Carlos Ruben Villar Alvear
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Carlos ruben villar alvear Continue Dr. Carlos Ruben Villar has 0 appointments in 0 active companies, has left 1 company and has made 0 appointments to 0 dissolved companies. CARLOS is not registered as holding any current appointments. Total cash at a bank value for all businesses where CARLOS has a current assignment equals 0.0, the total current value of the assets is 0.0 with a total current liabilities of 0.0 and a total current net value of 0.0. Roles associated with Dr. Carlos Ruben Villar as part of the recorded ventures include: Director in recent days renowned Telecolor journalist Alessandro Vagliasindi exclusively showed the interest of the South American holding to Catania. At the head of the above-mentioned group will be Carlos Ruben Villar d'Alvear, of which Vagliasindi himself, through numerous tweets on the official profile of SportSicilia, traced the first, accurate, identikit. Using Twitter, let's get to know the man at the head of the holding company interested in Catania: Carlos Ruben Villar, the noble title of Alvera, is an Argentine businessman, but living in Uruguay. The 67-wheeler is at the helm of a holding company based in Cordoba, Spain, called Skybridge Capital Investment Finance and Logistic Limited. He's outraged. D'Alvear will share with his 40-year-old son a great passion for football and will consider buying the Italian club for some time. In the past he would have been interested in Atalanta and Bologna. Catania Football - continues on Twitter Vagliasindi - has a tradition, passionate fans and an important sports infrastructure, all elements that arouse great interest in the Latin American group. The first meeting between Villar's representatives and the law firm on Catania's current property took place on 17 August, but contacts will resume after the appeal decision is made. In this regard, the holding will have to provide bank details, and Finaria will make a price. The idea for this group is to develop negotiations that can be completed by mid-September. Holding led by Villar represents Federico Balzano, the last present yesterday at the stadium for the Tim Cup match between the Reds and Cesena. The interest of the group is real, and Villar himself yesterday contacted his representative in Massimino during the match on Skype. Villar's group will have significant financial resources and if negotiations with the current ownership were successful, it would really like to invest in Catania Football. Among the plans, Vagliasindi's Twitter feed will be the construction of a new stadium and the creation of a modern sports medicine center in Torre del Grifo. Finally, from a sporting point of view, Villara's holding company would like to quinquennale pour riportare e consolidare il Catania in Serie A. Photo: torredelgrifovillage Carlos Maria de AlvearSupreme Director of the United Provinces of Rio de la PlataIn office9 January 1815 - 18 April 1815PretovenoGervasio Antonio de PosadasEdratedThird Triumvirate :Jose de San MartinMatias de IrigoyenManuel de Sarrathea Personal dataCar Helmian de Alvear y Balbastro (1789-10-25)October 25, 1789Santo Ngelo, Rio Grande do SulDed3 November 1852 (1852-11-03) (age 63) New York, United StatesSupply Place ReLacoleta, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery, Cemetery Buenos AiresNationalityArgentineSpouse (s) Maria del Carmen Sanchez de la Kintanilladethesmaria Carlota Emiliio MarceloCimio UrbelinoCarlos F. Torcuato Antonio Joaquina del CarmenVirgia MercedesDieJuanJuanucomenoLen GabinoProfessionPolitic , October 25, 1789, Santo Angel, Rio Grande do Sul - November 3, 1852) - Argentine soldier and statesman, Supreme Director of the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata in 1815. Early Life He was born Santo Angel in the northern part of the Viceroy River Plate (now in Rio Grande do Sul) Spanish nobleman father, Diego de Alvear y Ponce de Leon, and criollo mother, Maria Balbastro and baptized Carlos Antonio del Santo Angel Guardian. His homeland, Santo Angel, was part of the province of Miciones at the time, but is now owned by the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul. While traveling in Spain, Alveer's brothers and mother were killed in an incident on 5 October 1804 when British frigates opened fire on the Spanish ship that was carrying them. The incident was a preamble to the Battle of Trafalgar and the subsequent war between the two countries. The British took Alveer and his father along with other survivors as prisoners to England, where Diego de Alvear later married the Irish. In honor of his mother Carlos de Alvear adopted the name Carlos Maria de Alvear. Despite the fate of his mother and brothers on the part of the British, 15-year-old Carlos received a partial education in English culture, accepting in adulthood what some would later see as a position