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Joaquín Lloréns Fernández de Cordoba : ウィキペディア英語版
Joaquín Lloréns Fernández de Cordoba

Joaquín Lloréns Fernández de Cordoba (1854 – 1930) was a Spanish Carlist soldier and politician.
==Family and youth==

Joaquín Lloréns Fernández de Cordoba was born to a distinguished Levantine family, originating from Nules but for generations settled in Villareal; his ancestors can be traced back to the 16th century.〔see ''Lloréns'' entry at ''ABC Genealogia'', http://www.abcgenealogia.com/Llorens00.html〕 His grandfather, Joaquín Lloréns Chiva, was a judge and academic in Valencia,〔see ''Lloréns Bayer, José Joaquin'' entry at ''Aulamilitar'', available (here )〕 serving also as sindico general of the city in the early 19th century.〔''ABC Genealogia''〕 His father, José Joaquín Lloréns Bayer (1807–1863), pursued a military career. As a 16-year-old he joined the Voluntarios Realistas militia and fought against the Liberals during the 1821-23 civil war.〔''Aulamilitar''〕 In 1833 he volunteered to the Carlist insurgency; distinguished in a number of battles of the First Carlist War he rose to general brigadier and was twice awarded Cruz de San Fernando, also nominated marqués de Cordoba by Carlos V.〔''ABC Genealogia''〕 Following the Carlist defeat in 1839 he accompanied Carlos V into exile, later on living in France and Russia; he returned to Spain in wake of the 1848 amnesty. During the Second Carlist War he sided with the Isabellinos and successfully fought the Carlist troops in Levante; in return he got his brigadier rank and military honors (though not his marquesado) recognized by the Isabella II government.〔''Aulamilitar''〕 Served as mayor of Villareal.〔Federico Martínez Roda, ''Valencia y las Valencias: su historia contemporánea (1800-1975)'', Madrid 1998, ISBN 8486792894, 9788486792893, p. 192〕 Married to Joaquína Fernández Ibáñez de Ocerín, the couple had 5 children.〔''ABC Genealogia''. José Joaquín Lloréns Bayer's sister, Juana Lloréns Bayer, was maternal grandmother of the Carlist political leader in the 1920s, Marqués de Villores〕 Joaquín, their only son, was steered to become a military as well, though unlike his father not in the ranks of infantry. As a 14-year-old he joined Academia de Artillería 〔see ''Joaquín Lloréns Fernández de Cordoba'' entry at ''Euskomedia'', available (here )〕 in Segovia, promoted to alférez-alumno in 1871.〔Francisco de Paula, ''Album de Personajes Carlistas con sus Biografias'', volume II, Barcelona 1888, p. 190〕

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