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Antonio Nariño

Antonio Amador José de Nariño y Álvarez del Casal (Santa Fé de Bogotá, Colombia April 9, 1765 – Villa de Leyva, Colombia December 13, 1823),[1][2] was a Colombian ideological precursor of the independence movement in New Granada (present day Colombia) as well as one of its early political and military leaders.

Antonio Nariño
Oil painting by Ricardo Acevedo Bernal.
3rd Vice President of the Gran Colombia
In office
April 4, 1821 – June 6, 1821
PresidentSimón Bolívar
Preceded byJuan Germán Roscio
Succeeded byJosé María del Castillo
Governor President of the State of Cundinamarca
In office
September 19, 1813 – May 14, 1814
Preceded byManuel Benito de Castro
Succeeded byManuel de Bernardo Álvarez del Casal
Governor President of the State of Cundinamarca and Viceregent of the King's Person
In office
September 21, 1811 – August 19, 1812
MonarchFerdinand VII
Preceded byJorge Tadeo Lozano
Succeeded byManuel Benito de Castro
In office
September 12, 1812 – September 19, 1813
Preceded byManuel Benito de Castro
Personal details
Born
Antonio de la Santísima Concepción Nariño y Álvarez

(1765-04-09)April 9, 1765[1]
Bogotá, Viceroyalty of New Granada
DiedDecember 13, 1823(1823-12-13) (aged 58)
Villa de Leyva, Cundinamarca, Colombia
NationalityNeogranadine
Political partyCentralist
SpouseMagdalena Ortega y Mesa

Early life edit

Nariño was born to an aristocratic family. He was the third son of Vicente Nariño y Vásquez, a Spaniard from Galicia, and Catalina Álvarez. His father had moved to New Granada in 1751 as Official Royal Accountant of New Granada, headed the first gunpowder factory in Santafé (modern-day Bogotá),[3] and was later promoted to Major Accountant, an important role that he played up to his death in 1778. Nariño's mother was the sister of Manuel Álvarez del Casal, one of the attorneys of the Royal Audience. Nariño and his numerous siblings grew up surrounded by books. Details about his early life are scarce, but apparently he studied in the Colegio Mayor de San Bartolomé, a well-known Jesuit school in Bogotá, which had been founded in 1604. Nariño married Magdalena Ortega y Mesa in 1785, with whom he had six children. By then, he was already a merchant and proactively involved in politics. In 1789, he was appointed ordinary major of Santafé, as well as General Treasurer of Tithes. By 1793, he had opened his own print shop, and had obtained a license from the government to be allowed to print, which would later bring him trouble.

Early political activity edit

Nariño was intellectually curious and admired the political ideologies of the leaders of the French and American Revolutions. In his impressive library there was a portrait of Benjamin Franklin above the mantle. In his youth, Nariño was a strong influence among the progressive young people of Bogotá, Colombia, hosting secret political gatherings that he called "The Sanctuary," where the need for independence and the means of achieving it were discussed. Attendees included later notables Pedro Fermín de Vargas [es], José Antonio Ricaurte [fr], Luis de Rieux, Manuel Torres and Francisco Antonio Zea.[4] Nariño was one of the most outspoken and articulate participants at these meetings, and was widely respected by his fellow revolutionaries.

In 1794, Nariño procured a copy of the "Declaration of the Rights of Man", which was being distributed by the French Assembly. He translated the Declaration of the Rights of Man from its original French into Spanish and printed several copies from his own private press.[5] He then circulated these translated pamphlets among his politically like-minded friends. Copies of the pamphlet were distributed to all corners of the continent and created a stirring in the political mentalities of the time. The government soon discovered the material, and any copy that was found was burned. Nariño was arrested on August 29, 1794, as were many of the fellow attendees of his Sanctuary meetings, and underwent trials during the rest of the year and the next one. His attorney, José Antonio Ricaurte [fr], was arrested as well, so no other lawyer wanted to defend his case, and he and his followers were sentenced to ten years of imprisonment in Africa for his leading role in the political group and was exiled from South America. In addition to this, all his property was confiscated. Nariño had previously worked as a tithe collector (Recaudador de diezmos) and was also accused of fraud resulting from this activity.

