Consulate General of Peru in Paris | |
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Location | Paris, France |
Address | 25 Rue de l'Arcade |
Consul General | Carlos Herrera Rodríguez |
Website | consulado |
The Consulate General of Peru in Paris (French: Consulat général du Pérou à Paris, Spanish: Consulado General del Perú en París) is one of two diplomatic representations of Peru in Paris, the other being the Peruvian embassy.
The current Consul General is Carlos Herrera Rodríguez.[1]
History
France and Peru first established diplomatic relations in 1826. Peru has maintained a consular presence in France since 1841, opening consulates in Paris, as well as in Bourdeaux, Le Havre, Nice,[2] Cayenne, Strasbourg, Lyon, Marseille, Toulouse[3] and formerly Algiers, in French Algeria since at least 1874.[4][5]
During the German occupation of France, the German Chancellery notified the Peruvian legation on 12 June 1941, requesting that the embassy be closed and the personnel removed before 10 June. The Peruvian government agreed to this request and moved to the Hôtel des Ambassadeurs in Vichy, with only the consulate remaining.[6] The German government again notified Peru afterwards, requesting that the consulate be closed before 1 September. This request was rejected by the Peruvian government, with Germany ultimately accepting that the consulate remain open.[7] In November 1942, Peruvian and other Latin American diplomats were moved to Bad Godesberg by German forces, being exchanged in a prisoner swap with the United States and moved to Portugal or Switzerland, leading to the consulate in Paris closing, with Switzerland acting as Peru's protecting power instead.[8]
In 1944, after Peru severed relations with the French State of Philippe Pétain and established relations with Free France, the Peruvian legation in France—now based in Algiers—became known as the Representation of Peru before the French Committee of National Liberation (Spanish: Representación del Perú ante el Comité Francés de Liberación Nacional). The Parisian consulate only reopened after the liberation of the city, with the Peruvian envoy arriving to the Hotel Bristol on 5 October 1944. Three days later, the Swiss consul, Rodolphe Iselin, gifted the new property of the Parisian consulate to his Peruvian counterpart, located at Av. Pierre Premier De Serbie Nº 37. On 21 November, Peru recognised the new Provisional Government.[9]
List of Consuls general
See also
References
- 1 2 "RESOLUCIÓN SUPREMA Nº 216-2022-RE: Nombran Cónsul General del Perú en Paris, República Francesa". El Peruano. 30 December 2022.
- ↑ "Retrospectiva de los 100 años de historia consular del Perú en Francia (1841–1941): Burdeos, París, Niza y Le Havre". Gob.pe. 21 March 2023.
- ↑ "Consulados Peruanos a cargo de Cónsules Honorarios". Consulado General del Perú en París. Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores.
- ↑ Memoria que el Ministro de Estado en el despacho de Relaciones Exteriores presenta al Congreso Ordinario de 1874 (in Spanish). Lima: Imprenta del Estado. 1874. p. 162.
- ↑ Boletín de la Dirección de Fomento (in Spanish). Vol. 3. Lima: Dirección de Fomento. 1911. p. 16.
- ↑ Novak 2005, p. 209.
- ↑ Novak 2005, p. 209–210.
- ↑ Novak 2005, p. 210.
- ↑ Novak 2005, p. 210–211.
- ↑ "Embajada de Francia en Lima: refuerzan seguridad tras atentados". El Comercio. 14 November 2015.
Más temprano, el cónsul general del Perú en París, Jorge Méndez Torres-Llosa, señaló que hasta el momento no se tiene registro de peruanos que figuren entre las víctimas de los atentados y aseguró que continúa su visita a los hospitales para verificar si hay compatriotas afectados.
- ↑ "Carta a la Comunidad". Consulado General del Perú en París. 30 March 2018.
- ↑ "RESOLUCIÓN SUPREMA Nº 210-2022-RE: Dan por terminadas las funciones de Cónsul General del Perú en París, República Francesa". El Peruano. 29 December 2022.
Bibliography
- Novak, Fabián (2005). Las relaciones entre el Perú y Francia (1827–2004) (in Spanish). PUCP. ISBN 9972-42-721-8.