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Chilean War of Independence

The Chilean War of Independence (Spanish: Guerra de la Independencia de Chile, 'War of Independence of Chile') was a military and political event that allowed the emancipation of Chile from the Spanish Monarchy, ending the colonial period and initiating the formation of an independent republic.

Chilean War of Independence
Part of the Spanish American Wars of independence

Clockwise from top left: Battle of El Roble, Battle of Rancagua, Crossing of the Andes, First Government Junta, Battle of Maipú.
Date1810–1826
Location
North, center and south of Chile, American Pacific Ocean and also other regions of Spanish America.
Result

Chilean victory

Belligerents

Patriots:


Mapuche allies of the Patriots

Royalists:


Mapuche allies of the Royalists
Commanders and leaders

It developed in the context of the Spanish American Wars of independence, a military and political process that began after the formation of self-government juntas in the Spanish-American colonies, in response to the capture of King Ferdinand VII of Spain by Napoleonic forces in 1808. The First Government Junta of Chile was formed for that purpose. But then, it began to gradually radicalize, which caused a military struggle between Patriots, who were looking for a definitive separation from the Spanish Crown; and Royalists, who sought to maintain unity with her.

Traditionally, Chilean historiography covers this period between the establishment of the First Government Junta of Chile (September 18, 1810) and the resignation of Bernardo O'Higgins as Supreme Director of Chile (January 28, 1823). It is also subdivided into three stages: the Patria Vieja (1810–1814), Reconquista (1814–1817) and the Patria Nueva (1817–1823). Although the war began in 1812, the year in which the first hostile actions took place, and lasted until 1826, when the last royalist forces were defeated in Chiloé Archipelago.

A declaration of independence was officially issued by Chile on February 12, 1818 and formally recognized by Spain in 1844, when full diplomatic relations were established.[1]

Background

At the start of 1808, the Captaincy General of Chile—one of the smallest and poorest colonies in the Spanish Empire—was under the administration of Luis Muñoz de Guzmán, an able, respected and well-liked Royal Governor. In May 1808 the overthrow of Charles IV and Ferdinand VII, their replacement by Joseph Bonaparte and the start of the Peninsular War plunged the empire into a state of agitation. In the meantime, Chile was facing its own internal political problems. Governor Guzmán had suddenly died in February of that year and the crown had not been able to appoint a new governor before the invasion. After a brief interim regency by Juan Rodríguez Ballesteros, and according to the succession law in place at the time, the position was laid claim to and assumed by the most senior military commander, who happened to be Brigadier Francisco García Carrasco.

García Carrasco took over the post of Governor of Chile in April and in August the news of the Napoleonic invasion of Spain and of the conformation of a Supreme Central Junta to govern the Empire in the absence of a legitimate king reached the country. In the meantime, Charlotte Joaquina, sister of Ferdinand and wife of the King of Portugal, who was living in Brazil, also made attempts to obtain the administration of the Spanish dominions in Latin America. Since her father and brother were being held prisoners in France, she regarded herself as the heiress of her captured family. Allegedly among her plan was to send armies to occupy Buenos Aires and northern Argentina and to style herself as Queen of La Plata.

Brigadier García Carrasco was a man of crude and authoritarian manners, who managed in a very short time to alienate the criollo elites under his command. Already in Chile, as in most of Latin America, there had been some independence agitation but minimal and concentrated in the very ineffectual Conspiracy of the Tres Antonios back in 1781. The majority of the people were fervent royalists but were divided into two groups: those who favored the status quo and the divine right of Ferdinand VII (known as absolutists) and those who wanted to proclaim Charlotte Joaquina as Queen (known as carlotists). A third group was composed of those who proposed the replacement of the Spanish authorities with a local junta of notable citizens, which would conform a provisional government to rule in the absence of the king and an independent Spain (known as juntistas).

In 1809, Governor García Carrasco himself was implicated in a flagrant case of corruption (the Scorpion scandal) that managed to destroy whatever remnants of moral authority he or his office had left. From that moment on the pressure for his removal began to build. In June 1810 news arrived from Buenos Aires that Napoleon Bonaparte's forces had conquered Andalusia and laid siege to Cádiz, the last redoubt against the French on Spanish soil. Moreover, the Supreme Central Junta, which had governed the Empire for the past two years, had abolished itself in favor of a Regency Council. García Carrasco, who was a supporter of the carlotist group, managed to magnify the political problems by taking arbitrary and harsh measures, such as the arrest and deportation to Lima without due process of well-known and socially prominent citizens under simple suspicions of having been sympathetic to the junta idea. Among those arrested were José Antonio de Rojas, Juan Antonio Ovalle and Bernardo de Vera y Pintado.

Inspired by the May Revolution in Argentina, the autonomy movement had also propagated through the criollo elite. They resented the illegal arrests and, together with the news that Cádiz was all that was left of a free Spain, finally solidified in their opposition to the Governor. Brigadier García Carrasco was suspended from office and forced to resign on July 16, 1810, to be in turn replaced by the next most senior soldier, Mateo de Toro Zambrano Count of la Conquista, even though a legitimate Governor, Francisco Javier de Elío, had already been appointed by the Viceroy of Peru.

Count Toro Zambrano was, by all standards, a very unorthodox selection. He was a very old man already (82 years old at the time) and moreover a "criollo" (someone born in the colonies) as opposed to a "peninsular" (someone born in Spain). Immediately after his appointment in July, the juntistas began to lobby him in order to obtain the formation of a junta. In August the Royal Appeals Court (Spanish: Real Audiencia) took a public loyalty oath to the Regency Council in front of a massive audience, which put added pressure on the Governor to define himself. After vacillating for some time over which party to follow, Toro Zambrano finally agreed to hold an open Cabildo (city hall) meeting in Santiago to discuss the issue. The date was set for September 18, 1810 at 11 am.

