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José de San Martín

José Francisco de San Martín y Matorras (25 February 1778 – 17 August 1850), known simply as José de San Martín (Spanish pronunciation: [xoˈse ðe san maɾˈtin] (listen)) or the Liberator of Argentina, Chile and Peru,[1] was an Argentine general and the primary leader of the southern and central parts of South America's successful struggle for independence from the Spanish Empire who served as the Protector of Peru. Born in Yapeyú, Corrientes, in modern-day Argentina, he left the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata at the early age of seven to study in Málaga, Spain.

José de San Martín
Late 1820s painting
Member of the Third Triumvirate
In office
18 April – 20 April 1815
Preceded byCarlos María de Alvear
Succeeded byJosé Rondeau
Protector of Peru
In office
28 July 1821 – 20 September 1822
Governor of Cuyo
In office
10 August 1814 – 24 September 1816
Preceded byMarcos González de Balcarce
Succeeded byToribio de Luzuriaga
Personal details
Born(1778-02-25)25 February 1778
Yapeyú, Corrientes, Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata (now Argentina)
Died17 August 1850(1850-08-17) (aged 72)
Boulogne-sur-Mer, France
Political partyPatriot
SpouseMaría de los Remedios de Escalada y la Quintana
ChildrenMaría de las Mercedes Tomasa de San Martín y Escalada
ProfessionMilitary
Signature
NicknameThe Liberator of America
Military service
Allegiance
Years of service1789–1822
Ranklieutenant colonel (the rank that he had in the Spanish army), General of Argentina, Commander-in-Chief of the armies of Chile, Peru and Argentina, Generalissimo
CommandsRegiment of Mounted Grenadiers, Army of the North, Army of the Andes, Chilean Army
Battles/wars

In 1808, after taking part in the Peninsular War against France, San Martín contacted South American supporters of independence from Spain in London. In 1812, he set sail for Buenos Aires and offered his services to the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, present-day Argentina. After the Battle of San Lorenzo and time commanding the Army of the North during 1814, he organized a plan to defeat the Spanish forces that menaced the United Provinces from the north, using an alternative path to the Viceroyalty of Peru. This objective first involved the establishment of a new army, the Army of the Andes, in Cuyo Province, Argentina. From there, he led the Crossing of the Andes to Chile, and triumphed at the Battle of Chacabuco and the Battle of Maipú (1818), thus liberating Chile from royalist rule. Then he sailed to attack the Spanish stronghold of Lima, Peru.

On 12 July 1821, after seizing partial control of Lima, San Martín was appointed Protector of Peru, and Peruvian independence was officially declared on 28 July. On 26 July 1822, after a closed-door meeting with fellow libertador Simón Bolívar at Guayaquil, Ecuador, Bolívar took over the task of fully liberating Peru. San Martín unexpectedly left the country and resigned the command of his army, excluding himself from politics and the military, and moved to France in 1824. The details of that meeting would be a subject of debate by later historians.

San Martín is regarded as a national hero of Argentina, Chile, and Peru, a great military commander, and one of the Liberators of Spanish South America. The Order of the Liberator General San Martín (Orden del Libertador General San Martín), created in his honor, is the highest decoration conferred by the Argentine government.

Early life

José de San Martín's father, Juan de San Martín,[2] son of Andrés de San Martín and Isidora Gómez, was born in the town of Cervatos de la Cueza, in the current Province of Palencia (former Kingdom of León, in Spain) and was lieutenant governor of the department. He served as a military man to the Spanish Crown and in 1774 he was appointed Governor of the Yapeyú Department, part of the Government of the Guaraní Missions, created to administer the thirty Guaraní Jesuit missions, after the order was expelled from Hispanic America by Carlos III in 1767. based in Yapeyú reduction, and Gregoria Matorras del Ser. He was born in Yapeyú, Corrientes, an Indian reduction of Guaraní people.[3] The exact year of his birth is disputed, as there are no records of his baptism. Later documents formulated during his life, such as passports, military career records and wedding documentation, gave him varying ages. Most of these documents point to his year of birth as either 1777 or 1778.[4] The family moved to Buenos Aires in 1781, when San Martín was three or four years old.

Juan requested to be transferred to Spain, leaving the Americas in 1783. The family settled in Madrid, but as Juan was unable to earn a promotion, they moved to Málaga. Once in the city, San Martín enrolled in Málaga's school of temporalities, beginning his studies in 1785.[5] It is unlikely that he finished the six-year-long elementary education, before he enrolled in the Regiment of Murcia in 1789, when he reached the required age of 11. He began his military career as a cadet in the Murcian Infantry Unit.[6]

Military career in Europe

 
The Battle of Bailén was one of the most important battles fought by José de San Martín at the Peninsular War.

San Martín took part in several Spanish campaigns in North Africa, fighting in Melilla and in Oran against the Moors in 1791, among others.[7] His rank was raised to Sub-Lieutenant in 1793, at the age of 15. He began a naval career during the War of the Second Coalition, when Spain was allied with France against Great Britain, during the French Revolution. His ship Santa Dorotea was captured by the Royal Navy, who kept him as a prisoner of war for some time. Soon afterward, he continued to fight in southern Spain, mainly in Cádiz and Gibraltar with the rank of Second Captain of light infantry. He continued to fight Portugal on the side of Spain in the War of the Oranges in 1801. He was promoted to captain in 1804.[8] During his stay in Cádiz he was influenced by the ideas of the Spanish Enlightenment.[9]

At the outbreak of the Peninsular War in 1808, San Martín was named adjutant of Francisco María Solano Ortiz de Rosas. Rosas, suspected of being an afrancesado, was killed by a popular uprising which overran the barracks and dragged his corpse in the streets. San Martín was appointed to the armies of Andalusia, and led a battalion of volunteers. In June 1808 his unit became incorporated into a guerrilla force led by Juan de la Cruz Mourgeón. He was nearly killed during the battle of Arjonilla, but was saved by Sergeant Juan de Dios. On 19 July 1808, Spanish and French forces engaged in the battle of Bailén, a Spanish victory that allowed the Army of Andalusia to attack and seize Madrid. For his actions during this battle, San Martín was awarded a gold medal, and his rank raised to lieutenant colonel. On 16 May 1811, he fought in the battle of Albuera under the command of general William Carr Beresford. By this time, the French armies held most of the Iberian Peninsula under their control, except for Cádiz.[10]

 
Arrival of San Martín and Carlos María de Alvear to Buenos Aires, aboard the frigate George Canning.

San Martín resigned from the Spanish army, for controversial reasons, and moved to South America, where he joined the Spanish American wars of independence. Historians propose several explanations for this action: the common ones are that he missed his native land, that he was in the employ of the British and the congruence of the goals of both wars. The first explanation suggests that when the wars of independence began San Martín thought that his duty was to return to his country and serve in the military conflict. The second explanation suggests that Britain, which would benefit from the independence of the South American countries, sent San Martín to achieve it. The third suggests that both wars were caused by the conflicts between Enlightenment ideas and absolutism, so San Martín still waged the same war; the wars in the Americas only developed separatist goals after the Spanish Absolutist Restoration.[11]

San Martín was initiated in the Lodge of Rational Knights in 1811. They met at the house of Carlos María de Alvear, other members were José Miguel Carrera, Aldao, Blanco Encalada and other criollos, American-born Spaniards. They agreed to return to their home lands and join the local revolutionary movements. San Martín asked for his retirement from the military, and moved to Britain. He stayed in the country for a short time, and met many other South Americans at a lodge held at the house of Venezuelan general Francisco de Miranda at 27 Grafton Street (now 58 Grafton Way),[12] Bloomsbury, London (the house now has a blue plaque with Miranda's name).[13] Then he sailed to Buenos Aires aboard the British ship George Canning, along with the South Americans Alvear, Francisco José de Vera and Matías Zapiola, and the Spaniards Francisco Chilavert and Eduardo Kailitz. They arrived on 9 March 1812, to serve under the First Triumvirate.[14]

South America

Argentina

A few days after his arrival in Buenos Aires in the United Provinces (formally named the Argentine Republic in 1826), San Martín was interviewed by the First Triumvirate. They appointed him a lieutenant colonel of cavalry, and asked him to create a cavalry unit, as Buenos Aires did not have good cavalry. He began to organize the Regiment of Mounted Grenadiers with Alvear and Zapiola. As Buenos Aires lacked professional military leaders, San Martín was entrusted with the protection of the whole city, but kept focused in the task of building the military unit.[15]

San Martín, Alvear and Zapiola established a local branch of the Lodge of Rational Knights, along with morenists, the former supporters of the late Mariano Moreno. This lodge sought to promote liberal ideas; its secrecy hides whether it was a real Masonic lodge, or a lodge with political goals. It had no ties to the Premier Grand Lodge of England. In September 1812, San Martín married María de los Remedios de Escalada, a 14-year-old girl from one of the local wealthy families.[16]

The lodge organized the Revolution of 8 October 1812 when the terms of office of the triumvirs Manuel de Sarratea and Feliciano Chiclana ended. Juan Martín de Pueyrredón promoted antimorenist new members, Manuel Obligado and Pedro Medrano, by preventing the vote of three deputies and thus achieving a majority. As this caused a commotion, San Martín and Alvear intervened with their military force, and the Buenos Aires Cabildo disestablished the triumvirate. It was replaced by the Second Triumvirate of Juan José Paso, Nicolás Rodríguez Peña and Antonio Álvarez Jonte.[17] The new triumvirate called the Assembly of the Year XIII and promoted San Martín to colonel.[18]

San Lorenzo

 
José de San Martín, trapped under his dead horse during the battle of San Lorenzo, is saved by Juan Bautista Cabral.

Montevideo, on the other shore of the Río de la Plata, was still a royalist stronghold. Argentine general José Rondeau laid siege to it, but the Montevidean navy eluded it by pillaging nearby cities. San Martín was sent with the new Regiment to watch the activities in the Paraná River shore.[19][20]

The Regiment followed the navy from a distance, avoiding detection. They hid in the San Carlos Convent, in San Lorenzo, Santa Fe. San Martín watched the enemy ships from the top of the convent during the night. The royalists disembarked at dawn, ready to pillage and the regiment charged into battle. San Martín employed a pincer movement to trap the royalists. He led one column and Justo Bermúdez the other.[19][21]

San Martín's horse was killed during the battle, and his leg was trapped under the corpse of the animal after the fall. A royalist, probably Zabala himself,[22][23] attempted to kill San Martín while he was trapped under his dead horse where he suffered a saber injury to his face, and a bullet wound to his arm. Juan Bautista Cabral and Juan Bautista Baigorria of San Martín's regiment intervened and saved his life; Cabral was mortally wounded, and died shortly afterwards.[22]

The battle did not have a notable influence on the war and did not prevent further pillage. Montevideo was finally subdued by Admiral William Brown during the Second Banda Oriental campaign.[23] Antonio Zabala, the leader of the Montevidean army, served under San Martín during the crossing of the Andes years later.[24]

Army of the North

 
Meeting of Manuel Belgrano and José de San Martín at the Yatasto relay.

Once again in Buenos Aires, San Martín and his wife attended to the first official performance of the Argentine National Anthem, on 28 May 1813 at the Coliseo Theater. Oral tradition has it that the premiere took place on 14 May 1813 at the home of aristocrat Mariquita Sánchez de Thompson, with San Martín also attending, but there is no documentary evidence of that.[25] The lyrics of the new anthem included several references to the secessionist will of the time.[26]

Although they were still allies, San Martín began to distance himself from Alvear, who controlled the Assembly and the lodge. Alvear opposed the merchants and the Uruguayan caudillo José Gervasio Artigas, San Martín thought that it was risky to open such conflicts when the royalists were still a threat. The Army of the North, which was operating at the Upper Peru, was defeated at the battles of Vilcapugio and Ayohuma, so the triumvirate appointed San Martín to head it, replacing Manuel Belgrano.[27][28]

San Martín and Belgrano met at the Yatasto relay. The army was in poor condition, and San Martín initially refused to remove Belgrano from the army, as it would hurt the soldiers' morale. However, the supreme director Gervasio Posadas (who replaced the triumvirate in government) insisted, and San Martín acted as instructed. San Martín stayed only a few weeks in Tucumán, reorganizing the army and studying the terrain. He also had a positive impression of the guerrilla war waged by Martín Miguel de Güemes against the royalists,[29] similar to the Peninsular War. It was a defensive war, and San Martín trusted that they could prevent a royalist advance in Jujuy.[30][31]

San Martín had health problems in April 1814, probably caused by hematemesis. He temporarily delegated the command of the Army to colonel Francisco Fernández de la Cruz and requested leave to recover. He moved to Santiago del Estero, and then to Córdoba where he slowly recovered. During this time King Ferdinand VII returned to the throne, began the absolutist restoration and began to organize an attack on the rogue colonies. After an interview with Tomás Guido, San Martín came up with a plan: organize an army in Mendoza, cross the Andes to Chile, and move to Peru by sea; all while Güemes defended the north frontier. This would place him in Peru without crossing the harsh terrain of Upper Peru, where two campaigns had already been defeated. To advance this plan, he requested the governorship of the Cuyo province, which was accepted. He took office on 6 September.[32][33]

Governor of Cuyo

 
Training of the Army of the Andes at camp Plumerillo.

