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VALERIANO WEYLER Y NICOLAU , See also: Marquess of Tenerife (1839— ), See also: Spanish soldier, was See also: born at Palma de See also: Majorca
.
His See also: family were originally Prussians, and served in the Spanish army for several generations
.
He entered at sixteen the military See also: college of See also: infantry at Toledo, and, when he attained the See also: rank of See also: lieutenant, passed into the staff college, from which he came out as the See also: head of his class
.
Two years afterwards he became captain, and was sent to See also: Cuba at his own See also: request
.
He distinguished himself in the expedition to Santo Domingo in many fights, and especially in a daring reconnaissance with few men into the See also: heart of the enemy's lines, for which he got the See also: cross with laurels of See also: San Fernando
.
From 1868 to 1872 he served also brilliantly against the Cuban rebels, and commanded a corps of See also: volunteers specially raised for him in See also: Havana
.
He returned to See also: Spain in 1893 as brigadier-general, and took an active See also: part against the Carlists in the eastern provinces of the Peninsula in 1875 and 1876, for which he was raised to the rank of general of division
.
Then he was elected senator and given the title of marquess of Tenerife
.
He held the See also: post of captain-general in the See also: Canary Isles from 1878 to 1883, and in the Balearic Isles afterwards
.
In 1888 he was sent out as captain-general to the Philippines, where he dealt very sternly with the native rebels of the Carolines, of Mindanao and other provinces
.
On his return to Spain in 1892 he was appointed to the command first of the 6th Army Corps in the Basque Provinces and See also: Navarre, where he soon quelled agitations, and then as captain-general at See also: Barcelona, where he remained until See also: January 1896
.
In See also: Catalonia, with a See also: state of siege, he made himself the terror of the anarchists and socialists
.
After Marshal Campos had failed to pacify Cuba, the ConservativeSee also: government of See also: Canvas del See also: Castillo sent out Weyler, and this selection met the approval of most Spaniards, who thought him the proper See also: man to crush the See also: rebellion
.
Weyler attempted to do this by a policy of inexorable repression, which raised a See also: storm of indignation, and led to a demand from See also: America for his recall
.
This recall was granted by the Liberal government of See also: Sagasta, but Weyler afterwards asserted that, had he been See also: left alone, he would have stamped out the rebellion in six months
.
After his return to Spain his reputation as a strong and ambitious soldier made him one of those who in See also: case of any constitutional disturbance might be expected to See also: play an important role, and his See also: political position was nationally affected by this consideration; his See also: appointment in 'goo as captain-general of See also: Madrid resulted indeed in more than one ministerial crisis
.
He was See also: minister of war for a See also: short See also: time at the end of Igor, and again in 1905
.
At the end of See also: October 1909 he was appointed captain-general at Barcelona, where the disturbances connected with the execution of Francisco Ferrer were quelled by him without bloodshed
.
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