Domingo Caycedo


Domingo de Caycedo y Sanz de Santamaría was a Colombian statesman who served as the vice president of Gran Colombia and the Republic of New Granada. He served as President of Colombia a total of eleven times, the most terms any president has served to date. He is also credited for creating the Republic of New Granada after the division of Venezuela and Ecuador.

Biographic data

Caycedo was born in Santa Fe de Bogotá on August 4, 1783. He died in Puente Aranda, near Bogotá, on July 1, 1843.

Early life

Caycedo studied Law in the Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Señora del Rosario in Bogotá, where he later became vice-rector. At an early age, he decided not to practice law, and instead pursued military and political activities. He later became a general in the army and then president of the country.
He traveled to Spain, where he joined the army to fight against Napoleon. He also worked as a secretary in the Spanish Cortes.

Military career

Upon learning of the events of July 20, 1810, Caycedo returned to America with Vicente Bolívar, brother of Simón Bolívar, the future “Libertador” and first president of Colombia. Caycedo enlisted in the Colombian revolutionary army. He became a member of the Advisory Council to General Antonio Nariño.
He fought in the battles of “la Cuchilla del Tambo” y “la Plata”, where he was arrested by Spanish troops. He was court-martialed as a prisoner of war, found guilty of treason, and sentenced to death. His life was spared thanks to the influence of his father-in-law, his wife Juana Jurado y Bertendona, and some monetary payments to the Spanish authorities. He was freed under probation and vanished from the war theatre until the revolutionary triumph at the Battle of Boyacá on August 7, 1819.

Political career

Once again, after the revolutionary triumph of August 7, 1819, Caycedo returned to public life under the protection of Simón Bolívar. In 1827 he was appointed as Governor of Neiva, elected to Congress, and ascended to General of the Army. He became part of the inner circle of Bolívar, who appointed him as Secretary of the Interior in 1829 and a year later as Secretary of State. Afterward, Caycedo was appointed as president of the “Consejo de Estado” to replace the retiring José María Castillo y Rada, who decided to become a member of Congress of the Gran Colombia.

The Presidency

On April 1, 1830, President Bolívar took a leave of absence from Bogotá to the Hacienda of Fucha to recover from an illness. Caycedo assumed the Office of Interim President. This would be the first of several occasions in which he acted as President in this capacity.
Later that same year, when Simón Bolívar, the Founding Father, irrevocably resigned the presidency, Congress elected Don Joaquín de Mosquera as president and Caycedo as vice president. Because Mosquera was very ill and frail, Caycedo assumed the executive power as acting president on August 2, 1830.
Caycedo was deposed by the first coup d’état in the country, by the Venezuelan General Rafael Urdaneta on September 5, 1830. Months later, supported by the regrouped constitutional army, Caycedo proclaimed he was the legitimate president on April 11, 1831. He contacted General Urdaneta and invited him to a summit to discuss the future of the nation's government. Urdaneta accepted, and on April 28, 1831, they met at Juntas de Apulo, near the town of Tocaima. They both reached an agreement and signed the Accord of Apalo, by which General Urdaneta recognized Caycedo as acting president. Thus, Caycedo, once again, took office on May 3, 1831.
Caycedo, as acting president, convened Congress. On November 15, 1831, Congress elected General Francisco de Paula Santander as president and General José María Obando as vice president.
A few years later Caycedo was elected to Congress, appointed Secretary of the Treasury. Caycedo would act as interim president for the six times president José Ignacio de Márquez who would be absent from office for short periods of time. During the presidency of Pedro Alcántara Herrán, Caycedo acted as interim president twice during temporary absences by the president.