Patria Vieja

First Junta

 
Opening session of the First Junta

From the very beginning, the juntistas took the political initiative. As soon as the Cabildo was called, they were able to place their members in the committee charged with sending the invitations, thus manipulating the attendance lists to their own advantage. At the September 18 session, they grabbed center stage with shouts of "¡Junta queremos! ¡junta queremos!" ("We want a junta! We want a junta!"). Count Toro Zambrano, faced with this very public show of force, acceded to their demands by depositing his ceremonial baton on top of the main table and saying "Here is the baton, take it and rule."

The Government Junta of the Kingdom of Chile, also known as the First Junta, was organized with the same powers as a Royal Governor. Their first measure was to take a loyalty oath to Ferdinand VII as legitimate King. Count Toro Zambrano was elected President, and the rest of the positions were distributed equally among all parties, but the real power was left in the hands of the secretary, Juan Martínez de Rozas. The Junta then proceeded to take some concrete measures that had been long-held aspirations of the colonials: it created a militia for the defense of the kingdom, decreed freedom of trade with all nations that were allied to Spain or neutrals, a unique tariff of 134% for all imports (with the exception of printing presses, books and guns which were liberated from all taxes) and in order to increase its representativity, ordered the convocatory of a National Congress. Immediately, political intrigue began amongst the ruling elite, with news of the political turbulence and wars of Europe all the while coming in. It was eventually decided that elections for the National Congress, to be composed of 42 representatives, would be held in 1811.

 
Juan Martínez de Rozas

Three political factions started to coalesce: the Extremists (Spanish: exaltados), the Moderates (Spanish: moderados) and the Royalists (Spanish: realistas). These groups were all decidedly against independence from Spain and differentiated themselves only in the degree of political autonomy that they sought. The Moderates, under the leadership of José Miguel Infante, were a majority, and wanted a very slow pace of reforms since they were afraid that once the King was back in power he would think that they were seeking independence and would roll-back all changes. The Extremists were the second most important group and they advocated a larger degree of freedom from the Crown and a faster pace of reforms stopping just short of full independence. Their leader was Juan Martínez de Rozas. The Royalists were against any reform at all and for the maintenance of the status quo.

By March 1811, 36 representatives had already been elected in all major cities with the exception of Santiago and Valparaíso. The great political surprise up to that point had been the results from the other center of power, Concepción, in which Royalists had defeated the supporters of Juan Martínez de Rozas. In the rest of Chile, the results were more or less equally divided: twelve pro-Rozas delegates, fourteen anti-Rozas and three Royalists. So, the Santiago elections were the key to Rozas' desire to remain in power. This election was supposed to take place on April 10, but before they could be called the Figueroa mutiny broke out.

On April 1, Royalist colonel Tomás de Figueroa—considering the notion of elections to be too populist—led a revolt in Santiago. The revolt sputtered, and Figueroa was arrested and summarily executed. The mutiny was successful in that temporarily sabotaged the elections, which had to be delayed. Eventually, however, a National Congress was duly elected, and all 6 deputies from Santiago came from the Moderate camp. Nonetheless, the mutiny also encouraged a radicalization of political postures. Although Moderates—who continued advocating political control of the elites and greater autonomy without a complete rupture from Spain—gained the majority of seats, a vocal minority was formed by Extremist revolutionaries who now wanted complete and instant independence from Spain. The Real Audiencia of Chile, a long-standing pillar of Spanish rule, was dissolved for its alleged "complicity" with the mutiny. The idea of full independence gained momentum for the first time.

Carrera dictatorship

During this time, a well-connected young man and a veteran of the Peninsular War, José Miguel Carrera, returned to Chile from Spain. Quickly, he was involved with the intrigues of various Extremists who plotted to wrest power from Martínez de Rozas through armed means. After two coups, both in the end of 1811, the ambitious Carrera managed to take power, inaugurating a dictatorship. Prominent members of the government were Carrera's brothers Juan José and Luis, as well as Bernardo O'Higgins.

Meanwhile, a provisional Constitution of 1812 was promulgated with a marked liberal character. An example of this is the stipulation that "no order that emanates from outside the territory of Chile will have any effect, and anyone who tries to enforce such an order will be treated as a traitor." Carrera also created patriotic emblems for the Patria Vieja such as the flag, shield, and insignia. Also during his government, the first Chilean newspaper, the La Aurora de Chile was published under the editorship of Friar Camilo Henríquez. It supported the independence movement. Additionally, Carrera was responsible for bringing the first American consul to Chile. This was important, as it established a direct link between the liberalism and federalism of the United States with the principles of the Chilean independence movement. Finally, he founded the Instituto Nacional de Chile and the National Library of Chile. Both of these prestigious institutions have survived to the present day.

Spanish invasions

The triumph of rebellions—both in Chile and Argentina—disquieted the Viceroy of Peru, José Fernando de Abascal. As a result, in 1813, he sent a military expedition by sea under the command of Antonio Pareja to deal with the situation in Chile, and sent another force by land to attack northern Argentina. The troops landed in Concepción, where they were received with applause. Pareja then attempted to take Santiago. This effort failed, as did a subsequent inconclusive assault led by Gabino Gaínza. However, this was not due to the military performance of Carrera, whose incompetence led to the rise of the moderate O'Higgins, who eventually took supreme control of the pro-independence forces. Harassed on all sides, Carrera resigned, in what is commonly taken to mark the beginning of the period of the Reconquista.