The absolutist restoration in Spain and the growing influence of Artigas generated a political crisis in Buenos Aires, forcing Posadas to resign. Alvear became the new Supreme Director, but had to resign after three months. San Martín's plan was complicated as well by the Disaster of Rancagua, a royalist victory that restored absolutism in Chile, ending the Patria Vieja period. San Martín initially proposed a regular-sized army, simply to reinforce Chile, but changed to propose a larger one, to liberate the country from the occupation.[34] Chileans Bernardo O'Higgins, José Miguel Carrera, Luis Carrera and Manuel Rodríguez, the leaders of the deposed Chilean rule, sought refugee in Cuyo, along with their armies. O'Higgins and Rodríguez were well received, but the Carrera brothers intended to act as a government in exile. They ignored the local laws of Cuyo, and their soldiers committed acts of vandalism. San Martín imprisoned them and sent them to Buenos Aires. They proposed a plan to liberate Chile, different to the one outlined by San Martín, who rejected it as impractical. This initiated a rivalry between the Carreras and San Martín.[35][36]

San Martín immediately began to organize the Army of the Andes. He drafted all the citizens who could bear arms and all the slaves from ages 16 to 30, requested reinforcements to Buenos Aires, and reorganized the economy for war production. He took another leave to restore his health four months after taking power, so Alvear appointed Gregorio Perdriel. This appointment was resisted by the Mendoza Cabildo, which ratified San Martín.[37][38]

The government of San Martín repeated some of the ideas outlined in the Operations plan, drafted by Mariano Moreno at the beginning of the war. A combination of incentives, confiscations and planned economy allowed the country to provision the army: gunpowder, pieces of artillery, mules and horses, food, military clothing, etc. Mining increased, with increased extraction of lead, copper, saltpeter, sulfur and borax, which had several uses and improved local finances. Hundreds of women wove clothing used by the soldiers. Father José Luis Beltrán headed a military factory of 700 men, which produced rifles and horseshoes. San Martín stayed on good terms with both the government of Buenos Aires and the provincial caudillos, without fully allying with either one. He was able to receive provisions from both. He considered that the war of independence took priority over the civil wars.[39][40]

The army was not ready as of the summer of 1815, delaying the crossing. Given the harsh conditions on the mountains, the crossing could only be done in the summer season, when there is less snow. Buenos Aires did not send more provisions after the ousting of Alvear. San Martín proposed to resign and serve under Balcarce, if they would support the campaign. San Martín and Guido wrote a report in the autumn of 1816, detailing to the Supreme Director Antonio González de Balcarce the full military plan of operations.[41]

San Martín proposed that the country declare independence immediately, before the crossing. That way, they would be acting as a sovereign nation, and not as a mere rebellion.[42] He had great influence over the Congress of Tucumán, a Congress with deputies from the provinces, which was established in March 1816. He opposed the appointment of José Moldes, a soldier from Salta who was against the policies of Buenos Aires, as he feared Moldes would break national unity. He rejected proposals to be appointed Supreme Director himself. He supported his friend and lodge member Juan Martín de Pueyrredón for the office. Pueyrredón resumed the military aid to Cuyo. The Congress of Tucumán declared independence on 9 July 1816.[43] Congress discussed the type of government of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata (modern Argentina). General Manuel Belgrano, who had made a diplomatic mission to Europe, informed them that independence would be more easily acknowledged by the European powers if the country established a monarchy. For this purpose, Belgrano proposed a plan to crown a noble of the Inca Empire as king (the Sapa Inca dynasty had been dethroned in the 16th century).[44] San Martín supported this proposal, as well as Güemes and most deputies, except for those from Buenos Aires, who undermined the project and prevented its approval.[45]

Needing even more soldiers, San Martín extended the emancipation of slaves to the ages from 14 to 55, and even allowed them to be promoted to higher military ranks. He proposed a similar measure at the national level, but Pueyrredón encountered severe resistance. He included as well the Chileans who escaped Chile after the disaster of Rancagua, and organized them in four units, each one of infantry, cavalry, artillery and dragoons. At the end of 1816, the Army of the Andes had 5,000 men, 10,000 mules and 1,500 horses. San Martin organized military intelligence, propaganda and disinformation to confuse the royalist armies (such as the specific routes taken in the Andes), boost the national fervor of his army and promote desertion among the royalists.[46][47]

Crossing of the Andes

 
Generals José de San Martín (left) and Bernardo O'Higgins (right) during the crossing of the Andes.

Although the Congress of Tucumán had already formalized the flag of Argentina, the Army of the Andes did not use it, choosing a banner with two columns, light blue and white, and a coat of arms roughly similar to the Coat of arms of Argentina. The army did not use the flag of Argentina because it was not exclusively an Argentine army.[48]

Contrary to the common understanding, the crossing of the Andes was not the first time that a military expedition crossed the mountain range. The difference from previous operations was the size of the army, and that it had to be ready for combat right after the crossing. The army was divided in six columns, each taking a different path. Colonel Francisco Zelada in La Rioja took the Come-Caballos pass towards Copiapó. Juan Manuel Cabot, in San Juan, moved to Coquimbo. Ramón Freire and José León Lemos led two columns in the south. The bulk of the armies left from Mendoza. San Martín, O'Higgins and Soler led a column across the Los Patos pass, and Juan Gregorio de Las Heras another one across the Uspallata Pass.[49][50]

The whole operation took nearly a month. The armies took dried food for the soldiers and fodder for the horses, because of the inhospitable conditions. They also consumed garlics and onions, to prevent altitude sickness.[51] Only 4,300 mules and 511 horses survived, less than half the original complement.[52]

Manuel Rodríguez had returned to Chile before the crossing, and began a guerrilla war in Santiago de Chile against the royalists, in support of the upcoming army. He was supported in the south of the city and the countryside. The strategy was to occupy nearby villages, seize the royalists' weapons and flee. The attacks on Melipilla and San Fernando, and a failed one at Curicó, demoralized the royalists.[53][54]

Chile

Battle of Chacabuco

 
The Battle of Chacabuco between the Army of the Andes and Spanish forces in 1817.

The columns that crossed the Andes began to take military actions. The column in the north led by Cabot defeated the royalists in Salala, seized Coquimbo and then Copiapó. In the south, Ramón Freire captured Talca. Las Heras routed royalist outposts in Juncalito and Potrerillos.[55] Bernardo O'Higgins, who came from Los Patos pass, defeated the royalists at Las Coimas.[56] This allowed the main columns to gather at Aconcagua valley, meeting at the slopes of Chacabuco. Royalist commander Rafael Maroto converged his armies on that location as well. Maroto had 2,450 men and 5 pieces of artillery, San Martín had 3,600 men and 9 pieces of artillery. The misdirection that concealed the path of the bulk of the Army allowed San Martín this advantage, as other royalist forces were scattered in other regions of Chile.[57][58]

The battle began on 12 February. San Martín organized a pincer movement, with Soler leading the west column and O'Higgins the east one. O'Higgins, eager to avenge the defeat at Rancagua, rushed to the attack, instead of coordinating with Soler. This gave the royalists a brief advantage. San Martín instructed Soler to rush the attack as well. The combined attack was successful and San Martín's column secured the final victory. The battle ended with 600 royalists dead and 500 prisoners, with only 12 deaths and 120 injuries in the Army of the Andes.[59][60]

The army triumphantly entered Santiago de Chile the following day.[61] Governor Francisco Marcó del Pont attempted to escape to Valparaíso and sail to Peru, but he was captured on 22 February and returned to Santiago.[62] Several other officials were captured as well and sent as prisoners to San Luis, Argentina.[63] San Martín sent Marcó del Pont prisoner to Mendoza.[64]

Patria Nueva

 
Bernardo O'Higgins, commander of the Army of the Andes along with San Martín, and Supreme Director of Chile after the victory at Chacabuco.

Three deputies from Coquimbo, Santiago and Concepción organized a new government, and proposed San Martín as Supreme Director of Chile. He declined the offer and proposed O'Higgins in his stead: he recommended that the Supreme Director should be someone from Chile. San Martín would instead organize the navy to take the fight to Peru.[65] He established a local chapter of the Lodge of Rational Knights, named as Logia Lautaro, in reference to Mapuche leader Lautaro.[66]

The victory in Chacabuco did not liberate all Chile. Royalist forces still resisted in southern Chile, allied with local Mapuche chiefs. Las Heras occupied Concepción,[67] but failed to occupy Talcahuano.[68] The royalist resistance lasted for several months,[69] and Talcahuano was only captured when most of the continent was already free.[70]

San Martín left O'Higgins in charge of the Army, and returned to Buenos Aires to request resources for the campaign to Peru. He did not have a good reception this time. Pueyrredón thought that Chile should compensate Buenos Aires for the money invested in their liberation, as the support to San Martín reduced the support to Belgrano, and the Portuguese-Brazilian invasion of the Eastern Bank menaced Buenos Aires. Incapable of financial support, Buenos Aires sent lawyer Manuel Aguirre to the United States, to request aid and acknowledge the declaration of independence. However, the mission failed, as the United States stayed neutral in the conflict because they negotiated the purchase of Florida with Spain. The Chilean José Miguel Carrera had obtained ships on his own after the disaster of Rancagua, which he intended to use to liberate Chile; but as San Martín had already done that, he refused to place his fleet under the Army of the Andes. Carrera was an enemy of O'Higgins and sought to navigate to Chile and depose him, so Pueyrredón imprisoned him, and confiscated his ships.[71]

San Martín requested help from British Admiral William Bowles. He wrote from Chile and expected to find him in Buenos Aires, but Bowles had embarked for Río de Janeiro. Bowles considered that San Martín was more trustworthy than Alvear, and praised his support for monarchism. San Martín did not obtain the ships and interrupted the correspondence with Bowles for some months. He returned to Chile; his wife Remedios stayed in Buenos Aires with her daughter Mercedes because of her health problems. Unable to get help from either Buenos Aires or foreign powers, San Martín promoted a more decisive commitment from Chile to finance the navy.[72]

Battle of Cancha Rayada

 
The Chilean Declaration of Independence took place on 18 February 1818, shortly before the battles of Cancha Rayada and Maipú.

The failure to liberate Talcahuano was followed by naval reinforcements from the North. The viceroy of Peru sent Mariano Osorio in an attempt to reconquer Chile. The royalists would then advance by land from south to north towards Santiago. San Martín thought that it was not possible to defend Concepción, so he ordered O'Higgins to leave the city. 50,000 Chileans took cattle and grain and moved north, burning everything else, so that they did not leave supplies for the royalists. As he had done with the Tucumán Congress, San Martín urged a declaration of independence, to legitimize the government and the military actions. The Chilean Declaration of Independence was issued on 18 February 1818, one year after the battle of Chacabuco.[73][74]

San Martín, Las Heras and Balcarce met in Curicó, and the royalists in Talca, in a plain known as "Cancha rayada". As the patriots had a numeric advantage, 7,000 against 4,600, Osorio tried to avoid open battle, and tried instead a stealth operation. A spy informed San Martín that Osorio would make a surprise attack in the night, but the army could not be prepared in time. 1,000 soldiers fled, 120 died, and San Martín's assistant was killed. O'Higgins tried to resist with his unit, but retired when he was shot in the arm. Las Heras managed to retire his army in order, saving his 3,500 men. The patriots escaped to Santiago.[75][76]

Despite the defeat, the soldiers were received as heroes in Santiago. Thanks to Las Heras, a potential disaster for the patriot armies turned into a minor setback.[77] The army was reorganized again, but the deaths, injuries and desertions caused by the defeat at Cancha Rayada reduced its size to 5,000 soldiers, which was closer to the royalist forces. They took position next to the Maipo River, near Santiago.[78]

Battle of Maipú

 
The "Embrace of Maipú" between José de San Martín and Bernardo O'Higgins, after the victory in the Battle of Maipú.

