Lorenzo Montúfar y Rivera Maestre (born March 11, 1823, Guatemala City—died 1898) was a Central American statesman, diplomat, and historian whose liberal political activities often resulted in his exile.
Receiving degrees in philosophy and law from the University of Guatemala in 1846, Montúfar began his career as a professor of civil law. He vigorously opposed the dictatorship of Rafael Carrera and was frequently exiled for his political opinions. While in exile in El Salvador, he was elected to the Guatemalan Congress, which proscribed Carrera, but on the dictator’s return Montúfar was forced to flee to Costa Rica. Much later in his life he wrote the monumental Reseña histórica de Centro America, 17 vol. (1878–88; “Historical Outline of Central America”), which covers much of the Carrera era.
In exile in Costa Rica, Montúfar assumed a career as a lawyer, magistrate, and publisher. As Costa Rica’s foreign minister he helped to organize the Central American defense against the U.S. adventurer William Walker, who in 1855–62 sought control of Nicaragua. Montúfar traveled extensively in Latin America, the United States, and Europe. As one of the leading advocates of Central American unity, he repeatedly urged that the disintegrated federation of Central American states be reestablished. He held numerous government posts and negotiated treaties that settled some of the many Central American boundary disputes. In 1891 he was unsuccessful in his bid for the presidency of Guatemala.