After the attempt by Gaínza, the two sides had signed the Treaty of Lircay on May 14, nominally bringing peace but effectively only providing a breathing space. Abascal had no intention of honoring the treaty, and that very year sent a much more decisive force southwards, under the command of Mariano Osorio. The royalist force landed and moved to Chillán, demanding complete surrender. O'Higgins wanted to defend the city of Rancagua, while Carrera wanted to make the stand at the pass of Angostura, a more felicitous defensive position but also closer to Santiago. Because of the disagreements and resulting lack of coordination, the independence forces were divided, and O'Higgins was obliged to meet the royalists at Rancagua without reinforcements. The resulting battle, the Disaster of Rancagua, on October 1 and 2 of 1814, was fought fiercely, but ended in stunning defeat for the independence forces of which only 500 of the original 5,000 survived. A little while later, Osorio entered Santiago and put the rebellion of the Patria Vieja to an end.

Reconquista

 
Francisco Casimiro Marcó del Pont

The viceroy Abascal confirmed Mariano Osorio as governor of Chile, although a later disagreement between the two would result in Osorio's removal and the installation of Francisco Casimiro Marcó del Pont as governor in 1815. In any case, the Spanish believed that it was necessary to teach the revolutionaries a good lesson and embarked on a campaign of fierce political persecution, led by the infamous Vicente San Bruno. The patriots found in Santiago—among whom were members of the First Junta—were exiled to the Juan Fernández Islands. Far from pacifying the patriots, these actions served to incite them, and soon even the most moderate concluded that anything short of independence was intolerable.

A large group of patriots (among them Carrera and O'Higgins) decided to flee to Mendoza, an Andean province of the newly independent Argentina. At the time, the governor of this province was José de San Martín, a leader of the Argentine independence movement who would become regarded as the "Simón Bolívar" of the southern part of Spanish South America. Upon the arrival of the exiles, San Martín immediately began to favor O'Higgins (probably because of their shared membership in the Logia Lautaro, a pro-independence secret society). Carrera's influence begun to fade and ended finally when he was executed by firing squad in 1821.

 
Manuel Rodríguez

While San Martín and O'Higgins organized an army to recross the Andes and recapture Santiago, they charged the lawyer Manuel Rodríguez with the task of mounting a guerrilla campaign. The goals of the campaign were to keep the Spanish forces off balance, ridicule San Bruno, and generally bolster the morale of the patriots. Through his subsequent daring exploits, Rodríguez became a romantic hero of the revolution. In one of his more celebrated actions, he disguised himself as a beggar and succeeded in obtaining alms from Governor Marcó del Pont himself, who by that time had put a price on Rodríguez's head.

The liberating Army of the Andes was prepared by 1817. After a difficult crossing the Andes, royalist forces led by Rafael Maroto were encountered on the plain of Chacabuco, to the north of Santiago. The resulting Battle of Chacabuco, on February 12, 1817, was a decisive victory for the independence forces. As a result, the patriots re-entered Santiago. San Martín was proclaimed Supreme Director, but he declined the offer and put O'Higgins in the post, where he would remain until 1823. On the first anniversary of the Battle of Chacabuco, O'Higgins formally declared independence.

Patria Nueva

 
Bernardo O’Higgins, 'libertador' of Chile

During the preceding time, Joaquín de la Pezuela was installed as a new viceroy in Peru. He resolved to recall his son-in-law, Mariano Osorio, sending him south with another expeditionary force. The troops disembarked at Concepcion, and recruited a number of Amerindians to join their ranks. Meanwhile, Bernardo O'Higgins moved north to somehow stop the advance of the royalists. However, his forces were surprised and very badly beaten at the Second Battle of Cancha Rayada on March 18, 1818. In the confusion, a false rumor spread that San Martin and O'Higgins had died, and a panic seized the patriot troops, many of whom agitated for a full retreat back across the Andes to Mendoza. In these critical circumstances, the erstwhile Manuel Rodríguez jumped to the lead, haranguing and rallying the soldiers with the cry "There's still a country, citizens!" He named himself Supreme Director, a position which he would occupy for exactly 30 hours, which was the time the living, but wounded, O'Higgins took to return to Santiago and reclaim command.

Then, on April 5, 1818, San Martín inflicted a decisive defeat on Osorio the Battle of Maipú, after which the depleted royalists retreated to Concepcion, never again to launch a major offensive against Santiago. Independence was all but secured, and worries about internal divisions were allayed when O'Higgins saluted San Martín as savior of the country, a moment which came to be known as the Embrace of Maipú.

Total war

To further secure Chilean independence, San Martín launched a series of actions against armed bands in the mountains, consisting of assorted outlaws, royalists, and Indians who had taken advantage of the chaos of military expeditions and forced recruitments to pillage and sack the countryside. This time of irregular warfare was later called the Guerra a muerte (Total war) for its merciless tactics, as neither the guerillas nor the government soldiers took prisoners. Only after the band of Vicente Benavides was liquidated in 1822 was the region around Concepcion finally pacified.

Incorporation of Valdivia and Chiloé

 
Resignation of O'Higgins

As San Martín worked to establish internal stability, O'Higgins also looked to defend the country against further external threats by the Spanish and continue to roll back imperial control. He developed the Chilean navy as a line of defense against seaborne attacks, placing the Scotsman Lord Cochrane in the post of admiral. In 1820, Cochrane administered a stunning blow to the remaining royalist forces in a successful attack on a complex of fortifications at Valdivia. Later Cochrane disembarked troops under commander William Miller at northern Chiloé Island in order to conquer the last Spanish stronghold in Chile, the Archipelago of Chiloé. This failed attempt ended in the minor but significant Battle of Agüi. Later on, Georges Beauchef headed from Valdivia an expedition to secure Osorno so that the Spanish would not reoccupy Valdivia from the land. Beauchef inflicted a decisive defeat on the royalists at the Battle of El Toro.