San Martín made a brief reconnaissance of the royalist army, and noticed several flaws in their organization. Feeling secure of victory, he claimed that "Osorio is clumsier than I thought. Today's triumph is ours. The sun as witness!".[79] The battle began at 11:00 am. The patriot artillery on the right fired on the royalist infantry on the left. Manuel Escalada led mounted grenadiers to capture the royalist artillery, turning them against their owners. Burgos' regiment severely punished the patriot left wing, mainly composed of emancipated slaves, and took 400 lives. San Martín ordered the mounted grenadiers led by Hilarión de la Quintana to charge against the regiment. The firing suddenly ended and royalists began to fight with sword bayonets, under the cries "Long live the king!" and "Long live the homeland!" respectively. Finally, the royalists ended their cries and began to disperse.[80][81]

When the regiment of Burgos realized that their line was broken, they stopped resisting, and the soldiers began to disperse. The cavalry pursued and killed most of them. At the end of the battle, the royalists had been trapped among the units of Las Heras in the west, Alvarado in the middle, Quintana in the east and the cavalries of Zapiola and Freire. Osorio tried to fall back to the hacienda "Lo Espejo" but could not reach it, so he tried to escape to Talcahuano. Ordóñez made his last stand at that hacienda, where 500 royalists died.[82][83]

The battle ended in the afternoon. O'Higgins, still injured by the wound received in Cancha Rayada, arrived during the final action at the hacienda. He claimed "Glory to the savior of Chile!", in reference to San Martín, who praised him for going to the battlefield with his unhealed wound. They made an embrace on their horses, now known as the "Embrace of Maipú".[82]

The battle of Maipú secured Chilean independence.[84] Except for Osorio, who escaped with 200 cavalry, all top royalist military leaders were captured. All their armed forces were either killed or captured, and all their artillery, weapons, military hospitals, money and resources were lost. The victory was praised by Güemes, Bolívar and the international press.[85]

Fleet of the Pacific

 
San Martín before the Congress of Buenos Aires

San Martín made a new request for ships to Bowles, but received no answer. He moved again to Buenos Aires, to make a similar request. He arrived to Mendoza a few days after the execution of the Chileans Luis and Juan José Carrera, brothers of José Miguel Carrera.[86] The specific initiative of those executions is controversial. Chilean historian Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna indicts San Martín, while J. C. Raffo de la Reta blames O'Higgins instead. Manuel Rodríguez was also imprisoned and then killed in prison; this death may have been decided by the Lautaro lodge. San Martín could not have taken part in it, as he was already on the way to Buenos Aires.[87]

San Martín was not well received in Buenos Aires. Pueyrredón initially declined to give further help, citing the conflicts with the federal caudillos and the organization of a huge royalist army in Cádiz that would try to reconquer the La Plata basin. He thought that Chile should organize the navy against Peru, not Buenos Aires. San Martín discussed with him and finally got financing of 500,000 pesos. He returned to Mendoza with his wife and daughter and received a letter from Pueyrredón, who said that Buenos Aires could only deliver one-third of the promised funds. This complicated the project, as neither Santiago de Chile nor Mendoza had the resources needed. San Martín resigned from the Army, but it is unclear whether his decision to resign was sincere or was to apply pressure to his backers. The government of Buenos Aires still considered San Martín vital to the national defense, so Pueyrredón agreed to pay the 500,000 pesos requested, and encouraged San Martín to withdraw his resignation.[88]

San Martín proposed to mediate between Buenos Aires and the Liga Federal led by Artigas. He thought that the civil war was counter-productive to national unity, and that an end to hostilities would free resources needed for the navy. He calculated that Artigas might condition the peace on a joint declaration of war to colonial Brazil; so San Martín proposed to defeat the royalists first and then demand the return of the Eastern Bank to the United Provinces. O'Higgins recommended caution, fearing that San Martín might be captured. Pueyrredón rejected the mediation, as he did not recognize Artigas as an equal to negotiate with him.[89]

Act of Rancagua

 
Parade of the Army of the Andes in Rancagua.

Although Artigas was defeated by the Luso-Brazilian armies, his allies Estanislao López and Francisco Ramírez continued hostilities against Buenos Aires for its inactivity against the invasion. Pueyrredón called the Army of the Andes and the Army of the North (led by Belgrano) to aid Buenos Aires in the conflict. Guido noted to San Martín that if both armies did that, the north of Argentina and Chile would be easily reconquered by the royalists. San Martín also knew that most of the soldiers of the Army of the Andes would not be willing to aid Buenos Aires in the civil war, as most were from other provinces or from Chile. San Martín had doubts as well about the projected arrival of a large military expedition from Spain, as the absolutist restoration of Ferdinand VII had met severe resistance in Spain. San Martín finally kept the Army in Chile when Belgrano's lieutenant Viamonte signed an armistice with López; he thought that the conflict had ended.[90]

However, the minister of war Matías de Irigoyen ordered once more the return of the Army of the Andes, and appointed Francisco Fernández de la Cruz as its leader, displacing San Martín. San Martín resigned again, and observed that the Army would not be able to cross the Andes from Chile to Buenos Aires because the winter snow was blocking the trails. All the leaders of the military units of the Army of the Andes refused to go to Buenos Aires, as their soldiers would mutiny or desert. Facing both the resignation of San Martín and the refusals to obey the orders, the Supreme Director canceled the orders, and the Army of the Andes stayed in Chile. With the sanction of the Argentine Constitution of 1819, Pueyrredón ended his mandate as Supreme Director, replaced by José Rondeau.[91]

The navy was finally completed in Chile, and the British captain Thomas Cochrane was appointed to lead it. But it was not sent to Peru immediately: there were still rumors of an attack from Spain, and if needed the navy would move to Buenos Aires and fight the Spanish ships. The civil war resumed and San Martín attempted once more to mediate, to no effect. Rondeau again requested the return of the Army of the Andes, without success.[92] San Martín returned to Chile and prepared to take part in the naval actions against Peru, ignoring Buenos Aires. The Army of the North refused to join the conflict as well, revolting in Arequito and disbanding.[93] Without either reinforcements, Rondeau was defeated by federal forces in the Battle of Cepeda. The Congress of Tucumán and the office of the Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata were dissolved and the country turned into a confederation of 13 provinces, without a central state. This period is known as the Anarchy of the year XX.[94] The rebellion of Spanish general Rafael del Riego and an outbreak of yellow fever in the punitive expedition organized in Cádiz ended the royalist threat to Buenos Aires.[95] The Act of Rancagua invested San Martín with the full authority over the Army of the Andes, as it now lacked a national authority over it.[96]

Peru

Peru had armed forces nearly four times the strength of those of San Martín: 6,244 soldiers in Lima, 8,000 at the northern provinces, 1,263 in the coast, 1,380 in Arequipa and 6,000 in the Upper Peru; nearly 23,000 soldiers in total. The Army of the Andes had 4,000 soldiers instead, and Cochrane's navy another 1,600. With this disparity of forces, San Martín tried to avoid battles. He tried instead to divide the enemy forces in several locations, as he did during the Crossing of the Andes, and trap the royalists with a pincer movement with either reinforcements of the Army of the North from the South or the army of Simón Bolívar from the North. He also tried to promote rebellions and insurrection within the royalist ranks, and promised the emancipation of any slaves that deserted their Peruvian masters and join the army of San Martín. The spreading of the news of the Liberal Triennium, a liberal rebellion in Spain that reinstated the Spanish Constitution of 1812, also sought to undermine royalist loyalty.[97]

The navy sailed from Chile on 20 August 1820. It was composed of eight warships, eleven gunboats, 247 cannons and a crew of 1,600, most of them Chileans. There were 12 frigates, and a brig with the 4,000 soldiers of the Army of the Andes. San Martín was the leader of the military expedition. They landed in Paracas, 200 km to the south of Lima, on 7 September, and occupied the nearby city of Pisco, which was abandoned by the royalists.[98][99]

Expedition of Peru

 
The Numancia battalion, formerly a royalist unit, joins the forces of San Martín.

Peruvian viceroy Joaquín de la Pezuela had instructions from Spain to negotiate with the patriots. Under an armistice the opponents celebrated a meeting in Miraflores. The viceroy's deputies proposed to adopt the liberal Spanish constitution if San Martín left the country, but the patriots requested instead that Spain grant the independence of Peru. The negotiations did not bear fruit.[100][101]

San Martín isolated Lima from the surrounding countryside, and sent Juan Antonio Álvarez de Arenales to promote rebellions among the natives. The Army of the Andes moved north of Lima by sea. San Martín and Arenales besieged the city from two directions, and Cochrane attacked the port of El Callao. Cochrane captured the ship "Esmeralda", and the royalist regiment Numancia. Nearly 700 expeditionary soldiers of New Granada deserted and joined the patriots. Several populations in the north of Peru supported San Martín, and Arenales defeated the royalists at the Battle of Pasco. More than 300 royalists joined the patriots, including Andrés de Santa Cruz.[102][103]

However, the plans did not fully work as intended. The native populations that joined Arenales could not resist the royalist counter-attacks,[104] and the slaves did not join the army in the expected numbers. The Argentine provinces could not send the supporting army that San Martín had requested earlier, and the Army of the North no longer existed. As a result, he wrote to Simón Bolívar, trying to coordinate actions with him.[105]

Pezuela was deposed by a military-liberal coup, and José de la Serna e Hinojosa became the new viceroy. De la Serna called San Martín to negotiate an end of hostilities. The result was the same than with Pezuela: De la Serna proposed to enact the 1812 Spanish constitution (Perú inside Spain), and San Martín demanded the independence of Peru (with an independent monarchy). The rejection of the Spanish constitution was motivated by the disproportional representation of the Americas in the Constituent Assembly that wrote it. Both armies agreed a temporary armistice. San Martín proposed to establish a constitutional monarchy with a European monarch, with a regency ruling in the interim. The proposal was rejected, on the grounds that they could not accept it without Ferdinand's approval.[106][107]

Protector of Peru

 
José de San Martín's proclamation of the independence of Peru on 28 July 1821 in Lima. Painting by Juan Lepiani

As hostilities renewed, San Martín organized several guerrilla groups in the countryside, and laid siege to Lima, but did not force his entry, as he did not want to appear as a conqueror to the local population. However, De la Serna suddenly left the city with his army, for unknown reasons. San Martín called for an open cabildo to discuss the independence of the country, which was agreed. With this approval, the authority in Lima, the support of the northern provinces and the port of El Callao under siege, San Martín declared the independence of Peru on 28 July 1821. The war, however, had not ended yet.[108][109]

Unlike Chile, Peru had no local politicians of the stature of O'Higgins, so San Martín became the leader of the government, even though he did not want to. He was appointed Protector of Peru. As Peruvian society was highly conservative, San Martín did not take the liberal ideas too far immediately. The provisional statutes contained few changes and ratified several existing laws.[110] All the types of servitude imposed on the natives, such as mita and yanaconazgo, were abolished, and the natives received citizenship. He did not abolish slavery completely, as Peru had 40,000 slaveowners, and declared "freedom of wombs" instead, which emancipated the sons of slaves; he emancipated as well the slaves of the royalists who left Lima. He also abolished the Inquisition and corporal punishment, and enacted freedom of speech.[111] During his stay in Peru, San Martín had a romance with Rosa Campuzano, a woman from Guayaquil.[112]

The royalist armies that stayed in the Peruvian countryside headed to Lima, led by Canterac. In a confusing episode, there was no battle, as neither one attacked. Canterac changed his path to El Callao, took resources from it, and returned to his base. There was no battle during their return either. Without resources, El Callao surrendered in a few days.[113] Both armies took inadvisable actions: San Martín allowed Canterac to receive reinforcements, and Canterac left a key military objective incapable to resist. There is no known documentation that provides a reasonable explanation of those events.[114]

Cochrane had several disputes with San Martín.[115] He discussed several of his actions and tried to bypass his authority. During the blockade of El Callao, he proposed that O'Higgins take control of the mission and send any spoils of battle to Chile. As San Martín was appointed Protector of Peru, Cochrane reasoned that San Martín was no longer under Chilean command, and took the navy away. In later years Cochrane made accusations against San Martín in Chile.[116]

Bolívar took control of Caracas with his victory at the battle of Carabobo, and the Congress of Cúcuta issued laws similar to those in Perú. Guayaquil declared independence, and Bolívar sent Antonio José de Sucre to reinforce them. Sucre's forces were not enough, and requested help from San Martín. Peru sent a military force of 1,300 men. Bolívar entered the city a month later, and claimed that for historical reasons Quito should be part of Colombia.[117] San Martín and Bolívar sought to generate Latin American integration, but disagreed on the type of government: Bolívar proposed a republic, and San Martín a constitutional monarchy, reasoning that it would be easier to receive international recognition for the now-independent South American nations.[118] Peru and Colombia signed a treaty of integration, to be proposed to Chile, the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata and Paraguay, and at a later point to the United Provinces of Central America and the Empire of Brazil.[119]

Guayaquil conference

 
The Guayaquil conference between Simón Bolívar and José de San Martín. The real conference took place inside an office, and not in the countryside as the portrait suggests.

