:''For the barrio in Buenos Aires, see
Vélez Sársfield (barrio)''
:''For the football club from Buenos Aires, see
Club Atlético Vélez Sársfield''
:''For the football club from Bosnia-Herzegovina, see
Velež Mostar''
'Dalmacio Vélez Sársfield' (
February 18 1801 –
June 30 1875) was an
Argentine lawyer and
politician who wrote the
Argentine Civil Code of 1869, the vast majority of which remains in use to this day.
Vélez Sarsfield was born in
Amboy, a small town in the
Calamuchita Valley,
province of
Córdoba. He studied at the
Jesuit college in the provincial capital
Córdoba, where he later continued his study of law. He graduated when he was 22; and was particularly adept at
mathematics and
languages, fluently speaking
English,
French,
Italian and
Latin.
Upon finishing his studies he became very active in politics and was elected to the young
Chamber of Deputies. He was nominated as the
Speaker of the House in 1825, a position that he took up the following year, becoming the position's youngest holder. He was Minister of Justice on several occasions.
In 1826 Vélez Sarsfield was awarded a professorship of
Economics at the Law Faculty of the
University of Buenos Aires. He died in
Buenos Aires in 1875, at the age of 74.
The
barrio of Velez Sarsfield in Buenos Aires is named after him. The
Vélez Sársfield sports club, best known for its
top-level football team, is indirectly named after him, having taken its name from a railway station bearing his name.
See also
★
Law of Argentina