Nariño managed to escape in Cádiz, however, and then fled to Paris in 1795, where he devoted himself to the study of the French Revolution and its aftermath. This convinced him of the idea that centralized government was a superior form of government. After spending some time in France, Nariño went to England to look for economic and military support from the British but when he was denied it, he decided to return to Santafé (modern-day Bogotá). He traveled in disguise, but eventually he found himself forced to surrender to the authorities, on July 19, 1797. In prison he contracted tuberculosis. He was finally released in 1803, due to his health, and he recovered little by little.

By 1809, however, following the unrest all around the colonies over the Napoleonic invasion of Spain, many people started to meet clandestinely to discuss independence. Some of these conspirators, among them the priest Andrés Rosillo y Meruelo, started discussing a coup to overthrow the government and establish a republic in its stead, and the name of Nariño started circulating. Hearing of said rumors, viceroy Amar y Borbón decided to crush the rebellion before it started, and Nariño found himself arrested yet again when insurrections started to break all over the American colonies. He was moved to the prison in Cartagena de Indias, although he managed to escape briefly, only to be captured again on December 20, 1809, in Santa Marta. Nariño remained imprisoned in Cartagena, and was about to be sent to Puerto Rico, but he was freed in June 1810, following the city's declaration of independence. Following his release from prison, he had to wait for a few months in Cartagena before returning to his family. In December, 1810, Nariño returned to Santafé, and became deeply involved in the creation of a sovereign state, independent from Spain.

The Aftermath of the Declaration of Independence and The Foolish Motherland edit

Following the formation of Juntas all over the country, profound divisions became evident when trying to determine what type of government should be placed instead of the Spanish crown. In particular, disagreements on whether there should be a single state in the place of the old New Kingdom of Granada or whether the provinces should become autonomous and independent states became a matter of heated debate. The provinces, led by the province of Cartagena, called for a federal solution that gave them equal rights, and were not willing to submit to authorities sent from the capital just like they had submitted to Spanish authorities in the past. In contrast, the province of Cundinamarca, which held the former viceroyal capital, Santafé, was the richest and most populous province, and assumed that it would inherit the authority of the old regime, its leaders fearing the loss of power and privileges that would come with a federalist government. When the Cartagena junta called for a separate General Conference in Medellín, where each province would be represented in proportion to their populations, the Supreme Junta of Santafé decided to counter by inviting each province to send a delegate to form an interim government while a general congress was summoned to establish a Constitutional Assembly for the whole New Granada.

Nariño returned to Santafé just on time to participate in the organization of the Congress of the United Provinces of New Granada, being appointed secretary.[6] The congress was irregular from the start, as it was formed by delegates from barely a handful of provinces (Santa Fe, Socorro, Neiva, Pamplona, Nóvita, and Mariquita), and was deeply divided on whether the cities of Mompós (by then part of the Cartagena province) and Sogamoso, which had sent delegates, should be considered provinces. In the congress, held between December 22, 1810, and February 2, 1811, Nariño was the leader of a push to establish the Congress permanently in Santafé, a proposal that was rejected by the provinces, which saw in this a push for deferral to Santafé, Following profound disagreements, the Congress was dissolved barely more than a month later, when the members stopped attending the sessions.

 
Statue of Antonio Nariño in Villa de Leyva

As provinces were already busy establishing their own autonomous governments, under the lead of Jorge Tadeo Lozano, the Junta Suprema in Santafé called for a constitutional assembly for the province. In March, 1811, the province convened a "Constituent Electoral College of the State of Cundinamarca," which promulgated a constitution the following month declaring the creation of the Free and Independent State of Cundinamarca, with Lozano as president. This constitution followed the model of the Constitution of the United States, and established Cundinamarca as a Catholic and constitutional monarchy, under the absent Ferdinand VII (it would only declare full independence from Spain in August 1813).