In any case, San Martín and O'Higgins were in agreement that the danger would not be passed until the Viceroyalty of Peru itself was independent from Spain. Thus, a fleet and army was prepared for an expedition to the country, and in 1820, San Martín and Cochrane set off for Peru. However, the audacious and daring character of Cochrane conflicted with the excessive prudence of San Martín. San Martín let escape a number of opportunities to land the decisive blow against the viceroy,[citation needed] and in the end it was Simón Bolívar who launched the final offensive after coming down from Colombia, Peruvian independence was secured after the Battle of Ayacucho on December 9, 1824, in which forces led by Antonio José de Sucre—a lieutenant of Bolívar—defeated the royalist army for good.

In Chilean historiography, the Patria Nueva generally ends in 1823, with the resignation of O'Higgins. However, the last Spanish territory in Chile, the archipelago of Chiloé, was not conquered until 1826, during the government of Ramón Freire, O'Higgins' successor.

Economic impact

The independence wars in Chile (1810–1818) and Peru (1809–1824) had a negative impact on the Chilean wheat industry. Trade was disrupted and armies in Chile pillaged the countryside. The Guerra a muerte phase was particularly destructive and ended only to see a period of outlaw banditry (e.g. Pincheira brothers) occur until the late 1820s.[2] Trade with Peru did not fully recover after the independence struggles.[2] Being isolated from Central Chile by hostile Mapuche-controlled territory and dependent upon seaborne trade with the port of Callao in Peru the city of Valdivia was particularly badly hit by the decline of the trade with Peru. The fortune of this city would not shift until the arrival of German settlers in the late 1840s.[3]

Much of the war effort was financed with silver from Agua Amarga, a mining area south of Vallenar discovered in 1811.[4] Chile adopted a free trade policy already in 1811 with the "Decreto de Libre Comercio".[5] This allowed the country in the mid-19th century to exploit the opportunities that the California Gold Rush and the Australian gold rushes created for exporting wheat.[6][7]

In 1822 Bernardo O'Higgins government obtained a large loan in London to finance the independence struggle. The resulting Chilean independence debt took decades to regularize, ending the default in 1840s thanks to the efforts of the Ministers of Finance Manuel Rengifo and Joaquín Tocornal plus the favourable international markers for Chilean silver, copper and wheat.[8][9]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Chile". World Statesmen. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
  2. ^ a b (in Spanish) Villalobos, Sergio; Silva, Osvaldo; Silva, Fernando and Estelle, Patricio. 1974. Historia De Chile. Editorial Universitaria, Chile. pp. 406–413.
  3. ^ Bernedo Pinto, Patricio (1999), "Los industriales alemanes de Valdivia, 1850–1914" (PDF), Historia, 32: 5–42
  4. ^ Cortés Lutz, Guillermo (2017). Chañarcillo, cuando de las montañas brotó la plata (PDF). Cuadernos de Historia (in Spanish). Vol. II. Museo Regional de Atacama. p. 25.
  5. ^ (in Spanish) Historia contemporánea de Chile III. La economía: mercados empresarios y trabajadores. 2002. Gabriel Salazar and Julio Pinto. pp. 19–20.
  6. ^ (in Spanish) La Hacienda (1830–1930). Memoria Chilena.
  7. ^ (in Spanish) Villalobos, Sergio; Silva, Osvaldo; Silva, Fernando and Estelle, Patricio. 1974. Historia De Chile. Editorial Universitaria, Chile. pp. 481–485.
  8. ^ "La deuda pública externa de Chile (1810–2004)" [The external public debt of Chile (1810–2004)]. Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved May 18, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ Pérez Herrero, Pedro (2015). "El orden portaliano (1830–1840)". In Pérez Herrero, Pedro; Sanz, Eva (eds.). Fiscalidad, integración social y política exterior en el pensamiento liberal atlántico (1810–1930) (in Spanish). pp. 237–238. ISBN 978-84-9123-174-5.

Further reading

  • Barros Arana, Diego (1850). Estudios históricos sobre Vicente Benavides i las campañas del Sur: 1818–1822 (in Spanish). Santiago: Imprenta de Julio Belin i Compañia.
  • Barros Arana, Diego (1855). Historia Jeneral de la Independencia de Chile (in Spanish). Vol. I–IV. Santiago: Imprenta del Ferrocarril.
  • Barros Arana, Diego (1884–1902). Historia Jeneral de Chile (in Spanish). Vol. I–XVI. Santiago: Rafael Jover. ISBN 978-0598482358.
  • Castedo, Leopoldo (1954). Resumen de la Historia de Chile de Francisco Antonio Encina (in Spanish). Vol. 2. Santiago: Empresa Editora Zig-Zag.
  • Encina, Francisco Antonio (1940–1952). Historia de Chile: desde la prehistoria hasta 1891 (in Spanish). Vol. I–XX. Santiago: Editorial Nascimento.
  • Gay, Claudio (1856). Historia de la Independencia Chilena (in Spanish). Vol. I & II. Paris: Imprenta de E. Thunot y Cia.
  • Harvey, Robert. "Liberators: Latin America`s Struggle For Independence, 1810–1830". John Murray: London (2000). ISBN 0-7195-5566-3
  • Herring, Hubert (1968). A History of Latin America. New York: Alfred A Knopf.
  • Prago, Albert (1970). The Revolutions in Spanish America. New York: The Macmillan Company.
  • Vicuña Mackenna, Benjamín (1849). El sitio de Chillán (in Spanish). Santiago: Periodico La Tribuna.
  • Vicuña Mackenna, Benjamín (1868). La guerra a muerte: memoria sobre las últimas campañas de la Independencia de Chile (1819–1824) (in Spanish). Santiago: Imprenta Nacional. p. 562.

