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Mariano Melgarejo

Manuel Mariano Melgarejo Valencia (13 April 1820 – 23 November 1871)[1] was a Bolivian military officer and politician who served as the fifteenth president of Bolivia from December 28, 1864, until his fall on January 15, 1871.[2][3]

Mariano Melgarejo
15th President of Bolivia
In office
28 December 1864 – 15 January 1871
Provisional: 28 December 1864 – 15 August 1870
Preceded byJosé María de Achá
Succeeded byAgustín Morales
Personal details
Born
Manuel Mariano Melgarejo Valencia

(1820-04-13)13 April 1820
Tarata, United Provinces of the Río de la Plata (now Bolivia)
Died23 November 1871(1871-11-23) (aged 51)
Lima, Peru
Manner of deathAssassination
SpouseRosa Rojas
Domestic partnerJuana Sánchez
ChildrenFederico Melgarejo Rojas
Severo Melgarejo Rojas
Valentina Melgarejo
Parent(s)Ignacio Valencia
Lorenza Melgarejo
AwardsOrder of the Southern Cross
Signature
Nickname(s)Capitán del Siglo (Captain of the Century), Héroe de Diciembre (December Hero)
Military service
AllegianceBolivia
Branch/serviceBolivian Army
RankGeneral
Battles/warsWar of the Confederation
Peruvian-Bolivian War

He assumed power in 1864 after staging a coup d'état against president José María de Achá, thus beginning six-year dictatorship, popularly known as the Sexenio. He would cement his power after personally killing former president Manuel Isidoro Belzu in 1865.[4] He was of controversial personality and his dictatorship is remembered in Bolivia mainly for its poor government administration and its abuses against the indigenous population, in addition to having signed unfavorable border treaties with Chile and Brazil in 1866 and 1867, which proved to be devastating in coming years.[5][6]

On January 15, 1871, the Commander-in-Chief of the Army at the time, General Agustín Morales, along with the support of the people of La Paz, tired of the president's despotic actions for almost seven years, rose up against Melgarejo and deposed him. With the people having risen against Melgarejo, a bloody battle ensued in the city of La Paz which has been considered one of the fiercest and most terrible battles in Bolivian history.[7] At the end of that day, the uprising triumphed over government troops, thus managing ending the Melgarejo regime.[8][9]

Once ousted from power, Melgarejo fled Bolivia for Chile, where he stayed for a few months. While in Santiago de Chile, he learned that Juana Sánchez, his lover, was living in the city of Lima, Peru. Consequently, Melgarejo decided to leave for that country, but, once he arrived in Lima, he was shot to death on November 23, 1871, by Juana's brother, José Aurelio Sánchez.[10]

Early life edit

He was born on April 13, 1820, in the town of Tarata, current department of Cochabamba, Bolivia; then belonging to the territory of the Viceroyalty of Peru. He was the son of mestiza Ignacia Melgarejo and the Spaniard José Linares.[11] When he was born, his father did not recognize him as his legitimate son and abandoned him.[12][13] For this reason, Melgarejo had to take the surname of his mother, who raised him during his childhood. Melgarejo grew up with his mother and spent his childhood in a humble home in the small town of Tarata; his house still remains today.[2][14][15][16]

Personal life edit

Melgarejo was married to Rosa Rojas, the member of a middle-class family. Together, they two sons: Federico (1840-1872) and Severo (1842-1905). His younger son was married to Rosaura Sánchez, the sister of Juana and Aurelio Sánchez.[17] Melgarejo was constantly disloyal to his wife, who is often excluded from history and rarely mentioned.

Military career edit

 
Melgarejo's childhood home in Tarta.

Melgarejo began his military career in the city of Cochabamba at a very young age. He entered the army at the age of 16, joining in 1836 with the rank of private. Melgarejo was present in many different battles during the War of the Confederation, during which the government of Andrés de Santa Cruz. At the end of the war in 1839, he was promoted to the rank of sergeant.