While the constitution was mostly federalist, centralist ideas were evident in its writing, and it provided for the eventual annexation of other provinces which would then have to obey the provincial constitution. Nariño, who was recently widowed, was appointed as mayor of the city of Santafé on August 30, 1811, and being a fervent centralist, started pushing for a strong centralist position from the newspaper he created, La Bagatela (or The Triffle), which he started publishing on July 14, 1811.[6] In La Bagatela, Nariño became a ruthless critic of Lozano, whom he accused of indecisiveness. The aggressive criticisms by Nariño and his followers led to a riot in the city on September 19, 1811, following which president Lozano and his vice president were forced to resign. Fearful of popular rioting, the legislature elected Nariño as president and conceded to his demands, which increased the influence of the executive power.

The "Congress of the United Provinces," meanwhile, had started meeting again. In spite of Cundinamarca's opposition, the Congress finally achieved an agreement and delivered the Act of Federation of the United Provinces of New Granada on November 27, 1811, a heavily federalist act. The act provided a lot of autonomy to each province, and an extremely weak president who would be subordinate to the congress. This only made the differences between centralist and federalist ideas even stronger. Nariño and his followers became ardent opponents to federalism and to the congress, and were convinced that the economic and political power of Cundinamarca would allow the province to dominate and unify New Granada. Nariño convened an assembly to revise the constitution of the state and make it even more centralist, and then decided to annex the surrounding provinces of Tunja, Socorro, Pamplona, Mariquita, and Neiva, but was mostly unsuccessful on both enterprises. Nevertheless, the relentless hostility and harassment from Nariño's partisans pushed the members of the Congress to leave Santafé and to escape, first to Leyva and finally to Tunja. This would be the start of the period in the history of the recently founded country that would later be called "the Foolish Mortherland."

Soon, the Cundinamarca province became embroiled in civil war against other provinces, particularly Tunja, where the Congress had settled.[6] Nariño ordered General Antonio Baraya to defeat the federalist leaders in Tunja, but Baraya decided to switch sides and support the federalist forces, and many important leaders like Santander and Caldas joined him. Baraya, and the rebels with him, signed an act that declared Nariño an usurper and a tyrant, and pledged loyalty to the Congress. Nariño used the opportunity to request extraordinary powers from the legislature of Cundinamarca, which allowed him to be appointed as a dictator. On November 26, 1812, Nariño left with his army to conquer Tunja. On December 2, 1812, his army faced a federalist army commanded by Antonio Ricaurte and Atanasio Girardot in the Battle of Ventaquemada, and was soundly defeated, having to retreat back to Santafé. The federalist troops, however, only started pursuing them more than a week later.

Following this defeat, and the subsequent declaration of independence from the Province of Socorro, Nariño resigned as soon as he arrived to the city, but not finding a suitable replacement, he was reinstalled as dictator. Nariño then prepared to defend the city, which was put under siege by the Congress' army on December 24, 1812. Nevertheless, on January 9, 1813, in the Battle of San Victorino, Nariño's troops proved superior and the federalist armies were completely defeated. In June 1813, he was appointed dictator for life, and the following month, the Republic of Cundinamarca finally declared independence from the Spanish Monarchy.[6]

Southern campaign edit

In July 1813, General Nariño began an intensive military campaign against the Spanish and Royalist forces in the south of the country, intending to reach Pasto and eventually Quito. Nariño's forces, known as the 'Army of the South,' and numbering between 1.500 and 2.000 men, managed to capture Popayán in January 1814 after defeating the Royalist forces in the area in a series of initially successful battles.

After stopping to reorganize the city's government and his own forces, he pressed on towards Pasto. Historians have speculated that, had he not stopped at Popayán but actually decisively pursued the fleeing Royalist army, he might have been able to successfully capture a relatively undefended Pasto.