chilean, independence, battle, chile, redirects, here, film, patricio, guzman, battle, chile, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, prec. Battle of Chile redirects here For the film by Patricio Guzman see The Battle of Chile This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Chilean War of Independence Spanish Guerra de la Independencia de Chile War of Independence of Chile was a military and political event that allowed the emancipation of Chile from the Spanish Monarchy ending the colonial period and initiating the formation of an independent republic Chilean War of IndependencePart of the Spanish American Wars of independenceClockwise from top left Battle of El Roble Battle of Rancagua Crossing of the Andes First Government Junta Battle of Maipu Date1810 1826LocationNorth center and south of Chile American Pacific Ocean and also other regions of Spanish America ResultChilean victory Chile s independence from the Spanish Crown BelligerentsPatriots Chile Patria Vieja until 1814 Chile Patria Nueva since 1817 United ProvincesMapuche allies of the PatriotsRoyalists Spanish Monarchy Viceroyalty of Peru Captaincy General of Chile Governorate of ChiloeMapuche allies of the RoyalistsCommanders and leadersJ M Carrera B O Higgins Ramon Freire Blanco Encalada Thomas Cochrane Jose de San Martin Juan G de las HerasAntonio Pareja Gabino Gainza Mariano Osorio F del Pont POW Vicente Benavides A de Quintanilla It developed in the context of the Spanish American Wars of independence a military and political process that began after the formation of self government juntas in the Spanish American colonies in response to the capture of King Ferdinand VII of Spain by Napoleonic forces in 1808 The First Government Junta of Chile was formed for that purpose But then it began to gradually radicalize which caused a military struggle between Patriots who were looking for a definitive separation from the Spanish Crown and Royalists who sought to maintain unity with her Traditionally Chilean historiography covers this period between the establishment of the First Government Junta of Chile September 18 1810 and the resignation of Bernardo O Higgins as Supreme Director of Chile January 28 1823 It is also subdivided into three stages the Patria Vieja 1810 1814 Reconquista 1814 1817 and the Patria Nueva 1817 1823 Although the war began in 1812 the year in which the first hostile actions took place and lasted until 1826 when the last royalist forces were defeated in Chiloe Archipelago A declaration of independence was officially issued by Chile on February 12 1818 and formally recognized by Spain in 1844 when full diplomatic relations were established 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Patria Vieja 2 1 First Junta 2 2 Carrera dictatorship 2 3 Spanish invasions 3 Reconquista 4 Patria Nueva 4 1 Total war 4 2 Incorporation of Valdivia and Chiloe 5 Economic impact 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingBackground EditAt the start of 1808 the Captaincy General of Chile one of the smallest and poorest colonies in the Spanish Empire was under the administration of Luis Munoz de Guzman an able respected and well liked Royal Governor In May 1808 the overthrow of Charles IV and Ferdinand VII their replacement by Joseph Bonaparte and the start of the Peninsular War plunged the empire into a state of agitation In the meantime Chile was facing its own internal political problems Governor Guzman had suddenly died in February of that year and the crown had not been able to appoint a new governor before the invasion After a brief interim regency by Juan Rodriguez Ballesteros and according to the succession law in place at the time the position was laid claim to and assumed by the most senior military commander who happened to be Brigadier Francisco Garcia Carrasco Garcia Carrasco took over the post of Governor of Chile in April and in August the news of the Napoleonic invasion of Spain and of the conformation of a Supreme Central Junta to govern the Empire in the absence of a legitimate king reached the country In the meantime Charlotte Joaquina sister of Ferdinand and wife of the King of Portugal who was living in Brazil also made attempts to obtain the administration of the Spanish dominions in Latin America Since her father and brother were being held prisoners in France she regarded herself as the heiress of her captured family Allegedly among her plan was to send armies to occupy Buenos Aires and northern Argentina and to style herself as Queen of La Plata Brigadier Garcia Carrasco was a man of crude and authoritarian manners who managed in a very short time to alienate the criollo elites under his command Already in Chile as in most of Latin America there had been some independence agitation but minimal and concentrated in the very ineffectual Conspiracy of the Tres Antonios back in 1781 The majority of the people were fervent royalists but were divided into two groups those who favored the status quo and the divine right of Ferdinand VII known as absolutists and those who wanted to proclaim Charlotte Joaquina as Queen known as carlotists A third group was composed of those who proposed the replacement of the Spanish authorities with a local junta of notable citizens which would conform a provisional government to rule in the absence of the king and an independent Spain known as juntistas Mateo de Toro Zambrano In 1809 Governor Garcia Carrasco himself was implicated in a flagrant case of corruption the Scorpion scandal that managed to destroy whatever remnants of moral authority he or his office had left From that moment on the pressure for his removal began to build In June 1810 news arrived from Buenos Aires that Napoleon Bonaparte s forces had conquered Andalusia and laid siege to Cadiz the last redoubt against the French on Spanish soil Moreover the Supreme Central Junta which had governed the Empire for the past two years had abolished itself in favor of a Regency Council Garcia Carrasco who was a supporter of the carlotist group managed to magnify the political problems by taking arbitrary and harsh measures such as the arrest and deportation to Lima without due process of well known and socially prominent citizens under simple suspicions of having been sympathetic to the junta idea Among those arrested were Jose Antonio de Rojas Juan Antonio Ovalle and Bernardo de Vera y Pintado Inspired by the May Revolution in Argentina the autonomy movement had also propagated through the criollo elite They resented the illegal arrests and together with the news that Cadiz was all that was left of a free Spain finally solidified in their opposition to the Governor Brigadier Garcia Carrasco was suspended from office and forced to resign on July 16 1810 to be in turn replaced by the next