgoyen
José Javier de Arauz y Rojas
Manuel Sosa Betencourt
Francisco de la Riva
Lucas Ramírez Galán
Agustín Camacho y Rojas
Agustín de Alvarado y Castillo
Antonio Caballero y Góngora
Baltazar Martínez de Compañón
Fernando del Portillo y Torres
Juan Bautista Sacristán y Galiano
Isidoro Domínguez
Fernando Caycedit Florez
Manuel José Mosquera y Arboleda
Antonio Herrán y Zaldúa
Vicente Arbeláez
José Telésforo Paúl
Ignacio León Velasco
Bernardo Herrera Restrepo
Archbishops of BogotáAuxiliary bishops,
current
Luis Alí Herrera
Pedro Salamanca Mantilla
Auxiliary bishops,
former
José Carrión y Marfil
José Antonio Chaves
Indalecio Barreto
Mosé Higuera
Leonidas Medina
Luis Andrade Valderrama
Emilio de Brigard Ortiz
Luis Pérez Hernández
José Martinez Vargas
Gabriel Montalvo Higuera
Pablo Correa León
José Calderón Contreras
Rubén Buitrago Trujillo
Alfonso López Trujillo
Luis Parra Mora
Mario Revollo Bravo
Víctor López Forero
Ramón Molina Jaramillo
Luis Romero Franco
Jorge Ardila Serrano
Guillermo Alvaro Ortiz Carrillo
Enrique Sarmiento Angulo
Fabio Suescún Mutis
Agustín Otero Largacha
José Falla Robles
Oscar Urbina Ortega
José Ruiz Arenas
Fernando Sabogal Viana
Daniel Caro Borda
José Ospina Leongómez
Francisco Nieto Súa
Priests who became
bishops elsewhere
Eduardo Maldonado Calvo
Alfredo Rubio Díaz
Alberto Uribe Urdaneta
Héctor Luis Gutiérrez Pabón
Héctor Cubillos Peña
Mario E. Dorsonville