San Martín thought that if he joined forces with Bolívar he would be able to defeat the remnant royalist forces in Peru. Both liberators would meet in Quito, so San Martín appointed Torre Tagle to manage the government during his absence. Bolívar was unable to meet San Martín at the arranged date, so San Martín returned to Lima, but still left Tagle in government. Bolívar moved from Quito to Guayaquil, which secured its independence. There were discussions on the future of the region: some factions wanted to join Colombia, others to join Peru, and others to become a new nation. Bolívar ended the discussion by annexing Guayaquil into Colombia. There was Peruvian pressure on San Martín to do a similar thing, to annex Guayaquil to Peru.[120]

The Guayaquil conference took place on 26 July 1822. They had two private meetings, on that day and the following one. As there were no witnesses or minutes, the content of their discussions can only be inferred from their later actions and their letters to other people. Some likely topics of discussion may have been a request of reinforcements, and an offer to combine the armies into a single one, with San Martín ranked second to Bolívar.[121][122]

The minister Bernardo Monteagudo was removed from office by a Peruvian rebellion, during San Martín's absence. San Martín resigned as Protector of Peru a few days later and returned to Valparaíso, Chile. Several reasons influenced him to resign. The military discipline of the Army of the Andes was compromised, but San Martín was reluctant to take drastic action against his officers. The authority of San Martín and Bolívar, and the local rivalry of their respective countries Peru and Colombia, limited their options for joint work: Colombians would not have liked Bolívar to give many of his forces to San Martín, whilst Peruvians would not have liked their Protector to be second in command to Bolívar, and a joint command would complicate the maintenance of military discipline. Unlike Bolívar, backed up by the Colombian government, San Martín did not have more resources than those he already had: Buenos Aires denied him any support, the other Argentine governors (such as Juan Bautista Bustos) supported him but did not have resources to provide, O'Higgins was about to be deposed in Chile, and Cochrane took the navy and left him without naval power. Finally, he felt that only a very strong authority would be able to prevent balkanization, but refused to rule as a dictator himself.[123]

Later life

 
General San Martín in Paris, 1848.

After his retirement, San Martín intended to live in Cuyo. Although the war of independence had ended in the region, the Argentine Civil Wars continued. The unitarians wanted to organize the country as a unitary state centered on Buenos Aires, and the federalists preferred a federation of provinces. San Martín had good relations with the federal caudillos and a personal feud with unitarian leader Bernardino Rivadavia, but tried to stay neutral. San Martín's wife, María de los Remedios de Escalada, died in 1823, so he returned to Buenos Aires. He took his daughter Mercedes Tomasa, who was living with her mother's family, and sailed to Europe.[124]

After a failed attempt to settle in France, he moved to Britain and then to the capital of present-day Belgium, Brussels, where he settled. He intended to live there until Mercedes completed her education and then return to Argentina. Rivadavia visited Brussels and San Martín intended to challenge him to a duel, but was dissuaded by Diego Paroissien.[125]

Despite his feud with Rivadavia, who was appointed President of Argentina, San Martín offered his military services in the War with Brazil, but received no response. He sailed to the country when Rivadavia was deposed and replaced by the federal Manuel Dorrego, and the war ended in the interim. He intended to return anyway, as a federal government would spare him the persecution he would otherwise have received from the unitarians. He was unable to do as he planned. When his ship docked in Río de Janeiro he was informed that the unitarian Juan Lavalle had deposed Dorrego, and when he reached Montevideo he was informed that Lavalle had captured and executed Dorrego and begun a campaign of terror against all federals in the country. The ship arrived in Buenos Aires, but San Martín did not leave it, instead returning to Montevideo. Lavalle was unable to put down the federal rebellion against him, and offered San Martín the government. San Martín declined and returned to Brussels.[126]

By this time the federal Juan Manuel de Rosas had begun to pacify the civil war started by Lavalle and earned San Martín's admiration. They began to exchange friendly letters. The Belgian Revolution and the cholera epidemic of 1831 made San Martín leave Brussels and move to Paris, where both San Martín and his daughter became ill. They were helped by Mariano Balcarce. Mariano married Mercedes, and they had a daughter, María Mercedes.[127]

In 1837 France began a blockade of the Rio de la Plata against Rosas. San Martín offered his military services to Rosas, which was declined because of San Martín's advanced age, and condemned the role of the unitarians in that conflict, as they had allied themselves with France against their own nation. San Martín bequeathed his curved saber to Rosas, because of his successful defense of the country. The conflict between France and Argentina renewed in the Anglo-French blockade of the Río de la Plata, which San Martín condemned as well. During this time he met Florencio Varela and Domingo Faustino Sarmiento.[128]

During the French 1848 revolution, San Martin left Paris and moved to Boulogne-sur-Mer, a small city in northern France. He was almost blind and had many health problems because of his advanced age, but continued to write letters and keep in touch with the news from South America. Shortly after receiving the news of the Argentine victory against the Anglo-French blockade, he died, three o'clock on 17 August 1850.[129]

Remains

 
Mausoleum of San Martín at the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral. The three statues are national personifications of Argentina, Chile and Peru.

José de San Martín died on 17 August 1850, in his house at Boulogne-sur-Mer, France. Between 1850 and 1861, his corpse was buried in the crypt of the Basilica of Notre-Dame de Boulogne. He requested in his will to be taken to the cemetery without any funeral, and to be moved to Buenos Aires thereafter. Balcarce informed Rosas and the foreign minister Felipe Arana of San Martín's death. Balcarce oversaw the embalming of his remains and their temporary stay in a chapel of the city. He also sent San Martin's saber to Rosas.[130]

However, the rebellion of Justo José de Urquiza against Rosas in 1851, Rosas' defeat at the battle of Caseros and the resulting chaos delayed the move of San Martín's remains to Buenos Aires. Still, both Rosas and Urquiza organized public homages to San Martín, despite the conflict. Buenos Aires seceded from Argentina as the state of Buenos Aires, dominated by Unitarians who despised San Martín. Thus, the move of his remains was postponed indefinitely. Aware that there were no favorable conditions for the project, Balcarce arranged a creation of a tomb in the Boulogne-sur-Mer cemetery.[131]

San Martín's remains were finally repatriated on 29 May 1880, during the presidency of Nicolás Avellaneda. The mausoleum was placed inside the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral. As San Martín was suspected of being a freemason, the mausoleum was placed in an expanded wing of the cathedral.[132]

Legacy

San Martín was first acclaimed as a national hero of Argentina by the Federals, both during his life and immediately after his death. The unitarians still resented his refusal to aid the Supreme Directors with the Army of the Andes and his constant support to Rosas.[133] The unitarian Bartolomé Mitre wrote a biography of San Martín, "Historia de San Martín y de la emancipación sudamericana" (Spanish: History of San Martín and the South American emancipation). By that time, several accounts of San Martín were under way in many countries: Valentín Ledesma from Lima wrote in 1853 about San Martín's campaign in Peru, and Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna from Chile wrote in 1856 about the Chilean War of Independence.[134] With Mitre's book, San Martín was universally acclaimed as the Liberator of Argentina, but his work introduced several inaccuracies to make San Martín's campaign support Mitre's political project. These inaccuracies were detected and fixed by later historians.[135]

Statues of San Martín appear in most cities of Argentina, as well as in Santiago and Lima. José Gil de Castro made the first portrait of San Martín, and several other artists made works about him.[136] The most important films featuring San Martín are the 1970 El Santo de la Espada and the 2010 Revolución: El cruce de los Andes.[citation needed]

The neighbourhood of San Martín in Bogotá, Colombia's Centro Internacional area is named for the large equestrian statue of the General situated in a small plaza also named for him.[citation needed]

Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic has an avenue named Jose de San Martin in his honor that connects the colonial zone to the west of the city.[citation needed]

 
Equestrian statue in Boulogne-sur-Mer, in France.

An equestrian statue of the General was erected in Boulogne-sur-Mer; the statue was inaugurated on 24 October 1909, at a ceremony attended by several units from the Argentine military.[137][138] The statue was erected through purely private initiative, with the support of national government of Argentina, the municipal council of Buenos Aires and a public funding campaign. The statue is 10m high, on a 4m by 6m base; it is well known to locals. Located on the beach, it was virtually untouched by the numerous bombings campaigns during both world wars.[139]

There is an equestrian statue of General San Martín in Washington D.C. along NW Virginia Street. It is a copy of a statue in Buenos Aires. It was “presented by the Argentine people to the people of the United States (...) unveiled with appropriate ceremony on October 28, 1925.”[140][141]

There is also an equestrian statue of General San Martín in New York City, on the southern side of Central Park. It was dedicated in 1951 and was donated by the City of Buenos Aires, Argentina.[142]

There is a memorial featuring a bust of General San Martín in Beverly Hills, CA. The bust was designed by Fernando Di Zitti and dedicated in 2001.[143]

There is also a bust of San Martin at the Intramuros or Walled City of Manila, which was erected in 1950 at the request of the Perón government as a reminder that San Martin's brother, Juan Fermin, served in the Philippines from 1801 to 1822 and left descendants there.[144][145]

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  • Lynch, John. The Spanish American Revolutions 1808–1826 (2nd ed. 1986)
  • Abad de Santillán, Diego (1965). Historia Argentina (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: TEA (Tipográfica Editora Argentina).
  • Camogli, Pablo; de Privitellio, Luciano (2005). Batallas por la Libertad (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Aguilar. ISBN 978-987-04-0105-6.
  • Galasso, Norberto (2000). Seamos libres y lo demás no importa nada [Let us be free and nothing else matters] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Colihue. ISBN 978-950-581-779-5.
  • Mayochi, Enrique Mario. [San Martín saw by artists] (in Spanish). San Martín National Institute. Archived from the original on 1 June 2012. Retrieved 14 July 2012.

Further reading

  • Documentos para la historia del Libertador General San Martín [Documents for the history of Liberator General San Martín] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Instituto Nacional Sanmartiniano and Museo Histórico Nacional. 1953.
  • Crow, John (1992). The Epic of Latin America. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07723-2.
  • Dellepiane, Carlos (1965). Historia militar del Perú [Military history of Peru] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Círculo Militar.
  • Espíndola, Adolfo (1962). San Martín en el Ejército Español en la península [San Martín in the Spanish Army in the peninsula] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Comisión Nacional Ejecutiva del 150 Aniversario de la Revolución de Mayo.
  • Harvey, Robert (2000). Liberators: Latin America's Struggle For Independence. New York: The Overlook Press, Peter Mayer Publishers. ISBN 978-1-58567-072-7.
  • Higgins, James (2014). The Emancipation of Peru: British Eyewitness Accounts. Online at https://sites.google.com/site/jhemanperu
  • Levene, Ricardo (1936). Historia de la Nación Argentina [History of the Argentine Nation] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Editorial El Ateneo.
  • Montes i Bradley, Ricardo Ernesto (1952). El agricultor José de San Martín [The farmer José de San Martín] (in Spanish). Mexico: Editorial Perspectivas.

External links

Preceded by
None
President of Peru
1821–1822
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief of the Army of Chile
1817–1819
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Cuyo
1814–1816
Succeeded by
Toribio Luzuriaga