most senior soldier Mateo de Toro Zambrano Count of la Conquista even though a legitimate Governor Francisco Javier de Elio had already been appointed by the Viceroy of Peru Count Toro Zambrano was by all standards a very unorthodox selection He was a very old man already 82 years old at the time and moreover a criollo someone born in the colonies as opposed to a peninsular someone born in Spain Immediately after his appointment in July the juntistas began to lobby him in order to obtain the formation of a junta In August the Royal Appeals Court Spanish Real Audiencia took a public loyalty oath to the Regency Council in front of a massive audience which put added pressure on the Governor to define himself After vacillating for some time over which party to follow Toro Zambrano finally agreed to hold an open Cabildo city hall meeting in Santiago to discuss the issue The date was set for September 18 1810 at 11 am Patria Vieja EditMain article Patria Vieja First Junta Edit Opening session of the First Junta From the very beginning the juntistas took the political initiative As soon as the Cabildo was called they were able to place their members in the committee charged with sending the invitations thus manipulating the attendance lists to their own advantage At the September 18 session they grabbed center stage with shouts of Junta queremos junta queremos We want a junta We want a junta Count Toro Zambrano faced with this very public show of force acceded to their demands by depositing his ceremonial baton on top of the main table and saying Here is the baton take it and rule The Government Junta of the Kingdom of Chile also known as the First Junta was organized with the same powers as a Royal Governor Their first measure was to take a loyalty oath to Ferdinand VII as legitimate King Count Toro Zambrano was elected President and the rest of the positions were distributed equally among all parties but the real power was left in the hands of the secretary Juan Martinez de Rozas The Junta then proceeded to take some concrete measures that had been long held aspirations of the colonials it created a militia for the defense of the kingdom decreed freedom of trade with all nations that were allied to Spain or neutrals a unique tariff of 134 for all imports with the exception of printing presses books and guns which were liberated from all taxes and in order to increase its representativity ordered the convocatory of a National Congress Immediately political intrigue began amongst the ruling elite with news of the political turbulence and wars of Europe all the while coming in It was eventually decided that elections for the National Congress to be composed of 42 representatives would be held in 1811 Juan Martinez de Rozas Three political factions started to coalesce the Extremists Spanish exaltados the Moderates Spanish moderados and the Royalists Spanish realistas These groups were all decidedly against independence from Spain and differentiated themselves only in the degree of political autonomy that they sought The Moderates under the leadership of Jose Miguel Infante were a majority and wanted a very slow pace of reforms since they were afraid that once the King was back in power he would think that they were seeking independence and would roll back all changes The Extremists were the second most important group and they advocated a larger degree of freedom from the Crown and a faster pace of reforms stopping just short of full independence Their leader was Juan Martinez de Rozas The Royalists were against any reform at all and for the maintenance of the status quo By March 1811 36 representatives had already been elected in all major cities with the exception of Santiago and Valparaiso The great political surprise up to that point had been the results from the other center of power Concepcion in which Royalists had defeated the supporters of Juan Martinez de Rozas In the rest of Chile the results were more or less equally divided twelve pro Rozas delegates fourteen anti Rozas and three Royalists So the Santiago elections were the key to Rozas desire to remain in power This election was supposed to take place on April 10 but before they could be called the Figueroa mutiny broke out On April 1 Royalist colonel Tomas de Figueroa considering the notion of elections to be too populist led a revolt in Santiago The revolt sputtered and Figueroa was arrested and summarily executed The mutiny was successful in that temporarily sabotaged the elections which had to be delayed Eventually however a National Congress was duly elected and all 6 deputies from Santiago came from the Moderate camp Nonetheless the mutiny also encouraged a radicalization of political postures Although Moderates who continued advocating political control of the elites and greater autonomy without a complete rupture from Spain gained the majority of seats a vocal minority was formed by Extremist revolutionaries who now wanted complete and instant independence from Spain The Real Audiencia of Chile a long standing pillar of Spanish rule was dissolved for its alleged complicity with the mutiny The idea of full independence gained momentum for the first time Carrera dictatorship Edit Jose Miguel Carrera During this time a well connected young man and a veteran of the Peninsular War Jose Miguel Carrera returned to Chile from Spain Quickly he was involved with the intrigues of various Extremists who plotted to wrest power from Martinez de Rozas through armed means After two coups both in the end of 1811 the ambitious Carrera managed to take power inaugurating a dictatorship Prominent members of the government were Carrera s brothers Juan Jose and Luis as well as Bernardo O Higgins Meanwhile a provisional Constitution of 1812 was promulgated with a marked liberal character An example of this is the stipulation that no order that emanates from outside the territory of Chile will have any effect and anyone who tries to enforce such an order will be treated as a traitor Carrera also created patriotic emblems for the Patria Vieja such as the flag shield and insignia Also during his government the first Chilean newspaper the La Aurora de Chile was published under the editorship of Friar Camilo Henriquez It supported the independence movement Additionally Carrera was responsible for bringing the first American consul to Chile This was important as it established a direct link between the liberalism and federalism of the United States with the principles of the Chilean independence movement Finally he founded the Instituto Nacional de Chile and the National Library of Chile Both of these prestigious institutions have survived to the present day Spanish invasions Edit Bernardo O Higgins The triumph of rebellions both in Chile and Argentina