Federico Tinoco Granados

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Federico Tinoco Granados
File:Federico Tinoco Granados.jpg
21st President of Costa Rica
In office
27 January 1917 – 12 August 1919
Preceded byAlfredo González Flores
Succeeded byJuan Bautista Quirós
Minister of War and Navy
In office
8 May 1914 – 27 January 1917
PresidentAlfredo González Flores
Succeeded byJoaquín Tinoco Granados
Deputy of the Constitutional Congress
In office
1 May 1908 – 30 April 1912
ConstituencySan José Province
Personal details
BornJosé Federico Alberto de Jesús Tinoco Granados
21 November 1868
Died7 September 1931 (aged 62)
PartyPeliquista Party (1917–1919)
Other political
affiliations
Republican Party (Before 1917)
Spouse
(m. 1898)
SignatureFile:Firma de Federico Tinoco Granados.jpg

José Federico Alberto de Jesús Tinoco Granados (21 November 1868 – 7 September 1931) was a Costa Rican military officer and politician who served as the 21st President of Costa Rica from 1917 to 1919. He seized power in a coup d'état that overthrew the constitutionally appointed president, Alfredo González Flores, under whom Tinoco had served as Minister of War and Navy. Following the coup, he established a one-party regime and ruled as a dictator. His government lasted until 1919 and marked the last military dictatorship in Costa Rican history.[1][2]

Biography

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Tinoco was born in 1868. On 5 June 1898 in San José, he married María de las Mercedes Elodia Fernández Le Cappellain. The couple had no children.[3]

After a career in the army, he was appointed Minister of War in the cabinet of President Alfredo González. On 27 January 1917 he and his brother José Joaquín seized power in a coup d'état and established a repressive military dictatorship that attempted to crush all opposition. Though his government won support from the upper classes because it turned back the austerity measures adopted by President González, and declared war on the German Empire in May 1918, it failed to win the recognition of the United States, where President Woodrow Wilson supported the deposed government.

Popular sentiment against Tinoco, which began on 13 June 1919, quickly came to a head, and his brother was assassinated in early August. On August 13 Tinoco resigned in favor of Juan Bautista Quirós and went into exile in Europe. He died in Paris in 1931.

Due to a dispute over the legitimacy of the government of Tinoco, Costa Rica was not a party to the Treaty of Versailles and did not unilaterally end the state of war between itself and Germany.[4] The technical state of war ended after World War II only after they were included in the Potsdam Agreement. Costa Rica did issue a declaration of war against Germany again on 11 December 1941.[5]

References

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