Lorenzo Arrazola y García

[3] There, he completed his early education, eventually graduating with a degree in theology and philosophy, during which time he became fluent in Latin.

She was a native of Villanueva de Campa, where García had helped to repair the church after it set fire in 1850.

His ideological principles settled as he joined the Moderate Party and the Ateneo de Madrid.

In 1837 Arrazola entered his first election, becoming a member of Spain's Congress of Deputies, a seat he held until February 1841.

In thanks for creating a new Criminal Code, Queen Isabella II made Arrazola a senator-for-life on 23 December 1848.