disquieted the Viceroy of Peru Jose Fernando de Abascal As a result in 1813 he sent a military expedition by sea under the command of Antonio Pareja to deal with the situation in Chile and sent another force by land to attack northern Argentina The troops landed in Concepcion where they were received with applause Pareja then attempted to take Santiago This effort failed as did a subsequent inconclusive assault led by Gabino Gainza However this was not due to the military performance of Carrera whose incompetence led to the rise of the moderate O Higgins who eventually took supreme control of the pro independence forces Harassed on all sides Carrera resigned in what is commonly taken to mark the beginning of the period of the Reconquista After the attempt by Gainza the two sides had signed the Treaty of Lircay on May 14 nominally bringing peace but effectively only providing a breathing space Abascal had no intention of honoring the treaty and that very year sent a much more decisive force southwards under the command of Mariano Osorio The royalist force landed and moved to Chillan demanding complete surrender O Higgins wanted to defend the city of Rancagua while Carrera wanted to make the stand at the pass of Angostura a more felicitous defensive position but also closer to Santiago Because of the disagreements and resulting lack of coordination the independence forces were divided and O Higgins was obliged to meet the royalists at Rancagua without reinforcements The resulting battle the Disaster of Rancagua on October 1 and 2 of 1814 was fought fiercely but ended in stunning defeat for the independence forces of which only 500 of the original 5 000 survived A little while later Osorio entered Santiago and put the rebellion of the Patria Vieja to an end Reconquista EditSee also Reconquest Chile Francisco Casimiro Marco del Pont The viceroy Abascal confirmed Mariano Osorio as governor of Chile although a later disagreement between the two would result in Osorio s removal and the installation of Francisco Casimiro Marco del Pont as governor in 1815 In any case the Spanish believed that it was necessary to teach the revolutionaries a good lesson and embarked on a campaign of fierce political persecution led by the infamous Vicente San Bruno The patriots found in Santiago among whom were members of the First Junta were exiled to the Juan Fernandez Islands Far from pacifying the patriots these actions served to incite them and soon even the most moderate concluded that anything short of independence was intolerable A large group of patriots among them Carrera and O Higgins decided to flee to Mendoza an Andean province of the newly independent Argentina At the time the governor of this province was Jose de San Martin a leader of the Argentine independence movement who would become regarded as the Simon Bolivar of the southern part of Spanish South America Upon the arrival of the exiles San Martin immediately began to favor O Higgins probably because of their shared membership in the Logia Lautaro a pro independence secret society Carrera s influence begun to fade and ended finally when he was executed by firing squad in 1821 Manuel Rodriguez While San Martin and O Higgins organized an army to recross the Andes and recapture Santiago they charged the lawyer Manuel Rodriguez with the task of mounting a guerrilla campaign The goals of the campaign were to keep the Spanish forces off balance ridicule San Bruno and generally bolster the morale of the patriots Through his subsequent daring exploits Rodriguez became a romantic hero of the revolution In one of his more celebrated actions he disguised himself as a beggar and succeeded in obtaining alms from Governor Marco del Pont himself who by that time had put a price on Rodriguez s head The liberating Army of the Andes was prepared by 1817 After a difficult crossing the Andes royalist forces led by Rafael Maroto were encountered on the plain of Chacabuco to the north of Santiago The resulting Battle of Chacabuco on February 12 1817 was a decisive victory for the independence forces As a result the patriots re entered Santiago San Martin was proclaimed Supreme Director but he declined the offer and put O Higgins in the post where he would remain until 1823 On the first anniversary of the Battle of Chacabuco O Higgins formally declared independence Patria Nueva EditSee also First Chilean Navy Squadron Bernardo O Higgins libertador of Chile During the preceding time Joaquin de la Pezuela was installed as a new viceroy in Peru He resolved to recall his son in law Mariano Osorio sending him south with another expeditionary force The troops disembarked at Concepcion and recruited a number of Amerindians to join their ranks Meanwhile Bernardo O Higgins moved north to somehow stop the advance of the royalists However his forces were surprised and very badly beaten at the Second Battle of Cancha Rayada on March 18 1818 In the confusion a false rumor spread that San Martin and O Higgins had died and a panic seized the patriot troops many of whom agitated for a full retreat back across the Andes to Mendoza In these critical circumstances the erstwhile Manuel Rodriguez jumped to the lead haranguing and rallying the soldiers with the cry There s still a country citizens He named himself Supreme Director a position which he would occupy for exactly 30 hours which was the time the living but wounded O Higgins took to return to Santiago and reclaim command Then on April 5 1818 San Martin inflicted a decisive defeat on Osorio the Battle of Maipu after which the depleted royalists retreated to Concepcion never again to launch a major offensive against Santiago Independence was all but secured and worries about internal divisions were allayed when O Higgins saluted San Martin as savior of the country a moment which came to be known as the Embrace of Maipu Total war Edit Main article Guerra a muerte To further secure Chilean independence San Martin launched a series of actions against armed bands in the mountains consisting of assorted outlaws royalists and Indians who had taken advantage of the chaos of military expeditions and forced recruitments to pillage and sack the countryside This time of irregular warfare was later called the Guerra a muerte Total war for its merciless tactics as neither the guerillas nor the government soldiers took prisoners Only after the band of Vicente Benavides was liquidated in 1822 was the region around Concepcion finally pacified Incorporation of Valdivia and Chiloe Edit Resignation of O Higgins As San Martin worked to establish internal stability O Higgins also looked to defend the country against further external threats by the Spanish and continue to roll back imperial control He developed the Chilean navy as a line of defense against