In 1841, at the age of 21, Melgarejo participated in the battle of Ingavi, a clash between Bolivia and Peru while he was a sergeant under the command of José Ballivián Segurola. During the battle, Melgarejo managed to demonstrate his heroism and bravery on the battlefield, for which the Bolivian government promoted him to the rank of second lieutenant.[18]

After Ingavi, Ballivián kept the young soldier Melgarejo by his side, with the aim of protecting his government against future military uprisings by the opposition. It is worth mentioning that President Ballivián saw defects in the young soldier, which is why he kept him assigned to the borders, due to Melgarejo's conduct and dangerous behavior caused by his fondness and abuse of alcohol.[19]

 
The death of Marshal Agustín Gamarra at the Battle of Ingavi.

During his military career, Melgarejo managed to rise in the military hierarchy through the adulation of his superiors, his willingness to participate in rebellions and in some isolated acts of courage. Unlike other soldiers of his time, Melgarejo was characterized for being poorly educated, but always willful.[18]

Promotions edit

  • In 1836, he entered the Bolivian army with the rank of soldier (at the age of 16).
  • In 1839, he was promoted to the rank of sergeant (aged 19).
  • In 1841, he was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant by José Ballivián himself after his heroic displays during the Battle of Ingavi (21 years old).[18]
  • In 1846, he was promoted to the rank of first lieutenant (26 years old).
  • In 1850, he rose to the rank of captain (at the age of 30).
  • In 1855, he was promoted to the rank of major (at the age of 35).
  • In 1857, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel (at the age of 37).
  • In 1859, the president of Bolivia, José María Linares, personally promoted Melgarejo to the rank of colonel, in gratitude for having helped him overthrow former president Jorge Córdova (at the age of 39).[20]
  • In 1862, the president of Bolivia, José María de Achá, personally promoted Melgarejo to the rank of army general (at the age of 42), in gratitude for having helped him overthrow former president José María Linares. This is the maximum degree that can be reached within the Bolivian army. In just 26 years, Mariano Melgarejo went from being a simple soldier (in 1836) to being the general of the entire Bolivian Army (in 1862).[20][19][16]

Political career edit

Death sentence and presidential pardon edit

 
"Either you follow me, cuirassiers, or I blow my brains out!", an infamous harangue of Melgarejo during his imminent takeover in 1864.

In 1854, Melgarejo appears for the first time on the public and political scene of Bolivia. At the beginning of that year, he mutinied with his troops after carrying out a military uprising in the city of Santa Cruz de la Sierra, pronouncing himself against the government of President Manuel Isidoro Belzu, but his revolt was quickly crushed by government troops, being captured and immediately taken to the city of Cochabamba to stand trial. During his trial, Melgarejo was tried and charged with high treason and armed uprising against the Bolivian state and was sentenced to death.[15][1][7]

When Melgarejo was awaiting his execution by firing squad (as befitted the military officers of that time), some ladies from the high society of Cochabamba (very close friends of his) met in person with President Belzu at the Palcio Quemado to plead for the life of the prisoner. They justified his actions of revolt and military uprising to his alcoholism.[7]

President Manuel Isidoro Belzu, agreeing to the request, spared the life of Melgarejo, but later, in a prophetic way, told the women of Cochabamba that "one day they would regret" asking for mercy for the life of a womanizing and drunk military officer.[21][22] After the presidential pardon, Melgarejo was released and continued his military career in the Bolivian Army.

Paradoxically, among the various ladies who asked for Melgarejo's life was the mother of the prestigious Bolivian poet and politician Néstor Galindo, who eleven years later in 1865, would be cruelly shot fighting in the Battle of the Cantería de Potosí against the Melgarejo government.[22]

Political conspiracies edit

 
The assassination of Manuel Isidoro Belzu at the hands of Melgarejo.

After his military revolt in 1854, Melgarejo acquired a certain notoriety and a moderate leadership among the army troops. The governments of presidents Jorge Córdova (1855-1857) and José María Linares (1857-1861), considered him dangerous and kept him stationed at distant locations in the borderlands, far from the main cities. Doing so, Córdova and Linares reigmes hoped to isolate Melgarejo and prevent him from influencing soldiers and officers with his alcoholism and immorality and, at the same time, also avoid future military uprisings.[22][23]

During the government of President Córdova (1855-1857), Melgarejo already held the rank of lieutenant colonel. During that time he openly supported the conspiracies of politician José María Linares had and aided the civilian cause to overthrow Córdova. In September 1857, together with Colonel Plácido Yáñez, he rose up in favor of Linares during the coup d'état that ousted Córdova. Organizing and commanding the barricades in the city of Cochabamba, Melgarejo played a crucial role in the defeat of President Jorge Córdova who was overthrown after the Battle of Cochabamba. Linares rose to the presidency of Bolivia and, thankful for Melgarejo's support, promoted Melgarejo to the rank of colonel in 1859.[22][23]