 
Antonio Nariño

As things went, however, the constant raids by Royalist guerrillas, the harshness of the terrain, the lack of promised reinforcements from Antioquia, and the delays in bringing up his army's artillery contributed to weakening the morale of many of the troops under Nariño's command, when they had practically reached the gates of Pasto. On May 10, 1814, in the Battle of the Ejidos (Commons) of Pasto, the royalist army led by Melchior Aymerich attacked Nariño's army.[7] After being wounded during combat, a false rumor of his death was spread, and most of the remaining soldiers scattered, only some 400 returning to Popayán. Waiting for reinforcements, Nariño decided to send his officers back to Popayán while he harangued his few remaining troops. Nariño was left practically alone in the battlefield, and attempted to hide in the surrounding mountains, but finally surrendered himself when Royalist scouts found him, hungry and exhausted, on May 14. He had hoped he would be able to negotiate an armistice. He was taken into Pasto in May 1814, and then sent to the Royal prison at Cádiz via Quito on July 15, 1815. From there, he was sent to Lima, where he was taken by ship to Cádiz, arriving on the first weeks of March, 1816. Nariño would remain a prisoner in Cádiz for the next four years.

Later years edit

 
Watercolor by Ricardo Acevedo Bernal

Nariño was freed from imprisonment in 1821, following the revolt of Rafael del Riego, and returned to his home country, Colombia, now independent from Spain after the republican victory at the Battle of Boyacá.

Nariño was one of the candidates for election to the presidency of Gran Colombia in 1821, which he lost to Simón Bolívar by the significant margin of 50 to 6 votes in the Congress held at Cúcuta, finishing second. He also lost the election for vice president, with Francisco de Paula Santander (a former federalist soldier) eventually defeated by a 38 to 19 vote margin after several heated rounds of voting. Santander and others had been victorious in battle, while Nariño was not, and his popularity had been severely affected. This is also the year where a constituent assembly met in Cúcuta to draft a constitution for the new state.

Nariño returned to Santafé, now officially called Bogotá, in 1821, defeated politically and in poor health, following the many years of struggles and imprisonment. He was appointed military commander, a nominal charge without effective power. By then, he had lost the popularity he had enjoyed in the city during the Foolish Fatherland times. As he had done before with La Bagatela, he decided to create a newspaper: "Los Toros de Fucha" (The Bulls from Fucha), to publish his opposition against Santander and his government, but unlike Lozano, Santander was far from weak, and Nariño instead of returning to power came to be interrogated by Santander. His enemies did not want him to be in power because of his origin from Cundinamarca. According to his biographers (arguably partisans), to make sure he did not get elected they accused him of malfeasance of public funds, cowardice, and treason, but Nariño managed to defend himself. Tired and ill with tuberculosis, he decided to quit his public roles and move to Villa de Leyva. Nariño died there on December 13, 1823, having become a national hero of Colombia.

Legacy edit

While playing a minor role in the independence war against Spain, Nariño was widely acknowledged at his time and afterwards as a precursor of separatist ideas. He is mentioned in the last stanza of the Colombian national anthem. At the foot of his memorial statue in Bogotá he is quoted: "I have loved my country; only History will say what this love has been."

The presidential palace of the Republic of Colombia, Casa de Nariño or Palacio de Nariño, was constructed at the site of his birthplace and named in his honor.[8]

The department of Nariño was also named in his honor.[9]

Nariño's face has appeared in the $10 and $100 Colombian peso banknotes.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hector, M., and A. Ardila. Hombres y mujeres en las letras de Colombia. 2. Bogota: Magisterio, 2008. 25. Print.
  2. ^ "1. Biografía · Antonio Nariño · Biblioteca Virtual Colombiana". www.humanas.unal.edu.co. Retrieved 2023-02-07.
  3. ^ "Vicente Nariño Vásquez | Real Academia de la Historia". dbe.rah.es. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  4. ^ Bowman, Charles H. Jr. (September 1971). "Antonio Caballero y Góngora y Manuel Torres: La Cultura en la Nueva Granada". Boletín de Historia y Antigüedades (in Spanish). 58: 435.
  5. ^ MacFarlane, Anthony. Colombia before Independence: Economy, Society, and Politics under Bourbon Rule. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. 284-5. Print.
  6. ^ a b c d Rodriguez, Jaime (1998). The Independence of Spanish America. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-62673-6.
  7. ^ "Batalla de los ejidos de Pasto – Enciclopedia | Banrepcultural". enciclopedia.banrepcultural.org. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
  8. ^ (PDF). 2014-03-16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-03-16. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
  9. ^ . 2017-10-27. Archived from the original on 2017-10-27. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
  • El colombiano de todos los tiempos - semana.com (in Spanish)
  • (in Spanish)
  • (in Spanish)

