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Matos held a great political and economic influence on the country, during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, having an extraordinary prestige and power in the banking and business fields. In addition to having various investments and influence over foreign and transnational companies operating
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in
November of 1902, the vast network of armies and its extraordinary power was weakened, being a wound that could not be recovered. A few days after, in the midst of this civil war, Germany, the United Kingdom and later Italy instituted what came to be known as the naval blockade of Venezuela in
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order to force the government to honor its foreign debts. The claims and counter-claims stemming from the conflict would eventually force the three foreign countries to sever diplomatic relations in the ensuing years. The rest of the
Revolutionary Army finally was defeated in the
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After his departure from the presidential cabinet in 1913, Matos continued to dedicate himself to the formation of a solid banking and financial structure for
Venezuela, retiring from public life in 1920 and settling in Paris, where he died nine years later.
64:(1892, 1895 and 1898), besides being the most powerful promoter of mixed and public banking institutions, conformed to become the arms of investment and financial management of the Treasury of the Republic and the Venezuelan private sector, such as
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and the economic elite evolved into an open war that shook the country and brought the government to the brink of collapse, but after the revolution's defeat suffered in the
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He was the leader of the
Revolución Libertadora, a major military movement that took place between 1901 and 1903, with the intention to overthrow
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The
Caracas Credit Corporation, The Caracas Credit Company, The First Bank of Caracas, The Second Bank of Caracas, The Third Bank of Caracas
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in
Venezuela, held a variety of positions in banking and disposing of what is estimated to be the greatest fortune in the
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However, his power and political preeminence reemerged with the arrival of the dictatorship of
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in 1911 and directing a strong diplomatic attempt to consolidate relations between
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and the United States, receiving an official visit of the
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http://www.efemeridesvenezolanas.com/html/revolucion.htm
160:"Manuel Antonio Matos". Biblioteca Biográfica Venezolana
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Hacienda, Venezuela
Ministerio de (16 September 1965).
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A major figure of the political current denominated
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32:(8 January 1847 – 5 December 1929) was a
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16:Venezuelan politician
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58:Liberalismo Amarillo
51:history of Venezuela
36:politician, banker,
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68:and
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