Benito Pérez Brito de los Ríos y Fernández Valdelomar (1747 in Barcelona – August 3, 1813 in Panama City) was a Spanish military officer and colonial official. From March 21, 1812 to November 1812, he was viceroy of New Granada.
In August 1810 he was named viceroy of New Granada to replace Francisco Javier Venegas (who had never actually occupied the position). He stopped first in Mérida, Yucatán and Havana to gather resources for the reconquest of Cartagena, which was in rebel hands. He made his capital at Portobelo in Panama, because the capital of the viceroyalty, Bogotá, was also held by rebels. He arrived in Portobelo on February 19, 1812, without bringing any military reinforcements.
He established the Audiencia of Bogotá in Panama (February 21, 1812). The following March 21 he was sworn in as viceroy. He tried to aid the royalists of Santa Marta.
Pérez resigned the viceroyalty in November 1812 under pressure from the Spanish government in Cádiz, which required him to resign nearer to Bogotá. He died in Panama on August 3, 1813. Four days later rebel Simón Bolívar made his triumphal entry into Caracas, his native city, reestablishing the Venezuelan Republic.
References
^Alonso, María M.; Flores, Milagros (1997). The Eighteenth Century Caribbean & The British Attack on Puerto Rico in 1797. National Park Service. p. 322. ISBN1-881713-20-2.
(in Spanish) Plantada y Aznar, Jorge, Biografía genealógica del excmo. señor don Benito Pérez de Valdelomar, mariscal de Campo de los reales ejércitos, del hábito de Santiago, XIV Virrey de Nueva Granada : Ascendencia, consanguinidad y descendencia (1747-1813). Madrid : Instituto Salazar y Castro, 1962.