Bibliography edit

  • Blossom, Thomas (1967). Nariño: Hero of Colombian Independence. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  • Crow, John A. (1992) [1946]. The Epic of Latin America (4th ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN

9780520078680

antonio, nariño, locality, bogotá, bogotá, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, . For the locality of Bogota see Antonio Narino Bogota This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Antonio Narino news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Narino and the second or maternal family name is Alvarez Antonio Amador Jose de Narino y Alvarez del Casal Santa Fe de Bogota Colombia April 9 1765 Villa de Leyva Colombia December 13 1823 1 2 was a Colombian ideological precursor of the independence movement in New Granada present day Colombia as well as one of its early political and military leaders Antonio NarinoOil painting by Ricardo Acevedo Bernal 3rd Vice President of the Gran ColombiaIn office April 4 1821 June 6 1821PresidentSimon BolivarPreceded byJuan German RoscioSucceeded byJose Maria del CastilloGovernor President of the State of CundinamarcaIn office September 19 1813 May 14 1814Preceded byManuel Benito de CastroSucceeded byManuel de Bernardo Alvarez del CasalGovernor President of the State of Cundinamarca and Viceregent of the King s PersonIn office September 21 1811 August 19 1812MonarchFerdinand VIIPreceded byJorge Tadeo LozanoSucceeded byManuel Benito de CastroIn office September 12 1812 September 19 1813Preceded byManuel Benito de CastroPersonal detailsBornAntonio de la Santisima Concepcion Narino y Alvarez 1765 04 09 April 9 1765 1 Bogota Viceroyalty of New GranadaDiedDecember 13 1823 1823 12 13 aged 58 Villa de Leyva Cundinamarca ColombiaNationalityNeogranadinePolitical partyCentralistSpouseMagdalena Ortega y Mesa Contents 1 Early life 2 Early political activity 3 The Aftermath of the Declaration of Independence and The Foolish Motherland 4 Southern campaign 5 Later years 6 Legacy 7 References 8 BibliographyEarly life editNarino was born to an aristocratic family He was the third son of Vicente Narino y Vasquez a Spaniard from Galicia and Catalina Alvarez His father had moved to New Granada in 1751 as Official Royal Accountant of New Granada headed the first gunpowder factory in Santafe modern day Bogota 3 and was later promoted to Major Accountant an important role that he played up to his death in 1778 Narino s mother was the sister of Manuel Alvarez del Casal one of the attorneys of the Royal Audience Narino and his numerous siblings grew up surrounded by books Details about his early life are scarce but apparently he studied in the Colegio Mayor de San Bartolome a well known Jesuit school in Bogota which had been founded in 1604 Narino married Magdalena Ortega y Mesa in 1785 with whom he had six children By then he was already a merchant and proactively involved in politics In 1789 he was appointed ordinary major of Santafe as well as General Treasurer of Tithes By 1793 he had opened his own print shop and had obtained a license from the government to be allowed to print which would later bring him trouble Early political activity editNarino was intellectually curious and admired the political ideologies of the leaders of the French and American Revolutions In his impressive library there was a portrait of Benjamin Franklin above the mantle In his youth Narino was a strong influence among the progressive young people of Bogota Colombia hosting secret political gatherings that he called The Sanctuary where the need for independence and the means of achieving it were discussed Attendees included later notables Pedro Fermin de Vargas es Jose Antonio Ricaurte fr Luis de Rieux Manuel Torres and Francisco Antonio Zea 4 Narino was one of the most outspoken and articulate participants at these meetings and was widely respected by his fellow revolutionaries In 1794 Narino procured a copy of the Declaration of the Rights of Man which was being distributed by the French Assembly He translated the Declaration of the Rights of Man from its original French into Spanish and printed several copies from his own private press 5 He then circulated these translated pamphlets among his politically like minded friends Copies of the pamphlet were distributed to all corners of the continent and created a stirring in the political mentalities of the time The government soon discovered the material and any copy that was found was burned Narino was arrested on August 29 1794 as were many of the fellow attendees of his Sanctuary meetings and underwent trials during the rest of the year and the next one His attorney Jose Antonio Ricaurte fr was arrested as well so no other lawyer wanted to defend his case and he and his followers were sentenced to ten years of imprisonment in Africa for his leading role in the political group and was exiled from South America In addition to this all his property was confiscated