josé, martín, general, martín, general, redirect, here, other, uses, general, disambiguation, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, martín, second, maternal, family, name, matorras, josé, francisco, martín, matorras, february, 1778, august, 1850, know. General San Martin and General Jose de San Martin redirect here For other uses see General Jose de San Martin disambiguation In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is San Martin and the second or maternal family name is Matorras Jose Francisco de San Martin y Matorras 25 February 1778 17 August 1850 known simply as Jose de San Martin Spanish pronunciation xoˈse de san maɾˈtin listen or the Liberator of Argentina Chile and Peru 1 was an Argentine general and the primary leader of the southern and central parts of South America s successful struggle for independence from the Spanish Empire who served as the Protector of Peru Born in Yapeyu Corrientes in modern day Argentina he left the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata at the early age of seven to study in Malaga Spain Jose de San MartinLate 1820s paintingMember of the Third TriumvirateIn office 18 April 20 April 1815Serving with Matias de Irigoyen and Manuel de SarrateaPreceded byCarlos Maria de AlvearSucceeded byJose RondeauProtector of PeruIn office 28 July 1821 20 September 1822Governor of CuyoIn office 10 August 1814 24 September 1816Preceded byMarcos Gonzalez de BalcarceSucceeded byToribio de LuzuriagaPersonal detailsBorn 1778 02 25 25 February 1778Yapeyu Corrientes Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata now Argentina Died17 August 1850 1850 08 17 aged 72 Boulogne sur Mer FrancePolitical partyPatriotSpouseMaria de los Remedios de Escalada y la QuintanaChildrenMaria de las Mercedes Tomasa de San Martin y EscaladaProfessionMilitarySignatureNicknameThe Liberator of AmericaMilitary serviceAllegiance Spain until 1812 United Provinces modern Argentina Patria Nueva modern Chile Protectorate of Peru modern Peru Years of service1789 1822Ranklieutenant colonel the rank that he had in the Spanish army General of Argentina Commander in Chief of the armies of Chile Peru and Argentina GeneralissimoCommandsRegiment of Mounted Grenadiers Army of the North Army of the Andes Chilean ArmyBattles warsWar of the Second Coalition War of the Oranges Peninsular War Battle of Bailen Battle of Albuera Spanish American wars of independence Battle of San Lorenzo Battle of Chacabuco Second Battle of Cancha Rayada Battle of Maipu First siege of CallaoIn 1808 after taking part in the Peninsular War against France San Martin contacted South American supporters of independence from Spain in London In 1812 he set sail for Buenos Aires and offered his services to the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata present day Argentina After the Battle of San Lorenzo and time commanding the Army of the North during 1814 he organized a plan to defeat the Spanish forces that menaced the United Provinces from the north using an alternative path to the Viceroyalty of Peru This objective first involved the establishment of a new army the Army of the Andes in Cuyo Province Argentina From there he led the Crossing of the Andes to Chile and triumphed at the Battle of Chacabuco and the Battle of Maipu 1818 thus liberating Chile from royalist rule Then he sailed to attack the Spanish stronghold of Lima Peru On 12 July 1821 after seizing partial control of Lima San Martin was appointed Protector of Peru and Peruvian independence was officially declared on 28 July On 26 July 1822 after a closed door meeting with fellow libertador Simon Bolivar at Guayaquil Ecuador Bolivar took over the task of fully liberating Peru San Martin unexpectedly left the country and resigned the command of his army excluding himself from politics and the military and moved to France in 1824 The details of that meeting would be a subject of debate by later historians San Martin is regarded as a national hero of Argentina Chile and Peru a great military commander and one of the Liberators of Spanish South America The Order of the Liberator General San Martin Orden del Libertador General San Martin created in his honor is the highest decoration conferred by the Argentine government Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Military career in Europe 2 South America 2 1 Argentina 2 1 1 San Lorenzo 2 1 2 Army of the North 2 1 3 Governor of Cuyo 2 1 4 Crossing of the Andes 2 2 Chile 2 2 1 Battle of Chacabuco 2 2 2 Patria Nueva 2 2 3 Battle of Cancha Rayada 2 2 4 Battle of Maipu 2 2 5 Fleet of the Pacific 2 2 6 Act of Rancagua 2 3 Peru 2 3 1 Expedition of Peru 2 3 2 Protector of Peru 2 4 Guayaquil conference 3 Later life 4 Remains 5 Legacy 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life EditMain article Early life of Jose de San Martin Jose de San Martin s father Juan de San Martin 2 son of Andres de San Martin and Isidora Gomez was born in the town of Cervatos de la Cueza in the current Province of Palencia former Kingdom of Leon in Spain and was lieutenant governor of the department He served as a military man to the Spanish Crown and in 1774 he was appointed Governor of the Yapeyu Department part of the Government of the Guarani Missions created to administer the thirty Guarani Jesuit missions after the order was expelled from Hispanic America by Carlos III in 1767 based in Yapeyu reduction and Gregoria Matorras del Ser He was born in Yapeyu Corrientes an Indian reduction of Guarani people 3 The exact year of his birth is disputed as there are no records of his baptism Later documents formulated during his life such as passports military career records and wedding documentation gave him varying ages Most of these documents point to his year of birth as either 1777 or 1778 4 The family moved to Buenos Aires in 1781 when San Martin was three or four years old Juan requested to be transferred to Spain leaving the Americas in 1783 The family settled in Madrid but as Juan was unable to earn a promotion they moved to Malaga Once in the city San Martin enrolled in Malaga s school of temporalities beginning his studies in 1785 5 It is unlikely that he finished the six year long elementary education before he enrolled in the Regiment of Murcia in 1789 when he reached the required age of 11 He began his military career as a cadet in the Murcian Infantry Unit 6 Military career in Europe Edit Main article Military career of Jose de San Martin in Spain The Battle of Bailen was one of the most important battles fought by Jose de San Martin at the Peninsular War San Martin took part in several Spanish campaigns in North Africa fighting in Melilla and in Oran against the Moors in 1791 among others 7 His rank was raised to Sub Lieutenant in 1793 at the age of 15 He began a naval career during the War of the Second Coalition when Spain was allied with France against Great Britain during the French Revolution His ship Santa Dorotea was captured by the Royal Navy who kept him as a prisoner of war for some time Soon afterward he continued to fight in southern Spain mainly in Cadiz and Gibraltar with the rank of Second Captain of light infantry He continued to fight Portugal on the side of Spain in the War of the Oranges in 1801 He was promoted to captain in 1804 8 During his stay in Cadiz he was influenced by the ideas of the Spanish Enlightenment 9 At the outbreak of the Peninsular War in 1808 San Martin was named adjutant of Francisco Maria Solano Ortiz de Rosas Rosas suspected of being an afrancesado was killed by a popular uprising which overran the barracks and dragged his corpse in the streets San Martin was appointed to the armies of Andalusia and led a battalion of volunteers In June 1808 his unit became incorporated into a guerrilla force led by Juan de la Cruz Mourgeon He was nearly killed during the battle of Arjonilla but was saved by Sergeant Juan de Dios On 19 July 1808 Spanish and French forces engaged in the battle of Bailen a Spanish victory that allowed the Army of Andalusia to attack and seize Madrid For his actions during this battle San Martin was awarded a gold medal and his rank raised to lieutenant colonel On 16 May 1811 he fought in the battle of Albuera under the command of general William Carr Beresford By this time the French armies held most of the Iberian Peninsula under their control except for Cadiz 10 Arrival of San Martin and Carlos Maria de Alvear to Buenos Aires aboard the frigate George Canning San Martin resigned from the Spanish army for controversial reasons and moved to South America where he joined the Spanish American wars of independence Historians propose several explanations for this action the common ones are that he missed his native land that he was in the employ of the British and the congruence of the goals of both wars The first explanation suggests that when the wars of independence began San Martin thought that his duty was to return to his country and serve in the military conflict The second explanation suggests that Britain which would benefit from the independence of the South American countries sent San Martin to achieve it The third suggests that both wars were caused by the conflicts between Enlightenment ideas and absolutism so San Martin still waged the same war the wars in the Americas only developed separatist goals after the Spanish Absolutist Restoration 11 San Martin was initiated in the Lodge of Rational Knights in 1811 They met at the house of Carlos Maria de Alvear other members were Jose Miguel Carrera Aldao Blanco Encalada and other criollos American born Spaniards They agreed to return to their home lands and join the local revolutionary movements San Martin asked for his retirement from the military and moved to Britain He stayed in the country for a short time and met many other South Americans at a lodge held at the house of Venezuelan general Francisco de Miranda at 27 Grafton Street now 58 Grafton Way 12 Bloomsbury London the house now has a blue plaque with Miranda s name 13 Then he sailed to Buenos Aires aboard the British ship George Canning along with the South Americans Alvear Francisco Jose de Vera and Matias Zapiola and the Spaniards Francisco Chilavert and Eduardo Kailitz They arrived on 9 March 1812 to serve under the First Triumvirate 14 South America EditArgentina Edit See also Argentine War of Independence A few days after his arrival in Buenos Aires in the United Provinces formally named the Argentine Republic in 1826 San Martin was interviewed by the First Triumvirate They appointed him a lieutenant colonel of cavalry and asked him to create a cavalry unit as Buenos Aires did not have good cavalry He began to organize the Regiment of Mounted Grenadiers with Alvear and Zapiola As Buenos Aires lacked professional military leaders San Martin was entrusted with the protection of the whole city but kept focused in the task of building the military unit 15 San Martin Alvear and Zapiola established a local branch of the Lodge of Rational Knights along with morenists the former supporters of the late Mariano Moreno This lodge sought to promote liberal ideas its secrecy hides whether it was a real Masonic lodge or a lodge with political goals It had no ties to the Premier Grand Lodge of England In September 1812 San Martin married Maria de los Remedios de Escalada a 14 year old girl from one of the local wealthy families 16 The lodge organized the Revolution of 8 October 1812 when the terms of office of the triumvirs Manuel de Sarratea and Feliciano Chiclana ended Juan Martin de Pueyrredon promoted antimorenist new members Manuel Obligado and Pedro Medrano by preventing the vote of three deputies and thus achieving a majority As this caused a commotion San Martin and Alvear intervened with their military force and the Buenos Aires Cabildo disestablished the triumvirate It was replaced by the Second Triumvirate of Juan Jose Paso Nicolas Rodriguez Pena and Antonio Alvarez Jonte 17 The new triumvirate called the Assembly of the Year XIII and promoted San Martin to colonel 18 San Lorenzo Edit Main article Battle of San Lorenzo Jose de San Martin trapped under his dead horse during the battle of San Lorenzo is saved by Juan Bautista Cabral Montevideo on the other shore of the Rio de la Plata was still a royalist stronghold Argentine general Jose Rondeau laid siege to it but the Montevidean navy eluded it by pillaging nearby cities San Martin was sent with the new Regiment to watch the activities in the Parana River shore 19 20 The Regiment followed the navy from a distance avoiding detection They hid in the San Carlos Convent in San Lorenzo Santa Fe San Martin watched the enemy ships from the top of the convent during the night The royalists disembarked at dawn ready to pillage and the regiment charged into battle San Martin employed a pincer movement to trap the royalists He led one column and Justo Bermudez the other 19 21 San Martin s horse was killed during the battle and his leg was trapped under the corpse of the animal after the fall A royalist probably Zabala himself 22 23 attempted to kill San Martin while he was trapped under his dead horse where he suffered a saber injury to his face and a bullet wound to his arm Juan Bautista Cabral and Juan Bautista Baigorria of San Martin s regiment intervened and saved his life Cabral was mortally wounded and died shortly afterwards 22 The battle did not have a notable influence on the war and did not prevent further pillage Montevideo was finally subdued by Admiral William Brown during the Second Banda Oriental campaign 23 Antonio Zabala the leader of the Montevidean army served under San Martin during the crossing of the Andes years later 24 Army of the North Edit Meeting of Manuel Belgrano and Jose de San Martin at the Yatasto relay Once again in Buenos Aires San Martin and his wife attended to the first official performance of the Argentine National Anthem on 28 May 1813 at the Coliseo Theater Oral tradition has it that the premiere took place on 14 May 1813 at the home of aristocrat Mariquita Sanchez de Thompson with San Martin also attending but there is no documentary evidence of that 25 The lyrics of the new anthem included several references to the secessionist will of the time 26 Although they were still allies San Martin began to distance himself from Alvear who controlled the Assembly and the lodge Alvear opposed the merchants and the Uruguayan caudillo Jose Gervasio Artigas San Martin thought that it was risky to open such conflicts when the royalists were still a threat The Army of the North which was operating at the Upper Peru was defeated at the battles of Vilcapugio and Ayohuma so the triumvirate appointed San Martin to head it replacing Manuel Belgrano 27 28 San Martin and Belgrano met at the Yatasto relay The army was in poor condition and San Martin initially refused to remove Belgrano from the army as it would hurt the soldiers morale However the supreme director Gervasio Posadas who replaced the triumvirate in government insisted and San Martin acted as instructed San Martin stayed only a few weeks in Tucuman reorganizing the army and studying the terrain He also had a positive impression of the guerrilla war waged by Martin Miguel de Guemes against the royalists 29 similar to the Peninsular War It was a defensive war and San Martin trusted that they could prevent a royalist advance in Jujuy 30 31 San Martin had health problems in April 1814 probably caused by hematemesis He temporarily delegated the command of the Army to colonel Francisco Fernandez de la Cruz and requested leave to recover He moved to Santiago del Estero and then to Cordoba where he slowly recovered During this time King Ferdinand VII returned to the throne began the absolutist restoration and began to organize an attack on the rogue colonies After an interview with Tomas Guido San Martin came up with a plan organize an army in Mendoza cross the Andes to Chile and move to Peru by sea all while Guemes defended the north frontier This would place him in Peru without crossing the harsh terrain of Upper Peru where two campaigns had already been defeated To advance this plan he requested the governorship of the Cuyo province which was