
Fernando Barreda and Ferrer de la Vega in the 50 Anniversary of his death. Memory and tribute from Mountaineers Studies Center.
STROKES BIOGRAPHICAL
Born in Santander, of a family linked to the sea and its port, the year 1887, city in which he also died in 1976.
He was the third president of the Center for Montañeses Studies, and the one with the longest history (1945-1976). Law Degree (1913), historian and writer; president of the Official Agricultural Chamber of Santander (1925-1936); president of the Santander Choral Society (1927-1936); mayor of Santander (1928-1930); provincial deputy (1930-1931 and 1949-1964); president of the Board of Works of the Port of Santander (1932); president of the Official Chamber of Urban Property of Santander (1932-1939 and 1964-1967); corresponding academic of the Royal Academy of History (1935); president of the Provincial Monuments Commission (1939 c. 1960); president (1941-1960) and honorary president (1960-1976) of the Santander Athenaeum; president of the Santander Juvenile Guardianship Court (1948-1969); vice president of the Provincial Council of Santander (1954-1964); president of the Menéndez Pelayo Society (1961-1976); vice president of the Cultural Institution of Cantabria (1967-1976); gold medal of San Raimundo de Peñafort for Merit in Justice (1972) and Santander gold medal (1976). He was also a corresponding academic of the Academy of Sciences, Fine Letters and Noble Arts of Córdoba and number commander of the Order of Civil Merit. Author and co-author of approximately ten books, as well as numerous research works published in specialized journals.
As is evident, The preceding lines represent only the indication of a long, fruitful and solid personal career. Some information about this exceptional and outstanding character can be expanded in the chapter by Aurelio González-Riancho Colongues published in the book dedicated to the 75 Mountaineers anniversary Studies Center.
MONOGRAPHIC STUDIES BY FERNANDO BARREDA PUBLISHED BY THE CENTER FOR MOUNTAIN STUDIES AND ITS EDITORIAL ENVIRONMENT
1950. Comercio marítimo entre los Estados Unidos y Santander (1778-1829).
1950. Notes for a study of the ancient economic life of La Montaña. Disappeared from the CEM library, from whose file the reference has been taken, according to the January relationship 2009, signature 2506 double, MMC ?
1952. Armadas in the port of Santander. 8 p, C. Bermejo printer, Madrid. MMC ?
1956. The abandoned minors, according to Pereda. Topic presented to the XVII Assembly of the National Union of Juvenile Guardianship Courts, held in Burgos in October 1956.
1956. The Admiral of Castile, Don Pero Niño, First Count of Buelna.
157. Prosperity of Santander and industrial development of the province since the 18th century. donated exempt edition to the CEM of Manuel López-Calderón Barreda.
1957. Prosperity of Santander and desindustrial stream…, This is the section integrated into the commemorative book of the 1st Centenary of the founding of Banco de Santander, edited by said institution and carried out at the Center for Montañeses Studies with the title Contribution to the study of the Economic History of La Montaña.
1957. Don Antonio Lopez, first marquis of Comillas, published in the commemorative book of the 1st Centenary of the founding of Banco de Santander, edited by said institution and at the Center for Montañeses Studies, Contribution to the study of the Economic History of La Montaña.
1958. References to the French invasion in some business letters from that time, author donation “For the library of the Center for Montañeses Studies”
1965. Bibliographic and field agenda [by Fernando Barreda], (Original manuscript preserved in the CEM, Anónimo: estimated by calligraphic and thematic criteria)., reg.2742 / FA 7-5
1968. The Cantabrian Navy. Tome II: since the s. XVII at the twilight of sailing. Aldus Velarde S.A., Santander.
1973. Hospitals in Puente San Miguel and Cóbreces in ancient pilgrimage route by Cantabria.
1974. Victorio Macho and Santander: notes of some memories, by Fernando Barreda and Ferrer de la Vega. With the collaboration of Benito Madariaga de la Campa. Juan de Herrera Art Institute (Dedicated by the author to his wife and CEM colleagues, entity that materialized the edition).
1976. The Hospital for the poor and pilgrims in Santoña, XL Anniversary of the CEM (VV AA)
1988. Santander fishermen: the coastal sea bream and other 19th century fisheries. Folding mural for an exhibition about the marine world, in Santillana del Mar. Texts by Fernando Barreda (1957) and illustrations of “Andy”. And. Government of Cantabria/University of Cantabria.
1993. Rutas jacobeas por Cantabria (Ferrer Fernando Barreda and de la Vega (posthumous publication), José Luis Casado Soto and Carmen González Echegaray).
1974. Contributions to the economic history of La Montaña (Several authors)
2001. The Santander Chacolí in the thirteenth to the 19th centuries, [The original version came from Altamira magazine (1947) and monographs were built in foreign versions ca. 2001:
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Two reissues unauthorized from Fernando Barreda's article on “The Santander chacolí” in the Altamira magazine of the Center for Montañeses Studies. These reissues were executed by Maxtor (Valladolid), in 2001 the first of them. |
PUBLICATIONS IN MAGAZINES ALTAMIRA, JOURNAL OF SANTANDER,,es,nation,,ca,and magazine,,es,the,,es,and funds,,es,hemeroteca,,es, Nº3,,en, Nº4,,en, THE SCIENCES, MENÉNDEZ PELAYO LIBRARY BULLETIN…
1930. Artistic motifs in commercial documents …
1931. “Some historical indications regarding the maritime life of Laredo”, in The Santander Magazine.