Narino had previously worked as a tithe collector Recaudador de diezmos and was also accused of fraud resulting from this activity Narino managed to escape in Cadiz however and then fled to Paris in 1795 where he devoted himself to the study of the French Revolution and its aftermath This convinced him of the idea that centralized government was a superior form of government After spending some time in France Narino went to England to look for economic and military support from the British but when he was denied it he decided to return to Santafe modern day Bogota He traveled in disguise but eventually he found himself forced to surrender to the authorities on July 19 1797 In prison he contracted tuberculosis He was finally released in 1803 due to his health and he recovered little by little By 1809 however following the unrest all around the colonies over the Napoleonic invasion of Spain many people started to meet clandestinely to discuss independence Some of these conspirators among them the priest Andres Rosillo y Meruelo started discussing a coup to overthrow the government and establish a republic in its stead and the name of Narino started circulating Hearing of said rumors viceroy Amar y Borbon decided to crush the rebellion before it started and Narino found himself arrested yet again when insurrections started to break all over the American colonies He was moved to the prison in Cartagena de Indias although he managed to escape briefly only to be captured again on December 20 1809 in Santa Marta Narino remained imprisoned in Cartagena and was about to be sent to Puerto Rico but he was freed in June 1810 following the city s declaration of independence Following his release from prison he had to wait for a few months in Cartagena before returning to his family In December 1810 Narino returned to Santafe and became deeply involved in the creation of a sovereign state independent from Spain The Aftermath of the Declaration of Independence and The Foolish Motherland editMain article Foolish Motherland Following the formation of Juntas all over the country profound divisions became evident when trying to determine what type of government should be placed instead of the Spanish crown In particular disagreements on whether there should be a single state in the place of the old New Kingdom of Granada or whether the provinces should become autonomous and independent states became a matter of heated debate The provinces led by the province of Cartagena called for a federal solution that gave them equal rights and were not willing to submit to authorities sent from the capital just like they had submitted to Spanish authorities in the past In contrast the province of Cundinamarca which held the former viceroyal capital Santafe was the richest and most populous province and assumed that it would inherit the authority of the old regime its leaders fearing the loss of power and privileges that would come with a federalist government When the Cartagena junta called for a separate General Conference in Medellin where each province would be represented in proportion to their populations the Supreme Junta of Santafe decided to counter by inviting each province to send a delegate to form an interim government while a general congress was summoned to establish a Constitutional Assembly for the whole New Granada Narino returned to Santafe just on time to participate in the organization of the Congress of the United Provinces of New Granada being appointed secretary 6 The congress was irregular from the start as it was formed by delegates from barely a handful of provinces Santa Fe Socorro Neiva Pamplona Novita and Mariquita and was deeply divided on whether the cities of Mompos by then part of the Cartagena province and Sogamoso which had sent delegates should be considered provinces In the congress held between December 22 1810 and February 2 1811 Narino was the leader of a push to establish the Congress permanently in Santafe a proposal that was rejected by the provinces which saw in this a push for deferral to Santafe Following profound disagreements the Congress was dissolved barely more than a month later when the members stopped attending the sessions nbsp Statue of Antonio Narino in Villa de LeyvaAs provinces were already busy establishing their own autonomous governments under the lead of Jorge Tadeo Lozano the Junta Suprema in Santafe called for a constitutional assembly for the province In March 1811 the province convened a Constituent Electoral College of the State of Cundinamarca which promulgated a constitution the following month declaring the creation of the Free and Independent State of Cundinamarca with Lozano as president This constitution followed the model of the Constitution of the United States and established Cundinamarca as a Catholic and constitutional monarchy under the absent Ferdinand VII it would only declare full independence from Spain in August 1813 While the constitution was mostly federalist