Julio Mario Santo Domingo
Julio Mario Santo Domingo Pumarejo | |
---|---|
1st Colombia Ambassador to China | |
In office 27 February 1981 – 18 March 1983 | |
President | Julio César Turbay Ayala |
Preceded by | Office created |
Succeeded by | Alfonso Gómez Gómez |
Personal details | |
Born |
Panama City, Panamá, Panama | October 16, 1923
Died |
7 October 2011 87) New York City, United States | (aged
Nationality | Colombian |
Spouse(s) |
Edyala Braga Brandão do Monte (-) Beatrice Dávila Rocha (1975–2011) |
Relations | Tatiana Santo Domingo Rechulski (granddaughter) |
Children |
Julio Mario Santo Domingo Braga Alejandro Santo Domingo Dávila Andrés Santo Domingo Dávila |
Alma mater | University of Virginia (, ) |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Net worth | US$8.4 billion (2011)[1] |
Julio Mario Santo Domingo Pumarejo (October 16, 1923 – October 7, 2011)[2] was a Colombian businessman, diplomat and patriarch of the wealthy Santo Domingo family. He controlled more than 100 companies in the diversified portfolio of the "Santo Domingo Group." He was listed by Forbes magazine as one of the wealthiest men in the world, and the second wealthiest in Colombia, with a fortune of $8 billion US dollars.[3] He was the founder of a philanthropic foundation, named to honor his father, that benefits Colombia's social development.
Early life
Julio Mario Santo Domingo was born on 16 October 1923 in Panama City, Panama, to Julio Mario Santo Domingo Santo Domingo and Beatriz Pumarejo de Vengoechea, the youngest of their four children; his older siblings were Beatriz Alicia, Cecilia, and Luis Felipe. His father was a banker, described as austere and disciplined, who made a fortune buying companies weakened during the Great Depression; his mother, from a rich and influential family, was first cousin of Alfonso López Pumarejo who was twice President of Colombia. He grew up in Barranquilla and later attended the exclusive Gimnasio Moderno in Bogotá, D.C., ultimately culminating his secondary studies at the Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts; he later attended University of Virginia before transferring to Georgetown University, but did not finish his degree.[4]
Ambassadorship
On 26 May 1980, President Julio César Turbay Ayala appointed Santo Domingo to be the first Ambassador of Colombia to China. He presented his Letters of Credence to Ulanhu, Vice Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, in Beijing on 17 February 1981.[5]
Santo Domingo Group
The Group has a majority stake in Bavaria Brewery and Valores Bavaria (a holding company for his non-beer interests). In 2005, Bavaria Brewery merged with South African company SABMiller. In this merging, the group acquired 15.1% of SAB Miller, becoming the second-largest shareholder of the second-largest beer company in the world (behind Anheuser-Busch InBev).[6][7]
Portfolio
- Caracol TV (Colombian television channel)
- Caracol TV International
- Caracol Radio (sold to PRISA in 2001)
- Cromos (magazine)
- El Espectador (newspaper)
- SABMiller (14% stake)
- Avianca (sold in 2004 to Germán Efromovich)[4]
- Bluradio (radio station)
Personal life
He first married to Edyala Braga Brandão do Monte, a Brazilian socialite, daughter of Brazilian ambassador in Paris and former wife of Brazilian President Getúlio Vargas' brother. Together they had one son, Julio Mario Santo Domingo Braga (1958–2009), but the marriage did not last long and they divorced shortly after. He remarried on 15 February 1975 to Colombian socialite Beatrice Dávila Rocha, and together they had two sons, Alejandro Santo Domingo Dávila (b. 1977) who has continued on in the family business and Andrés Santo Domingo Dávila (b. 1978) the co-founder and president of Kemado Records, whose 2008 wedding to the socialite Lauren Davis (then founder of the online fashion retailer Moda Operandi).
Santo Domingo owned homes in New York City, in Paris, and Barú, a Colombian island near Cartagena.
His first marriage was to Edyala Braga Brandão do Monte, an aristocratic Brazilian, with whom he had a son:
- Julio Mario Santo Domingo, Jr. (1958–2009)[8] m. Vera Rechulski, a Brazilian socialite
- Tatiana Santo Domingo (born November 24, 1983)
- Julio Mario Santo Domingo III (born May 2, 1985)
References
- ↑ "Julio Mario Santo Domingo". Forbes; The World's Billionaires. March 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
- ↑ D. A. Crowe (2005-09-04). "Una jugada de póquer". El País.
- ↑ "Billionaires: Julio Mario Santo Domingo". Forbes. 2008-03-05.
- 1 2 Forbes Billionaires, 2006
- ↑ BBC Asian Network (1981-02-27). "Summary of world broadcasts: Far East, Part 3". Caversham Park: BBC Monitoring. Xinhua News Agency. OCLC 10807079. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
- ↑ Timmons, Heather (2005-07-19). "SABMiller and Bavaria announce a major transaction in Latin America". International Herald Tribune.
- ↑ "SABMiller buys brewer to grow in Latin America". SAB Miller. 2005-07-19.
- ↑ "Colombian Businessman Julio Mario Santo Domingo Braga Dies". Latin American Herald Tribune. 2009-03-29.
Further reading
- Reyes, Gerardo (2003). Don Julio Mario: biografía no autorizada del hombre más poderoso de Colombia [Don Julio Mario: non authorized biography of the most powerful man of Colombia] (Biography). Crónica actual (in Spanish). Barcelona: Ediciones B. ISBN 978-958-96022-8-7. OCLC 150360666.
External links
Wikinews has related news: SABMiller acquires Colombian Grupo Bavaria brewery |
- Forbes.com: Forbes: World's Richest People
- Latin Business Chronicle: Latin America's Billionaires
- The Death of Julio Mario Santo Domingo
- Caracol Televisión special coverage on Julio Mario Santo Domingo
- Julio Mario Santo Domingo P. (1923–2011)
- Julio Mario Santo Domingo on images