partial to English interests. Like many other nineteenth-century Argentines prominent in public life, he was a Freemason. Alvir's military career was one of the few professional officers who participated in the Argentine War of Independence on the side of the revolutionaries who served in the Spanish army during the Napoleonic wars. He became an active Freemason. While in Cadiz, he founded Sociedad de los Caballeros Racionales, a Masonic secret society that included a South American. Jose de San Martin, with whom Alvear will always have a conflicting and conflicting relationship, will later also become a member secret society. He returned to Buenos Aires aboard the English frigate George Canning, which also had San Martin, Juan Mathias Sapiola, Francisco Chilavert and other soldiers on board. Upon arrival, Alveer was appointed Lieutenant Coronel of the Young Argentine Army. He led the action against the Royal Army under The Forces of Gaspar Igodet in Montevideo, replacing Jose Rondo and making the eastern leader Jose Gervasio Artigas an enemy. Alvear was the leader of the Constituent Assembly of 1813 and, under the rule of political ambitions, succeeded in creating a unitary (centralizing) form of government when his uncle Jervasio Antonio de Posadas was appointed Supreme Director (Chief Executive Director). In early 1814, Alvear was appointed commander-in-chief of the forces defending the capital. A few months later, he succeeded General Jose Rondo as commander-in-chief of the army, besieging Montevideo, the last bastion of Spanish power in the River Plate, which was defended by 5,000 soldiers. At the end of June 1814, when it was news that Ferdinand VII had restored the crown of Spain, Alvear managed to force Spanish troops to surrender to Montevideo. It was the biggest victory for the cause of independence since 1810. He was only 25 years old and the most successful general of the revolution. He returned to Buenos Aires to claim the laurels, but the uprising forced him to return to Banda Oriental. After a quick and decisive campaign, his forces defeated the caudillos who opposed the government. At the end of 1814, Alvear was appointed commander of the Army of the North, but he lacked the support of Posadas, and his unpopularity among the troops, and other disagreements, including the draft constitutional monarchy, which he sent to Europe for negotiations of Manuel Belgrano, which was fiercely opposed by the League of Free Peoples, forced him to return to Buenos Aires. On January 9, 1815, at the age of 25, he was elected to the position of his uncle Posadas as Supreme Director. With neither the support of the troops nor sufficient influence over the inhabitants of the internal provinces, Director Alvear then tried to come up with an alliance with Artigas, to whom he proposed the independence of the Eastern Banda (now Uruguay). In exchange, Artigas withdrew his army from the Argentine Litoral. But Artigas rejected the offer, and Alvear sent troops to occupy the area. At the time, he was in correspondence with the British ambassador to Rio de Janeiro after a mutiny among his troops and under pressure from the Cabildo, Alvear resigned on April 15 and left the country. Until 1818, he was in exile in Rio de Janeiro in May of that year, where he joined his friend, The Chilean Jose Miguel Carrera, who was also expelled because of political differences with San Martin and Bernardo O'Higgins. Diplomatic missions in England, United States and Bolivia Alvear returned to Argentina in 1822 thanks to the amnesty law (Ley del olvido). In late 1823, Bernardino Rivadavia appointed him Minister of Captivity in the United States. Before leaving for Washington, Alveer stayed in London and managed to interview British Foreign Secretary George Canning. A few weeks after this interview, the British cabinet officially recognized the independence of the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata. In 1825, Alvear was sent by the government of Buenos Aires to Bolivia to meet With Simon Bolivar. The real purpose of this mission was to seek support from Bolivar in the impending war against the Brazilian Empire, over the Eastern Gang. Alvira also had his own project: the creation of a large republic in South America, including Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay. He asked Bolivar to be his first president. The Venezuelan leader was sympathetic to the project, but the dissensations in Gran Colombia forced him to abandon it. A war against the Brazilian Empire to neutralize Alvira's political ambitions, newly elected President Bernardino Rivadavia appointed him Minister of War and Navy in early 1826. In a short period of time, and with limited resources, Alvear managed to raise an army of 8,000 men to wage war against Brazil's empire. Conflicting claims about Banda East (including the current Uruguay) have pushed both countries into conflict.