centralist ideas were evident in its writing and it provided for the eventual annexation of other provinces which would then have to obey the provincial constitution Narino who was recently widowed was appointed as mayor of the city of Santafe on August 30 1811 and being a fervent centralist started pushing for a strong centralist position from the newspaper he created La Bagatela or The Triffle which he started publishing on July 14 1811 6 In La Bagatela Narino became a ruthless critic of Lozano whom he accused of indecisiveness The aggressive criticisms by Narino and his followers led to a riot in the city on September 19 1811 following which president Lozano and his vice president were forced to resign Fearful of popular rioting the legislature elected Narino as president and conceded to his demands which increased the influence of the executive power The Congress of the United Provinces meanwhile had started meeting again In spite of Cundinamarca s opposition the Congress finally achieved an agreement and delivered the Act of Federation of the United Provinces of New Granada on November 27 1811 a heavily federalist act The act provided a lot of autonomy to each province and an extremely weak president who would be subordinate to the congress This only made the differences between centralist and federalist ideas even stronger Narino and his followers became ardent opponents to federalism and to the congress and were convinced that the economic and political power of Cundinamarca would allow the province to dominate and unify New Granada Narino convened an assembly to revise the constitution of the state and make it even more centralist and then decided to annex the surrounding provinces of Tunja Socorro Pamplona Mariquita and Neiva but was mostly unsuccessful on both enterprises Nevertheless the relentless hostility and harassment from Narino s partisans pushed the members of the Congress to leave Santafe and to escape first to Leyva and finally to Tunja This would be the start of the period in the history of the recently founded country that would later be called the Foolish Mortherland Soon the Cundinamarca province became embroiled in civil war against other provinces particularly Tunja where the Congress had settled 6 Narino ordered General Antonio Baraya to defeat the federalist leaders in Tunja but Baraya decided to switch sides and support the federalist forces and many important leaders like Santander and Caldas joined him Baraya and the rebels with him signed an act that declared Narino an usurper and a tyrant and pledged loyalty to the Congress Narino used the opportunity to request extraordinary powers from the legislature of Cundinamarca which allowed him to be appointed as a dictator On November 26 1812 Narino left with his army to conquer Tunja On December 2 1812 his army faced a federalist army commanded by Antonio Ricaurte and Atanasio Girardot in the Battle of Ventaquemada and was soundly defeated having to retreat back to Santafe The federalist troops however only started pursuing them more than a week later Following this defeat and the subsequent declaration of independence from the Province of Socorro Narino resigned as soon as he arrived to the city but not finding a suitable replacement he was reinstalled as dictator Narino then prepared to defend the city which was put under siege by the Congress army on December 24 1812 Nevertheless on January 9 1813 in the Battle of San Victorino Narino s troops proved superior and the federalist armies were completely defeated In June 1813 he was appointed dictator for life and the following month the Republic of Cundinamarca finally declared independence from the Spanish Monarchy 6 Southern campaign editIn July 1813 General Narino began an intensive military campaign against the Spanish and Royalist forces in the south of the country intending to reach Pasto and eventually Quito Narino s forces known as the Army of the South and numbering between 1 500 and 2 000 men managed to capture Popayan in January 1814 after defeating the Royalist forces in the area in a series of initially successful battles After stopping to reorganize the city s government and his own forces he pressed on towards Pasto Historians have speculated that had he not stopped at Popayan but actually decisively pursued the fleeing Royalist army he might have been able to successfully capture a relatively undefended Pasto nbsp Antonio NarinoAs things went however the constant raids by Royalist guerrillas the harshness of the terrain the lack of promised reinforcements from Antioquia and the delays in bringing up his army s artillery contributed to weakening the morale of many of the troops under Narino s command when they had practically reached the gates of Pasto On May 10 1814 in the Battle of the Ejidos Commons of Pasto the royalist army led by Melchior Aymerich attacked Narino s army 7 After being wounded during combat a false rumor of his death was spread and most of