accepted He took office on 6 September 32 33 Governor of Cuyo Edit Training of the Army of the Andes at camp Plumerillo The absolutist restoration in Spain and the growing influence of Artigas generated a political crisis in Buenos Aires forcing Posadas to resign Alvear became the new Supreme Director but had to resign after three months San Martin s plan was complicated as well by the Disaster of Rancagua a royalist victory that restored absolutism in Chile ending the Patria Vieja period San Martin initially proposed a regular sized army simply to reinforce Chile but changed to propose a larger one to liberate the country from the occupation 34 Chileans Bernardo O Higgins Jose Miguel Carrera Luis Carrera and Manuel Rodriguez the leaders of the deposed Chilean rule sought refugee in Cuyo along with their armies O Higgins and Rodriguez were well received but the Carrera brothers intended to act as a government in exile They ignored the local laws of Cuyo and their soldiers committed acts of vandalism San Martin imprisoned them and sent them to Buenos Aires They proposed a plan to liberate Chile different to the one outlined by San Martin who rejected it as impractical This initiated a rivalry between the Carreras and San Martin 35 36 San Martin immediately began to organize the Army of the Andes He drafted all the citizens who could bear arms and all the slaves from ages 16 to 30 requested reinforcements to Buenos Aires and reorganized the economy for war production He took another leave to restore his health four months after taking power so Alvear appointed Gregorio Perdriel This appointment was resisted by the Mendoza Cabildo which ratified San Martin 37 38 The government of San Martin repeated some of the ideas outlined in the Operations plan drafted by Mariano Moreno at the beginning of the war A combination of incentives confiscations and planned economy allowed the country to provision the army gunpowder pieces of artillery mules and horses food military clothing etc Mining increased with increased extraction of lead copper saltpeter sulfur and borax which had several uses and improved local finances Hundreds of women wove clothing used by the soldiers Father Jose Luis Beltran headed a military factory of 700 men which produced rifles and horseshoes San Martin stayed on good terms with both the government of Buenos Aires and the provincial caudillos without fully allying with either one He was able to receive provisions from both He considered that the war of independence took priority over the civil wars 39 40 The army was not ready as of the summer of 1815 delaying the crossing Given the harsh conditions on the mountains the crossing could only be done in the summer season when there is less snow Buenos Aires did not send more provisions after the ousting of Alvear San Martin proposed to resign and serve under Balcarce if they would support the campaign San Martin and Guido wrote a report in the autumn of 1816 detailing to the Supreme Director Antonio Gonzalez de Balcarce the full military plan of operations 41 San Martin proposed that the country declare independence immediately before the crossing That way they would be acting as a sovereign nation and not as a mere rebellion 42 He had great influence over the Congress of Tucuman a Congress with deputies from the provinces which was established in March 1816 He opposed the appointment of Jose Moldes a soldier from Salta who was against the policies of Buenos Aires as he feared Moldes would break national unity He rejected proposals to be appointed Supreme Director himself He supported his friend and lodge member Juan Martin de Pueyrredon for the office Pueyrredon resumed the military aid to Cuyo The Congress of Tucuman declared independence on 9 July 1816 43 Congress discussed the type of government of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata modern Argentina General Manuel Belgrano who had made a diplomatic mission to Europe informed them that independence would be more easily acknowledged by the European powers if the country established a monarchy For this purpose Belgrano proposed a plan to crown a noble of the Inca Empire as king the Sapa Inca dynasty had been dethroned in the 16th century 44 San Martin supported this proposal as well as Guemes and most deputies except for those from Buenos Aires who undermined the project and prevented its approval 45 Needing even more soldiers San Martin extended the emancipation of slaves to the ages from 14 to 55 and even allowed them to be promoted to higher military ranks He proposed a similar measure at the national level but Pueyrredon encountered severe resistance He included as well the Chileans who escaped Chile after the disaster of Rancagua and organized them in four units each one of infantry cavalry artillery and dragoons At the end of 1816 the Army of the Andes had 5 000 men 10 000 mules and 1 500 horses San Martin organized military intelligence propaganda and disinformation to confuse the royalist armies such as the specific routes taken in the Andes boost the national fervor of his army and promote desertion among the royalists 46 47 Crossing of the Andes Edit Main article Crossing of the Andes Generals Jose de San Martin left and Bernardo O Higgins right during the crossing of the Andes Although the Congress of Tucuman had already formalized the flag of Argentina the Army of the Andes did not use it choosing a banner with two columns light blue and white and a coat of arms roughly similar to the Coat of arms of Argentina The army did not use the flag of Argentina because it was not exclusively an Argentine army 48 Contrary to the common understanding the crossing of the Andes was not the first time that a military expedition crossed the mountain range The difference from previous operations was the size of the army and that it had to be ready for combat right after the crossing The army was divided in six columns each taking a different path Colonel Francisco Zelada in La Rioja took the Come Caballos pass towards Copiapo Juan Manuel Cabot in San Juan moved to Coquimbo Ramon Freire and Jose Leon Lemos led two columns in the south The bulk of the armies left from Mendoza San Martin O Higgins and Soler led a column across the Los Patos pass and Juan Gregorio de Las Heras another one across the Uspallata Pass 49 50 The whole operation took nearly a month The armies took dried food for the soldiers and fodder for the horses because of the inhospitable conditions They also consumed garlics and onions to prevent altitude sickness 51 Only 4 300 mules and 511 horses survived less than half the original complement 52 Manuel Rodriguez had returned to Chile before the crossing and began a guerrilla war in Santiago de Chile against the royalists in support of the upcoming army He was supported in the south of the city and the countryside The strategy was to occupy nearby villages seize the royalists weapons and flee The attacks on Melipilla and San Fernando and a failed one at Curico demoralized the royalists 53 54 Chile Edit See also Chilean War of Independence Battle of Chacabuco Edit The Battle of Chacabuco between the Army of the Andes and Spanish forces in 1817 Main article Battle of Chacabuco The columns that crossed the Andes began to take military actions The column in the north led by Cabot defeated the royalists in Salala seized Coquimbo and then Copiapo In the south Ramon Freire captured Talca Las Heras routed royalist outposts in Juncalito and Potrerillos 55 Bernardo O Higgins who came from Los Patos pass defeated the royalists at Las Coimas 56 This allowed the main columns to gather at Aconcagua valley meeting at the slopes of Chacabuco Royalist commander Rafael Maroto converged his armies on that location as well Maroto had 2 450 men and 5 pieces of artillery San Martin had 3 600 men and 9 pieces of artillery The misdirection that concealed the path of the bulk of the Army allowed San Martin this advantage as other royalist forces were scattered in other regions of Chile 57 58 The battle began on 12 February San Martin organized a pincer movement with Soler leading the west column and O Higgins the east one O Higgins eager to avenge the defeat at Rancagua rushed to the attack instead of coordinating with Soler This gave the royalists a brief advantage San Martin instructed Soler to rush the attack as well The combined attack was successful and San Martin s column secured the final victory The battle ended with 600 royalists dead and 500 prisoners with only 12 deaths and 120 injuries in the Army of the Andes 59 60 The army triumphantly entered Santiago de Chile the following day 61 Governor Francisco Marco del Pont attempted to escape to Valparaiso and sail to Peru but he was captured on 22 February and returned to Santiago 62 Several other officials were captured as well and sent as prisoners to San Luis Argentina 63 San Martin sent Marco del Pont prisoner to Mendoza 64 Patria Nueva Edit Bernardo O Higgins commander of the Army of the Andes along with San Martin and Supreme Director of Chile after the victory at Chacabuco Three deputies from Coquimbo Santiago and Concepcion organized a new government and proposed San Martin as Supreme Director of Chile He declined the offer and proposed O Higgins in his stead he recommended that the Supreme Director should be someone from Chile San Martin would instead organize the navy to take the fight to Peru 65 He established a local chapter of the Lodge of Rational Knights named as Logia Lautaro in reference to Mapuche leader Lautaro 66 The victory in Chacabuco did not liberate all Chile Royalist forces still resisted in southern Chile allied with local Mapuche chiefs Las Heras occupied Concepcion 67 but failed to occupy Talcahuano 68 The royalist resistance lasted for several months 69 and Talcahuano was only captured when most of the continent was already free 70 San Martin left O Higgins in charge of the Army and returned to Buenos Aires to request resources for the campaign to Peru He did not have a good reception this time Pueyrredon thought that Chile should compensate Buenos Aires for the money invested in their liberation as the support to San Martin reduced the support to Belgrano and the Portuguese Brazilian invasion of the Eastern Bank menaced Buenos Aires Incapable of financial support Buenos Aires sent lawyer Manuel Aguirre to the United States to request aid and acknowledge the declaration of independence However the mission failed as the United States stayed neutral in the conflict because they negotiated the purchase of Florida with Spain The Chilean Jose Miguel Carrera had obtained ships on his own after the disaster of Rancagua which he intended to use to liberate Chile but as San Martin had already done that he refused to place his fleet under the Army of the Andes Carrera was an enemy of O Higgins and sought to navigate to Chile and depose him so Pueyrredon imprisoned him and confiscated his ships 71 San Martin requested help from British Admiral William Bowles He wrote from Chile and expected to find him in Buenos Aires but Bowles had embarked for Rio de Janeiro Bowles considered that San Martin was more trustworthy than Alvear and praised his support for monarchism San Martin did not obtain the ships and interrupted the correspondence with Bowles for some months He returned to Chile his wife Remedios stayed in Buenos Aires with her daughter Mercedes because of her health problems Unable to get help from either Buenos Aires or foreign powers San Martin promoted a more decisive commitment from Chile to finance the navy 72 Battle of Cancha Rayada Edit Main article Second Battle of Cancha Rayada The Chilean Declaration of Independence took place on 18 February 1818 shortly before the battles of Cancha Rayada and Maipu The failure to liberate Talcahuano was followed by naval reinforcements from the North The viceroy of Peru sent Mariano Osorio in an attempt to reconquer Chile The royalists would then advance by land from south to north towards Santiago San Martin thought that it was not possible to defend Concepcion so he ordered O Higgins to leave the city 50 000 Chileans took cattle and grain and moved north burning everything else so that they did not leave supplies for the royalists As he had done with the Tucuman Congress San Martin urged a declaration of independence to legitimize the government and the military actions The Chilean Declaration of Independence was issued on 18 February 1818 one year after the battle of Chacabuco 73 74 San Martin Las Heras and Balcarce met in Curico and the royalists in Talca in a plain known as Cancha rayada As the patriots had a numeric advantage 7 000 against 4 600 Osorio tried to avoid open battle and tried instead a stealth operation A spy informed San Martin that Osorio would make a surprise attack in the night but the army could not be prepared in time 1 000 soldiers fled 120 died and San Martin s assistant was killed O Higgins tried to resist with his unit but retired when he was shot in the arm Las Heras managed to retire his army in order saving his 3 500 men The patriots escaped to Santiago 75 76 Despite the defeat the soldiers were received as heroes in Santiago Thanks to Las Heras a potential disaster for the patriot armies turned into a minor setback 77 The army was reorganized again but the deaths injuries and desertions caused by the defeat at Cancha Rayada reduced its size to 5 000 soldiers which was closer to the royalist forces They took position next to the Maipo River near Santiago 78 Battle of Maipu Edit The Embrace of Maipu between Jose de San Martin and Bernardo O Higgins after the victory in the Battle of Maipu Main article Battle of Maipu San Martin made a brief reconnaissance of the royalist army and noticed several flaws in their organization Feeling secure of victory he claimed that Osorio is clumsier than I thought Today s triumph is ours The sun as witness 79 The battle began at 11 00 am The patriot artillery on the right fired on the royalist infantry on the left Manuel Escalada led mounted grenadiers to capture the royalist artillery turning them against their owners Burgos regiment severely punished the patriot left wing mainly composed of emancipated slaves and took 400 lives San Martin ordered the mounted grenadiers led by Hilarion de la Quintana to charge against the regiment The firing suddenly ended and royalists began to fight with sword bayonets under the cries Long live the king and Long live the homeland respectively Finally the royalists ended their cries and began to disperse 80 81 When the regiment of Burgos realized that their line was broken they stopped resisting and the soldiers began to disperse The cavalry pursued and killed most of them At the end of the battle the royalists had been trapped among the units of Las Heras in the west Alvarado in the middle Quintana in the east and the cavalries of Zapiola and Freire Osorio tried to fall back to the hacienda Lo Espejo but could not reach it so he tried to escape to Talcahuano Ordonez made his last stand at that hacienda where 500 royalists died 82 83 The battle ended in the afternoon O Higgins still injured by the wound received in Cancha Rayada arrived during the final action at the hacienda He claimed Glory to the savior of Chile in reference to San Martin who praised him for going to the battlefield with his unhealed wound They made an embrace on their horses now known as the Embrace of Maipu 82 The battle of Maipu secured Chilean independence 84 Except for Osorio who escaped with 200 cavalry all top royalist military leaders were captured All their armed forces were either killed or captured and all their artillery weapons military hospitals money and resources were lost The victory was praised by Guemes Bolivar and the international press 85 Fleet of the Pacific Edit San Martin before the Congress of Buenos Aires San Martin made a new request for ships to Bowles but received no answer He moved again to Buenos Aires to make a similar request He arrived to Mendoza a few days after the execution of the Chileans Luis and Juan Jose Carrera brothers of Jose Miguel Carrera 86 The specific initiative of those executions is controversial