Luis José Sartorius, 1st Count of San Luis

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The Count of San Luis, wearing the Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III.

Don Luis José Sartorius y Tapia, 1st Count of San Luis (Seville, Spain, 1820 – Madrid, Spain, 22 February 1871) was a Spanish noble, politician and journalist who served as Prime Minister of Spain from 1853 to 1854, during the reign of Queen Isabella II.

Sartorius, a man of very traditional convictions, was the leader of a faction of the Moderate Party which, because of his Polish origin, was known as los polacos ("the Poles"). His newspaper, El Herlado, became one of the mainstays of the moderates during the regency of the Progressivist Baldomero Espartero. During the Moderate decade (1844-1854), Sartorius held several political offices, especially three times as Ministry of the Interior (Ministro de Gobernacion) in 1847, 1849-1851 and 1853-1854. He became Prime Minister between 1853 and 1854.

Family

Sartorius was married to María de los Remedios Chacón y Romero de Cisneros (daughter of Rafael Chacón, 7th Marquis of Cela, and María del Amparo Romero de Cisneros y Nagüens), with whom he had seven children:

  • Doña Isabel Sartorius y Chacón (b. 1874), died unmarried and without issue.
  • Doña Laura Sartorius y Chacón, married to Enrique Maldonado y Carvajal, with issue.
  • Doña Leonor Sartorius y Chacón, died as an infant.
  • Don Luis Sartorius y Chacón, died as an infant.
  • Don José Sartorius y Chacón, died as an infant.
  • Doña María de la Concepción Sartorius y Chacón (1859-1887), married to Juan de Dios Pareja-Obregón, 7th Count of la Camorra, with issue.
  • Don Fernando Sartorius, 2nd Count of San Luis (1860-1920), married to María del Carmen Díaz de Mendoza y Aguayo, with issue.

References

Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Spain
1853 - 1854
Succeeded by
Fernando Fernández de Córdova