1932. “The Santander commercial fleet since 1800 a 1932”, The Journal of Santander.
1932. “Contributions to the biography of D. Telesforo Trueba y Cosío”, Boletín de la Biblioteca de Menéndez Pelayo”, (1931-1932, extra).
1932. “Ship voyages from Santander to the Philippines in the 19th century”, The Journal of Santander.
1932. “The first manned balloon to rise over Santander”, The Journal of Santander.
1933. “Two letters from a Santander merchant residing in Flanders in the 16th century”, The Journal of Santander.
1934. “The right to ballast in the port of Santander”, Altamira magazine.
1935. “19th century mountain pilots who sailed through the seas of the Far East”, Altamira magazine.
1935 – Nelson's attack on Tenerife told by a mountain sailor, Altamira magazine.
1945. “The export of citrus fruits through the port of Laredo”, Altamira magazine.
1945. “From Santander maritime folklore: tidal movements and human death”, digital edition in Cervantes Virtual from Boletín de la Biblioteca de Menéndez Pelayo, año 21 (1945), pp. 348-352.
1947. “The Santander chacolí in the 13th to 19th centuries”, Altamira magazine.
1948. “The ironworks in the province of Santander”, science magazine.
1949. “Lasa naves santanderinas y la conquista de Sevilla”, In Africa 90, June of 1949.
1949. “The mountain man Toribio Alonso de Salazar, discoverer of the Carolinas”, Altamira magazine.
1950. “Sailor votive offerings in Santander sanctuaries. Chapel of the Holy Martyrs and Our Lady of Loreto”, Altamira magazine.
1950. “Trip of Charles V to Laredo, Yuste road“, Altamira magazine. Cuttered inference, el día 21 of August, by the president of the Center for Mountain Studies, Don Fernando Barreda.
1950. “The last armed privateers in Santander (1797-1825)”, Bulletin of the Nenéndez Pelayo Library.
1951. “Sailor votive offerings in Santander sanctuaries: III. Our Lady of the Virgin of the Sea, Patron of the Center for Mountain Studies. IV. Santa María de Miera. The. Our Lady of Valvanuz”, Altamira magazine.
Barreda, Maza and Velasco in the Virgin of the Sea, 1957.
1952. “Sailor offerings in Santander sanctuaries: XIII. San Mamés de Meruelo. XIV. Santa María de Latas”, Altamira magazine.
1952. “Sailor offerings in Santander sanctuaries: XV. Our Lady of the Assumption, in Laredo”, Altamira magazine.
1953. “Trafficking from the port of Santander”, Boletín de la Biblioteca de Menéndez Pelayo.
1953. “Sailor offerings in Santander sanctuaries: XVI. Our Lady of Muslera, in Guarnizo. XVII. Our Lady of the Soto”, Altamira magazine.
1954. “Sailor offerings in Santander sanctuaries: XVIII. Our Lady of Valencia, in Vioño”, Altamira magazine.
1955. “The aggrandizement of the city and the Santander Royal Consulate”, Altamira magazine.
1956. “Sailor offerings in Santander sanctuaries: XIX. Our Lady of Las Caldas”, Altamira magazine.
1961. “The first eucalyptus planted in Santander”, Altamira magazine.
1963. “The French admiral Robin de Bracamonte, en Santander”, Altamira magazine.
1974. “Some traditions and superstitions in the Mountain”, in Publications of the Institute of Ethnography and Folklore Hoyos Sainz.
1974. “The Factory Book of the hermitage of Santiago in Aldea de Ebro (1618-1873)”, Altamira magazine.
1939. San Miguel de Monte Carceña (The Penilla de Cayón, And. in Madrid. Considered lost in the CEM library according to the January report 2009, signatura original 2392. MMC ?
Youth stage


Ferrer Fernando Barreda and de la Vega
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A MENTION TO THE ECHOES OF FERNANDO BARREDA ON THE INTERNET
The sampling has been carried out in the academic database DIALNET, a fecha 12-02-2026 -which included more than a hundred references to works published by Fernando Barrada between 1930 and 1976, figure that implies an important presence half a century after the author's death. Barreda's predilection and contributions to local studies with historical and geographical significance can be highlighted., and the relations between Santander and the commercial destinations of its port. Although he is a well-known author in the academic environments of Cantabria, It can be estimated that its reading and reading will continue to be guaranteed as the wide and varied work is made available to potential readers belonging to the new generations.. From the Center for Montañeses Studies - where his studies, well known and managed over time, are guaranteed appreciation- That's how we understand it, and we will collaborate in facilitating the memory and dissemination of the work of the admirable colleague and long-time president, who contributed so much to Santander, to Cantabria and the knowledge of its history.
The. Holly Fernandez
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