Chilean historian Benjamin Vicuna Mackenna indicts San Martin while J C Raffo de la Reta blames O Higgins instead Manuel Rodriguez was also imprisoned and then killed in prison this death may have been decided by the Lautaro lodge San Martin could not have taken part in it as he was already on the way to Buenos Aires 87 San Martin was not well received in Buenos Aires Pueyrredon initially declined to give further help citing the conflicts with the federal caudillos and the organization of a huge royalist army in Cadiz that would try to reconquer the La Plata basin He thought that Chile should organize the navy against Peru not Buenos Aires San Martin discussed with him and finally got financing of 500 000 pesos He returned to Mendoza with his wife and daughter and received a letter from Pueyrredon who said that Buenos Aires could only deliver one third of the promised funds This complicated the project as neither Santiago de Chile nor Mendoza had the resources needed San Martin resigned from the Army but it is unclear whether his decision to resign was sincere or was to apply pressure to his backers The government of Buenos Aires still considered San Martin vital to the national defense so Pueyrredon agreed to pay the 500 000 pesos requested and encouraged San Martin to withdraw his resignation 88 San Martin proposed to mediate between Buenos Aires and the Liga Federal led by Artigas He thought that the civil war was counter productive to national unity and that an end to hostilities would free resources needed for the navy He calculated that Artigas might condition the peace on a joint declaration of war to colonial Brazil so San Martin proposed to defeat the royalists first and then demand the return of the Eastern Bank to the United Provinces O Higgins recommended caution fearing that San Martin might be captured Pueyrredon rejected the mediation as he did not recognize Artigas as an equal to negotiate with him 89 Act of Rancagua Edit Parade of the Army of the Andes in Rancagua Although Artigas was defeated by the Luso Brazilian armies his allies Estanislao Lopez and Francisco Ramirez continued hostilities against Buenos Aires for its inactivity against the invasion Pueyrredon called the Army of the Andes and the Army of the North led by Belgrano to aid Buenos Aires in the conflict Guido noted to San Martin that if both armies did that the north of Argentina and Chile would be easily reconquered by the royalists San Martin also knew that most of the soldiers of the Army of the Andes would not be willing to aid Buenos Aires in the civil war as most were from other provinces or from Chile San Martin had doubts as well about the projected arrival of a large military expedition from Spain as the absolutist restoration of Ferdinand VII had met severe resistance in Spain San Martin finally kept the Army in Chile when Belgrano s lieutenant Viamonte signed an armistice with Lopez he thought that the conflict had ended 90 However the minister of war Matias de Irigoyen ordered once more the return of the Army of the Andes and appointed Francisco Fernandez de la Cruz as its leader displacing San Martin San Martin resigned again and observed that the Army would not be able to cross the Andes from Chile to Buenos Aires because the winter snow was blocking the trails All the leaders of the military units of the Army of the Andes refused to go to Buenos Aires as their soldiers would mutiny or desert Facing both the resignation of San Martin and the refusals to obey the orders the Supreme Director canceled the orders and the Army of the Andes stayed in Chile With the sanction of the Argentine Constitution of 1819 Pueyrredon ended his mandate as Supreme Director replaced by Jose Rondeau 91 The navy was finally completed in Chile and the British captain Thomas Cochrane was appointed to lead it But it was not sent to Peru immediately there were still rumors of an attack from Spain and if needed the navy would move to Buenos Aires and fight the Spanish ships The civil war resumed and San Martin attempted once more to mediate to no effect Rondeau again requested the return of the Army of the Andes without success 92 San Martin returned to Chile and prepared to take part in the naval actions against Peru ignoring Buenos Aires The Army of the North refused to join the conflict as well revolting in Arequito and disbanding 93 Without either reinforcements Rondeau was defeated by federal forces in the Battle of Cepeda The Congress of Tucuman and the office of the Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata were dissolved and the country turned into a confederation of 13 provinces without a central state This period is known as the Anarchy of the year XX 94 The rebellion of Spanish general Rafael del Riego and an outbreak of yellow fever in the punitive expedition organized in Cadiz ended the royalist threat to Buenos Aires 95 The Act of Rancagua invested San Martin with the full authority over the Army of the Andes as it now lacked a national authority over it 96 Peru Edit Main article Peruvian War of Independence Peru had armed forces nearly four times the strength of those of San Martin 6 244 soldiers in Lima 8 000 at the northern provinces 1 263 in the coast 1 380 in Arequipa and 6 000 in the Upper Peru nearly 23 000 soldiers in total The Army of the Andes had 4 000 soldiers instead and Cochrane s navy another 1 600 With this disparity of forces San Martin tried to avoid battles He tried instead to divide the enemy forces in several locations as he did during the Crossing of the Andes and trap the royalists with a pincer movement with either reinforcements of the Army of the North from the South or the army of Simon Bolivar from the North He also tried to promote rebellions and insurrection within the royalist ranks and promised the emancipation of any slaves that deserted their Peruvian masters and join the army of San Martin The spreading of the news of the Liberal Triennium a liberal rebellion in Spain that reinstated the Spanish Constitution of 1812 also sought to undermine royalist loyalty 97 The navy sailed from Chile on 20 August 1820 It was composed of eight warships eleven gunboats 247 cannons and a crew of 1 600 most of them Chileans There were 12 frigates and a brig with the 4 000 soldiers of the Army of the Andes San Martin was the leader of the military expedition They landed in Paracas 200 km to the south of Lima on 7 September and occupied the nearby city of Pisco which was abandoned by the royalists 98 99 Expedition of Peru Edit The Numancia battalion formerly a royalist unit joins the forces of San Martin Peruvian viceroy Joaquin de la Pezuela had instructions from Spain to negotiate with the patriots Under an armistice the opponents celebrated a meeting in Miraflores The viceroy s deputies proposed to adopt the liberal Spanish constitution if San Martin left the country but the patriots requested instead that Spain grant the independence of Peru The negotiations did not bear fruit 100 101 San Martin isolated Lima from the surrounding countryside and sent Juan Antonio Alvarez de Arenales to promote rebellions among the natives The Army of the Andes moved north of Lima by sea San Martin and Arenales besieged the city from two directions and Cochrane attacked the port of El Callao Cochrane captured the ship Esmeralda and the royalist regiment Numancia Nearly 700 expeditionary soldiers of New Granada deserted and joined the patriots Several populations in the north of Peru supported San Martin and Arenales defeated the royalists at the Battle of Pasco More than 300 royalists joined the patriots including Andres de Santa Cruz 102 103 However the plans did not fully work as intended The native populations that joined Arenales could not resist the royalist counter attacks 104 and the slaves did not join the army in the expected numbers The Argentine provinces could not send the supporting army that San Martin had requested earlier and the Army of the North no longer existed As a result he wrote to Simon Bolivar trying to coordinate actions with him 105 Pezuela was deposed by a military liberal coup and Jose de la Serna e Hinojosa became the new viceroy De la Serna called San Martin to negotiate an end of hostilities The result was the same than with Pezuela De la Serna proposed to enact the 1812 Spanish constitution Peru inside Spain and San Martin demanded the independence of Peru with an independent monarchy The rejection of the Spanish constitution was motivated by the disproportional representation of the Americas in the Constituent Assembly that wrote it Both armies agreed a temporary armistice San Martin proposed to establish a constitutional monarchy with a European monarch with a regency ruling in the interim The proposal was rejected on the grounds that they could not accept it without Ferdinand s approval 106 107 Protector of Peru Edit Jose de San Martin s proclamation of the independence of Peru on 28 July 1821 in Lima Painting by Juan Lepiani As hostilities renewed San Martin organized several guerrilla groups in the countryside and laid siege to Lima but did not force his entry as he did not want to appear as a conqueror to the local population However De la Serna suddenly left the city with his army for unknown reasons San Martin called for an open cabildo to discuss the independence of the country which was agreed With this approval the authority in Lima the support of the northern provinces and the port of El Callao under siege San Martin declared the independence of Peru on 28 July 1821 The war however had not ended yet 108 109 Unlike Chile Peru had no local politicians of the stature of O Higgins so San Martin became the leader of the government even though he did not want to He was appointed Protector of Peru As Peruvian society was highly conservative San Martin did not take the liberal ideas too far immediately The provisional statutes contained few changes and ratified several existing laws 110 All the types of servitude imposed on the natives such as mita and yanaconazgo were abolished and the natives received citizenship He did not abolish slavery completely as Peru had 40 000 slaveowners and declared freedom of wombs instead which emancipated the sons of slaves he emancipated as well the slaves of the royalists who left Lima He also abolished the Inquisition and corporal punishment and enacted freedom of speech 111 During his stay in Peru San Martin had a romance with Rosa Campuzano a woman from Guayaquil 112 The royalist armies that stayed in the Peruvian countryside headed to Lima led by Canterac In a confusing episode there was no battle as neither one attacked Canterac changed his path to El Callao took resources from it and returned to his base There was no battle during their return either Without resources El Callao surrendered in a few days 113 Both armies took inadvisable actions San Martin allowed Canterac to receive reinforcements and Canterac left a key military objective incapable to resist There is no known documentation that provides a reasonable explanation of those events 114 Cochrane had several disputes with San Martin 115 He discussed several of his actions and tried to bypass his authority During the blockade of El Callao he proposed that O Higgins take control of the mission and send any spoils of battle to Chile As San Martin was appointed Protector of Peru Cochrane reasoned that San Martin was no longer under Chilean command and took the navy away In later years Cochrane made accusations against San Martin in Chile 116 Bolivar took control of Caracas with his victory at the battle of Carabobo and the Congress of Cucuta issued laws similar to those in Peru Guayaquil declared independence and Bolivar sent Antonio Jose de Sucre to reinforce them Sucre s forces were not enough and requested help from San Martin Peru sent a military force of 1 300 men Bolivar entered the city a month later and claimed that for historical reasons Quito should be part of Colombia 117 San Martin and Bolivar sought to generate Latin American integration but disagreed on the type of government Bolivar proposed a republic and San Martin a constitutional monarchy reasoning that it would be easier to receive international recognition for the now independent South American nations 118 Peru and Colombia signed a treaty of integration to be proposed to Chile the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata and Paraguay and at a later point to the United Provinces of Central America and the Empire of Brazil 119 Guayaquil conference Edit Main article Guayaquil conference The Guayaquil conference between Simon Bolivar and Jose de San Martin The real conference took place inside an office and not in the countryside as the portrait suggests San Martin thought that if he joined forces with Bolivar he would be able to defeat the remnant royalist forces in Peru Both liberators would meet in Quito so San Martin appointed Torre Tagle to manage the government during his absence Bolivar was unable to meet San Martin at the arranged date so San Martin returned to Lima but still left Tagle in government Bolivar moved from Quito to Guayaquil which secured its independence There were discussions on the future of the region some factions wanted to join Colombia others to join Peru and others to become a new nation Bolivar ended the discussion by annexing Guayaquil into Colombia There was Peruvian pressure on San Martin to do a similar thing to annex Guayaquil to Peru 120 The Guayaquil conference took place on 26 July 1822 They had two private meetings on that day and the following one As there were no witnesses or minutes the content of their discussions can only be inferred from their later actions and their letters to other people Some likely topics of discussion may have been a request of reinforcements and an offer to combine the armies into a single one with San Martin ranked second to Bolivar 121 122 The minister Bernardo Monteagudo was removed from office by a Peruvian rebellion during San Martin s absence San Martin resigned as Protector of Peru a few days later and returned to Valparaiso Chile Several reasons influenced him to resign The military discipline of the Army of the Andes was compromised but San Martin was reluctant to take drastic action against his officers The authority of San Martin and Bolivar and the local rivalry of their respective countries Peru and Colombia limited their options for joint work Colombians would not have liked Bolivar to give many of his forces to San Martin whilst Peruvians would not have liked their Protector to be second in command to Bolivar and a joint command would complicate the maintenance of military discipline Unlike Bolivar backed up by the Colombian government San Martin did not have more resources than those he already had Buenos Aires denied him any support the other Argentine governors such as Juan Bautista Bustos supported him but did not have resources to provide O Higgins was about to be deposed in Chile and Cochrane took the navy and left him without naval power Finally he felt that only a very strong authority would be able to prevent balkanization but refused to rule as a dictator himself 123 Later life EditMain article Later life of Jose de San Martin General San Martin in Paris 1848 After his retirement San Martin intended to live in Cuyo Although the war of independence had ended in the region the Argentine Civil Wars continued The unitarians wanted to organize the country as a unitary state centered on Buenos Aires and the federalists preferred a federation of provinces San Martin had good relations with the federal caudillos and a personal feud with unitarian leader Bernardino Rivadavia but tried to stay neutral San Martin s wife Maria de los Remedios de Escalada died in 1823 so he returned to Buenos Aires He took his daughter Mercedes Tomasa who was living with her mother s family and sailed to Europe 124 After a failed attempt to settle in France he moved to Britain and then to the capital of present day Belgium Brussels where he settled He intended to live there until Mercedes completed her education and then return to Argentina Rivadavia visited Brussels and San