the remaining soldiers scattered only some 400 returning to Popayan Waiting for reinforcements Narino decided to send his officers back to Popayan while he harangued his few remaining troops Narino was left practically alone in the battlefield and attempted to hide in the surrounding mountains but finally surrendered himself when Royalist scouts found him hungry and exhausted on May 14 He had hoped he would be able to negotiate an armistice He was taken into Pasto in May 1814 and then sent to the Royal prison at Cadiz via Quito on July 15 1815 From there he was sent to Lima where he was taken by ship to Cadiz arriving on the first weeks of March 1816 Narino would remain a prisoner in Cadiz for the next four years Later years edit nbsp Watercolor by Ricardo Acevedo BernalNarino was freed from imprisonment in 1821 following the revolt of Rafael del Riego and returned to his home country Colombia now independent from Spain after the republican victory at the Battle of Boyaca Narino was one of the candidates for election to the presidency of Gran Colombia in 1821 which he lost to Simon Bolivar by the significant margin of 50 to 6 votes in the Congress held at Cucuta finishing second He also lost the election for vice president with Francisco de Paula Santander a former federalist soldier eventually defeated by a 38 to 19 vote margin after several heated rounds of voting Santander and others had been victorious in battle while Narino was not and his popularity had been severely affected This is also the year where a constituent assembly met in Cucuta to draft a constitution for the new state Narino returned to Santafe now officially called Bogota in 1821 defeated politically and in poor health following the many years of struggles and imprisonment He was appointed military commander a nominal charge without effective power By then he had lost the popularity he had enjoyed in the city during the Foolish Fatherland times As he had done before with La Bagatela he decided to create a newspaper Los Toros de Fucha The Bulls from Fucha to publish his opposition against Santander and his government but unlike Lozano Santander was far from weak and Narino instead of returning to power came to be interrogated by Santander His enemies did not want him to be in power because of his origin from Cundinamarca According to his biographers arguably partisans to make sure he did not get elected they accused him of malfeasance of public funds cowardice and treason but Narino managed to defend himself Tired and ill with tuberculosis he decided to quit his public roles and move to Villa de Leyva Narino died there on December 13 1823 having become a national hero of Colombia Legacy editWhile playing a minor role in the independence war against Spain Narino was widely acknowledged at his time and afterwards as a precursor of separatist ideas He is mentioned in the last stanza of the Colombian national anthem At the foot of his memorial statue in Bogota he is quoted I have loved my country only History will say what this love has been The presidential palace of the Republic of Colombia Casa de Narino or Palacio de Narino was constructed at the site of his birthplace and named in his honor 8 The department of Narino was also named in his honor 9 Narino s face has appeared in the 10 and 100 Colombian peso banknotes References edit a b Hector M and A Ardila Hombres y mujeres en las letras de Colombia 2 Bogota Magisterio 2008 25 Print 1 Biografia Antonio Narino Biblioteca Virtual Colombiana www humanas unal edu co Retrieved 2023 02 07 Vicente Narino Vasquez Real Academia de la Historia dbe rah es Retrieved 2023 10 16 Bowman Charles H Jr September 1971 Antonio Caballero y Gongora y Manuel Torres La Cultura en la Nueva Granada Boletin de Historia y Antiguedades in Spanish 58 435 MacFarlane Anthony Colombia before Independence Economy Society and Politics under Bourbon Rule Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 284 5 Print a b c d Rodriguez Jaime 1998 The Independence of Spanish America Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 62673 6 Batalla de los ejidos de Pasto Enciclopedia Banrepcultural enciclopedia banrepcultural org Retrieved 2020 09 07 Bicentenario en Bogota 1810 2010 PDF 2014 03 16 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 03 16 Retrieved 2020 09 07 Historia del Departamento 2017 10 27 Archived from the original on 2017 10 27 Retrieved 2020 09 07 El colombiano de todos los tiempos semana com in Spanish Biografia del General Antonio Narino in Spanish Defensa ante el senado in Spanish Bibliography editBlossom Thomas 1967 Narino Hero of Colombian Independence Tucson University of Arizona Press Crow John A 1992 1946 The Epic of Latin America 4th ed Berkeley University of California Press ISBN9780520078680 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antonio Narino amp oldid 1187525977, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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