seaborne attacks placing the Scotsman Lord Cochrane in the post of admiral In 1820 Cochrane administered a stunning blow to the remaining royalist forces in a successful attack on a complex of fortifications at Valdivia Later Cochrane disembarked troops under commander William Miller at northern Chiloe Island in order to conquer the last Spanish stronghold in Chile the Archipelago of Chiloe This failed attempt ended in the minor but significant Battle of Agui Later on Georges Beauchef headed from Valdivia an expedition to secure Osorno so that the Spanish would not reoccupy Valdivia from the land Beauchef inflicted a decisive defeat on the royalists at the Battle of El Toro In any case San Martin and O Higgins were in agreement that the danger would not be passed until the Viceroyalty of Peru itself was independent from Spain Thus a fleet and army was prepared for an expedition to the country and in 1820 San Martin and Cochrane set off for Peru However the audacious and daring character of Cochrane conflicted with the excessive prudence of San Martin San Martin let escape a number of opportunities to land the decisive blow against the viceroy citation needed and in the end it was Simon Bolivar who launched the final offensive after coming down from Colombia Peruvian independence was secured after the Battle of Ayacucho on December 9 1824 in which forces led by Antonio Jose de Sucre a lieutenant of Bolivar defeated the royalist army for good In Chilean historiography the Patria Nueva generally ends in 1823 with the resignation of O Higgins However the last Spanish territory in Chile the archipelago of Chiloe was not conquered until 1826 during the government of Ramon Freire O Higgins successor Economic impact EditSee also Chilean wheat cycle and Chilean silver rush The independence wars in Chile 1810 1818 and Peru 1809 1824 had a negative impact on the Chilean wheat industry Trade was disrupted and armies in Chile pillaged the countryside The Guerra a muerte phase was particularly destructive and ended only to see a period of outlaw banditry e g Pincheira brothers occur until the late 1820s 2 Trade with Peru did not fully recover after the independence struggles 2 Being isolated from Central Chile by hostile Mapuche controlled territory and dependent upon seaborne trade with the port of Callao in Peru the city of Valdivia was particularly badly hit by the decline of the trade with Peru The fortune of this city would not shift until the arrival of German settlers in the late 1840s 3 Much of the war effort was financed with silver from Agua Amarga a mining area south of Vallenar discovered in 1811 4 Chile adopted a free trade policy already in 1811 with the Decreto de Libre Comercio 5 This allowed the country in the mid 19th century to exploit the opportunities that the California Gold Rush and the Australian gold rushes created for exporting wheat 6 7 In 1822 Bernardo O Higgins government obtained a large loan in London to finance the independence struggle The resulting Chilean independence debt took decades to regularize ending the default in 1840s thanks to the efforts of the Ministers of Finance Manuel Rengifo and Joaquin Tocornal plus the favourable international markers for Chilean silver copper and wheat 8 9 See also Edit Spain portal Latin America portal War portal Chile portalArgentine War of Independence Antonio de Quintanilla Antonio Pareja Antonio Jose de Sucre Bernardo O Higgins Camilo Henriquez Charlotte Joaquina Francisco Garcia Carrasco Francisco Marco del Pont Ferdinand VII Founding of Talca Gabino Gainza Juan Albano Pereira Marquez Georges Beauchef Logia Lautaro Lord Thomas Cochrane Manuel Rodriguez Mariano Osorio Mateo de Toro Zambrano Joaquin de la Pezuela Luisa Recabarren de Marin Jose de San Martin Jose Fernando de Abascal Jose Miguel Carrera Jose Miguel Infante Juan Martinez de Rozas Ramon Freire Rafael Maroto Simon Bolivar Vicente Benavides Vicente San Bruno William MillerReferences Edit Chile World Statesmen Retrieved 31 March 2012 a b in Spanish Villalobos Sergio Silva Osvaldo Silva Fernando and Estelle Patricio 1974 Historia De Chile Editorial Universitaria Chile pp 406 413 Bernedo Pinto Patricio 1999 Los industriales alemanes de Valdivia 1850 1914 PDF Historia 32 5 42 Cortes Lutz Guillermo 2017 Chanarcillo cuando de las montanas broto la plata PDF Cuadernos de Historia in Spanish Vol II Museo Regional de Atacama p 25 in Spanish Historia contemporanea de Chile III La economia mercados empresarios y trabajadores 2002 Gabriel Salazar and Julio Pinto pp 19 20 in Spanish La Hacienda 1830 1930 Memoria Chilena in Spanish Villalobos Sergio Silva Osvaldo Silva Fernando and Estelle Patricio 1974 Historia De Chile Editorial Universitaria Chile pp 481 485 La deuda publica externa de Chile 1810 2004 The external public debt of Chile 1810 2004 Memoria Chilena in Spanish Biblioteca Nacional de Chile Retrieved May 18 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Perez Herrero Pedro 2015 El orden portaliano 1830 1840 In Perez Herrero Pedro Sanz Eva eds Fiscalidad integracion social y politica exterior en el pensamiento liberal atlantico 1810 1930 in Spanish pp 237 238 ISBN 978 84 9123 174 5 Further reading Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Independence of Chile Spanish Texts Barros Arana Diego 1850 Estudios historicos sobre Vicente Benavides i las campanas del Sur 1818 1822 in Spanish Santiago Imprenta de Julio Belin i Compania Barros Arana Diego 1855 Historia Jeneral de la Independencia de Chile in Spanish Vol I IV Santiago Imprenta del Ferrocarril Barros Arana Diego 1884 1902 Historia Jeneral de Chile in Spanish Vol I XVI Santiago Rafael Jover ISBN 978 0598482358 Castedo Leopoldo 1954 Resumen de la Historia de Chile de Francisco Antonio Encina in Spanish Vol 2 Santiago Empresa Editora Zig Zag Encina Francisco Antonio 1940 1952 Historia de Chile desde la prehistoria hasta 1891 in Spanish Vol I XX Santiago Editorial Nascimento Gay Claudio 1856 Historia de la Independencia Chilena in Spanish Vol I amp II Paris Imprenta de E Thunot y Cia Harvey Robert Liberators Latin America s Struggle For Independence 1810 1830 John Murray London 2000 ISBN 0 7195 5566 3 Herring Hubert 1968 A History of Latin America New York Alfred A Knopf Prago Albert 1970 The Revolutions in Spanish America New York The Macmillan Company Vicuna Mackenna Benjamin 1849 El sitio de Chillan in Spanish Santiago Periodico La Tribuna Vicuna Mackenna Benjamin 1868 La guerra a muerte memoria sobre las ultimas campanas de la Independencia de Chile 1819 1824 in Spanish Santiago Imprenta Nacional p 562 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chilean War of Independence amp oldid 1137349840, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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