Martin intended to challenge him to a duel but was dissuaded by Diego Paroissien 125 Despite his feud with Rivadavia who was appointed President of Argentina San Martin offered his military services in the War with Brazil but received no response He sailed to the country when Rivadavia was deposed and replaced by the federal Manuel Dorrego and the war ended in the interim He intended to return anyway as a federal government would spare him the persecution he would otherwise have received from the unitarians He was unable to do as he planned When his ship docked in Rio de Janeiro he was informed that the unitarian Juan Lavalle had deposed Dorrego and when he reached Montevideo he was informed that Lavalle had captured and executed Dorrego and begun a campaign of terror against all federals in the country The ship arrived in Buenos Aires but San Martin did not leave it instead returning to Montevideo Lavalle was unable to put down the federal rebellion against him and offered San Martin the government San Martin declined and returned to Brussels 126 By this time the federal Juan Manuel de Rosas had begun to pacify the civil war started by Lavalle and earned San Martin s admiration They began to exchange friendly letters The Belgian Revolution and the cholera epidemic of 1831 made San Martin leave Brussels and move to Paris where both San Martin and his daughter became ill They were helped by Mariano Balcarce Mariano married Mercedes and they had a daughter Maria Mercedes 127 In 1837 France began a blockade of the Rio de la Plata against Rosas San Martin offered his military services to Rosas which was declined because of San Martin s advanced age and condemned the role of the unitarians in that conflict as they had allied themselves with France against their own nation San Martin bequeathed his curved saber to Rosas because of his successful defense of the country The conflict between France and Argentina renewed in the Anglo French blockade of the Rio de la Plata which San Martin condemned as well During this time he met Florencio Varela and Domingo Faustino Sarmiento 128 During the French 1848 revolution San Martin left Paris and moved to Boulogne sur Mer a small city in northern France He was almost blind and had many health problems because of his advanced age but continued to write letters and keep in touch with the news from South America Shortly after receiving the news of the Argentine victory against the Anglo French blockade he died three o clock on 17 August 1850 129 Remains Edit Mausoleum of San Martin at the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral The three statues are national personifications of Argentina Chile and Peru Jose de San Martin died on 17 August 1850 in his house at Boulogne sur Mer France Between 1850 and 1861 his corpse was buried in the crypt of the Basilica of Notre Dame de Boulogne He requested in his will to be taken to the cemetery without any funeral and to be moved to Buenos Aires thereafter Balcarce informed Rosas and the foreign minister Felipe Arana of San Martin s death Balcarce oversaw the embalming of his remains and their temporary stay in a chapel of the city He also sent San Martin s saber to Rosas 130 However the rebellion of Justo Jose de Urquiza against Rosas in 1851 Rosas defeat at the battle of Caseros and the resulting chaos delayed the move of San Martin s remains to Buenos Aires Still both Rosas and Urquiza organized public homages to San Martin despite the conflict Buenos Aires seceded from Argentina as the state of Buenos Aires dominated by Unitarians who despised San Martin Thus the move of his remains was postponed indefinitely Aware that there were no favorable conditions for the project Balcarce arranged a creation of a tomb in the Boulogne sur Mer cemetery 131 San Martin s remains were finally repatriated on 29 May 1880 during the presidency of Nicolas Avellaneda The mausoleum was placed inside the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral As San Martin was suspected of being a freemason the mausoleum was placed in an expanded wing of the cathedral 132 Legacy EditMain article Legacy of Jose de San Martin The Cerro de la Gloria monument to the Army of the Andes at Mendoza Argentina San Martin was first acclaimed as a national hero of Argentina by the Federals both during his life and immediately after his death The unitarians still resented his refusal to aid the Supreme Directors with the Army of the Andes and his constant support to Rosas 133 The unitarian Bartolome Mitre wrote a biography of San Martin Historia de San Martin y de la emancipacion sudamericana Spanish History of San Martin and the South American emancipation By that time several accounts of San Martin were under way in many countries Valentin Ledesma from Lima wrote in 1853 about San Martin s campaign in Peru and Benjamin Vicuna Mackenna from Chile wrote in 1856 about the Chilean War of Independence 134 With Mitre s book San Martin was universally acclaimed as the Liberator of Argentina but his work introduced several inaccuracies to make San Martin s campaign support Mitre s political project These inaccuracies were detected and fixed by later historians 135 Statues of San Martin appear in most cities of Argentina as well as in Santiago and Lima Jose Gil de Castro made the first portrait of San Martin and several other artists made works about him 136 The most important films featuring San Martin are the 1970 El Santo de la Espada and the 2010 Revolucion El cruce de los Andes citation needed The neighbourhood of San Martin in Bogota Colombia s Centro Internacional area is named for the large equestrian statue of the General situated in a small plaza also named for him citation needed Santo Domingo Dominican Republic has an avenue named Jose de San Martin in his honor that connects the colonial zone to the west of the city citation needed Equestrian statue in Boulogne sur Mer in France An equestrian statue of the General was erected in Boulogne sur Mer the statue was inaugurated on 24 October 1909 at a ceremony attended by several units from the Argentine military 137 138 The statue was erected through purely private initiative with the support of national government of Argentina the municipal council of Buenos Aires and a public funding campaign The statue is 10m high on a 4m by 6m base it is well known to locals Located on the beach it was virtually untouched by the numerous bombings campaigns during both world wars 139 There is an equestrian statue of General San Martin in Washington D C along NW Virginia Street It is a copy of a statue in Buenos Aires It was presented by the Argentine people to the people of the United States unveiled with appropriate ceremony on October 28 1925 140 141 There is also an equestrian statue of General San Martin in New York City on the southern side of Central Park It was dedicated in 1951 and was donated by the City of Buenos Aires Argentina 142 There is a memorial featuring a bust of General San Martin in Beverly Hills CA The bust was designed by Fernando Di Zitti and dedicated in 2001 143 There is also a bust of San Martin at the Intramuros or Walled City of Manila which was erected in 1950 at the request of the Peron government as a reminder that San Martin s brother Juan Fermin served in the Philippines from 1801 to 1822 and left descendants there 144 145 References Edit John Lynch San Martin Argentine Soldier American Hero 2009 El origen mestizo del general San Martin www cedec cl 7 January 2007 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 25 March 2015 Galasso 2000 p 14 15 Galasso 2000 pp 11 12 Galasso 2000 p 22 24 Galasso 2000 p 24 Galasso 2000 p 24 26 Galasso 2000 p 26 27 Galasso 2000 p 28 Galasso 2000 p 26 32 Galasso 2000 p 33 50 Jaksic Ivan 2006 Andres Bello Scholarship and Nation Building in Nineteenth Century Latin America Cambridge University Press p 33 ISBN 978 0 521 02759 5 Francisco de Miranda Blue Plaque londonremembers com Retrieved 7 May 2013 Galasso 2000 pp 51 64 Galasso 2000 pp 65 76 Galasso 2000 pp 77 85 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 498 500 Vol I Galasso 2000 pp 85 89 a b Galasso 2000 p 91 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 p 73 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 p 74 a b Galasso 2000 p 92 a b Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 p 76 Galasso 2000 pp 93 95 Galasso 2000 p 102 Galasso 2000 pp 101 104 Galasso 2000 pp 104 110 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 506 507 Vol I Abad de Santillan 1965 p 537 Vol I Galasso 2000 pp 111 121 Abad de Santillan 1965 p 581 Vol I Galasso 2000 pp 123 130 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 1 3 Vol II Galasso 2000 p 131 Galasso 2000 p 212 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 7 Galasso 2000 pp 133 136 Abad de Santillan 1965 p 526 Vol I Galasso 2000 pp 143 156 John Lynch The Spanish American Revolutions 1808 1826 2nd ed 1986 Galasso 2000 pp 157 163 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 548 549 Vol I Galasso 2000 pp 165 178 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 549 550 Vol I Galasso 2000 pp 179 189 Galasso 2000 pp 191 202 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 9 10 Vol II Galasso 2000 pp 203 206 Galasso 2000 pp 206 208 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 12 13 Vol II Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 13 Galasso 2000 pp 209 210 Galasso 2000 pp 214 217 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 10 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 76 79 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 81 82 Galasso 2000 pp 219 220 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 p 84 Galasso 2000 pp 220 221 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 85 92 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 p 92 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 91 92 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 18 Galasso 2000 p 221 222 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 19 Galasso 2000 p 224 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 92 93 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 98 101 Galasso 2000 pp 224 226 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 p 101 Galasso 2000 pp 227 234 Galasso 2000 pp 235 246 Galasso 2000 p 247 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 p 102 Galasso 2000 pp 247 248 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 102 107 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 p 107 Galasso 2000 p 248 Galasso 2000 p 250 Galasso 2000 pp 250 251 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 108 115 a b Galasso 2000 p 251 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 115 118 Camogli amp de Privitellio 2005 pp 118 119 Galasso 2000 pp 251 254 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 32 Galasso 2000 pp 265 267 Galasso 2000 pp 269 277 Galasso 2000 pp 279 286 Galasso 2000 pp 287 293 Galasso 2000 pp 293 299 Galasso 2000 pp 301 308 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 52 Galasso 2000 pp 309 320 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 44 Galasso 2000 pp 321 327 Galasso 2000 pp 334 336 Galasso 2000 p 337 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 50 Galasso 2000 p 338 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 49 53 Vol II Galasso 2000 pp 339 340 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 53 55 Vol II Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 55 Galasso 2000 p 341 Galasso 2000 pp 342 347 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 58 59 Vol II Galasso 2000 pp 349 353 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 59 63 Vol II Galasso 2000 pp 353 358 Galasso 2000 pp 359 368 Galasso 2000 pp 381 383 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 64 66 Vol II Galasso 2000 pp 369 371 Abad de Santillan 1965 Vol II p 67 Galasso 2000 pp 372 383 Galasso 2000 p 383 385 Galasso 2000 pp 387 395 Galasso 2000 pp 397 406 Galasso 2000 pp 407 409 Galasso 2000 pp 407 421 Abad de Santillan 1965 pp 73 74 Vol II Galasso 2000 pp 423 437 Galasso 2000 pp 453 465 Galasso 2000 pp 467 476 Galasso 2000 pp 477 495 Galasso 2000 pp 497 521 Galasso 2000 pp 523 558 Galasso 2000 pp 559 570 Galasso 2000 pp 569 574 Galasso 2000 pp 574 577 Galasso 2000 p 584 Galasso 2000 pp 574 576 Galasso 2000 p 579 Galasso 2000 pp 582 586 Mayochi Inauguration de la statue equestre du general argentin San Martin marins argentins du navire Presidente Sarmiento 24 oct 1909 BNF Gallica in French Retrieved 13 May 2016 Inauguration de la statue equestre du general argentin San Martin cavaliers argentins detachement du regiment des grenadiers a cheval Boulogne sur Mer 24 octobre 1909 photographie de presse BNF Gallica in French Retrieved 13 May 2016 Verley Andre 21 October 2009 Jose de San Martin histoire d un monument Jose de San Martin History of a monument La semaine dans le boulonnais in French Boulogne Retrieved 13 May 2016 Smithsonian Inventory Liberador General Jose de San Martin sculpture Retrieved 28 June 2016 Bulletin Of The Pan American Union 1925 12 Vol 59 Iss 12 retrieved 7 January 2021 Central Park Monuments General Jose de San Martin NYC Parks NYC Parks New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation Retrieved 26 May 2016 Jose de San Martin Bust AtlasObscura Retrieved 16 July 2020 Aguilar Karl 22 July 2012 Of conquistadores and libertadores the case of Intramuros monuments The Urban Roamer Retrieved 6 July 2015 Galasso 2000 pp 574 585 Bibliography EditLynch John San Martin Argentine Soldier American Hero Lynch John The Spanish American Revolutions 1808 1826 2nd ed 1986 Abad de Santillan Diego 1965 Historia Argentina in Spanish Buenos Aires TEA Tipografica Editora Argentina Camogli Pablo de Privitellio Luciano 2005 Batallas por la Libertad in Spanish Buenos Aires Aguilar ISBN 978 987 04 0105 6 Galasso Norberto 2000 Seamos libres y lo demas no importa nada Let us be free and nothing else matters in Spanish Buenos Aires Colihue ISBN 978 950 581 779 5 Mayochi Enrique Mario San Martin visto por los artistas San Martin saw by artists in Spanish San Martin National Institute Archived from the original on 1 June 2012 Retrieved 14 July 2012 Further reading Edit Spain portal Latin America portal Argentina portal Chile portal Peru portal Biography portalDocumentos para la historia del Libertador General San Martin Documents for the history of Liberator General San Martin in Spanish Buenos Aires Instituto Nacional Sanmartiniano and Museo Historico Nacional 1953 Crow John 1992 The Epic of Latin America Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07723 2 Dellepiane Carlos 1965 Historia militar del Peru Military history of Peru in Spanish Buenos Aires Circulo Militar Espindola Adolfo 1962 San Martin en el Ejercito Espanol en la peninsula San Martin in the Spanish Army in the peninsula in Spanish Buenos Aires Comision Nacional Ejecutiva del 150 Aniversario de la Revolucion de Mayo Harvey Robert 2000 Liberators Latin America s Struggle For Independence New York The Overlook Press Peter Mayer Publishers ISBN 978 1 58567 072 7 Higgins James 2014 The Emancipation of Peru British Eyewitness Accounts Online at https sites google com site jhemanperu Levene Ricardo 1936 Historia de la Nacion Argentina History of the Argentine Nation in Spanish Buenos Aires Editorial El Ateneo Montes i Bradley Ricardo Ernesto 1952 El agricultor Jose de San Martin The farmer Jose de San Martin in Spanish Mexico Editorial Perspectivas External links EditJose de San Martin at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Newspaper clippings about Jose de San Martin in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPreceded byNone President of Peru1821 1822 Succeeded byFrancisco Xavier de Luna PizarroPreceded byJose Miguel Carrera Commander in Chief of the Army of Chile1817 1819 Succeeded byBernardo O HigginsPreceded byMarcos Gonzalez de Balcarce Governor of Cuyo1814 1816 Succeeded byToribio Luzuriaga Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jose de San Martin amp oldid 1141178281, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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