Jacinta Parejo
Jacinta Parejo | |
|---|---|
| First Lady of Venezuela | |
| President | Joaquín Crespo |
| In role April 26, 1884 – September 15, 1886 | |
| Preceded by | Ana Teresa Ibarra Urbaneja |
| Succeeded by | Ana Teresa Ibarra Urbaneja |
| In role October 7, 1892 – February 28, 1898 | |
| Preceded by | Isabel González Esteves |
| Succeeded by | María Isabel Sosa Saa |
| Personal details | |
| Born | August 16, 1845 Parapara, Guárico, State of Venezuela |
| Died | April 16, 1914 (aged 68) Caracas, United States of Venezuela |
| Resting place | Southern General Cemetery |
| Spouse(s) | Saturnino Silva Joaquín Crespo |
| Signature | |
Jacinta Parejo de Crespo (August 16, 1845–April 16, 1914), better known as Misia Jacinta, was a Venezuelan public figure and the First Lady of Venezuela from 1884 to 1886 and from 1892 to 1898 during the presidential terms of Joaquín Crespo. Parejo was the first woman in Venezuela to intercede in official policy in a very involved fashion. She held government meetings, worked on projects of the head of state, and at times interceded on the behalf of political prisoners. Her second husband was killed in battle in 1898, and Parejo afterwards became the defender of their family's legacy. VenezuelaTuya states that the legal succession of Parejo and Crespo was "one of the biggest legal disputes of the early twentieth century in Venezuela".