During the first months of the Linares regime, Melgarejo supported him openly. However, years later he rose up against himin rebellion and was crucial yet again in the overthrow of a president. Once Linares was overthrown in 1861, the former Minister of War, José María de Achá, rose to the presidency. During the coup, Melgarejo changed sides and, with Achá's victory, openly supported the new regime.[22]

Rise to power edit

He crushed countless uprisings and rebellions on behalf of President Achá, who in return gave him his friendship and total trust, promoting Melgarejo to the rank of army general in 1862. At the beginning of the year 1864, a rumor spread in Bolivian society about the infidelity of President Achá's wife with General Melgarejo.

Upon discovering they were indeed lovers, the morale and health of President Achá seriously declined, as well losing respect from the army, being discredited by the opposition as a cuckold. His wife would die suddenly weeks later, also afflicted by a serious illness in August 1864.[24]

Presidency (1864-1871) edit

 
Mariano Melgarejo as President of Bolivia (1864-1871).

In December 1864, taking advantage of the delicate health of President Achá, Melgarejo revolted against him, and, together with his troops, carried out a coup against the government. By this point, the unpopular government was ruling over a chaotic and anarchic land, making Melgarejo's task far simpler. Melgarejo rose to the Presidency of Bolivia on December 28, 1864, at the age of forty-four.[25]

The Constitutionalist Uprising of 1865-1865 edit

The early rebellion edit

Even after Belzu had been eliminated, Melgarejo still faced widespread discontent from several sector of society and would face nearly a year of rebellions by a collective group called "Constitutionalists". Having seized power only in December 1864, less than a month later Melgarejo clashed with rebel forces in Tacaquira, located in the southern area of the Chuquisaca Department, on January 24, 1865. The rebels would win this encounter, facing government troops again in a bigger battle on the banks of the Oscara River on February 3 and ultimately retreating.[26]

The assassination of Manuel Isidoro Belzu edit

To Melgarejo's dismay, former President Manuel Isidoro Belzu, who was exiled in Europe, returned to Bolivia to dispute the rise of General Melgarejo, finally sparking a full civil war. On March 22, 1865, Belzu's army defeated the government forces in La Paz with the help of the popular masses. On March 27, Melgarejo attacked La Paz with his army but was defeated, with several of his men choosing to side with Belzu.[26]

However, as soon as Belzu entered the Palacio Quemado for the meeting, Melgarejo and his men murdered him. New investigations have come up with the theory that since Melgarejo's revolver failed (the seller found out that only 1 bullet came out of 5 shots), then the bullet that killed Belzu came from the revolver of some soldier who was behind him.[4][27] Regardless of what happened that fateful day, Belzu was killed and Melgarejo had eliminated a huge threat to his government.

According to legend, when Melgarejo's presence was known, a crowd gathered in the Plaza Murillo, located in front of the Bolivian Government Palace, cheering Belzu's name. However, Melgarejo appeared on a balcony instead and announced, "Belzu is dead. Who lives now?" and the crowd gave a bestial cry: "Long live Melgarejo!"[28][29]

The May uprising edit

Only two months after Belzu had been defeated and killed, on May 25 another Constitutionalist revolt broke out in La Paz. A week later, on June 1, a committee was established in Oruro and proclaimed a revolution. The rebels managed to capture the government palace and, two days later, the garrison of Chayanta also rose up against Melgarejo. On June 8, the Constitutionalists sent an army toward Oruro in the south, being defeated on July 1 by Melgarejo's troops. With Oruro now occupied by the government forces, Melgarejo still was unable to end the anarchy, facing rebellion in many more areas of the country. La Paz, Oruro, and Chayanta joined to create a board to lead the revolution and foment the spread of it to other cities and towns. Very quickly, Potosí, Sucre, Cobija, Tarija, and Cochabamba would join. Although all seemed lost for Melgarejo, by August 8, he was able to recapture Sucre, Cochabamba, and Potosí. Generals Ildefonso Sanjinés and Nicanor Flores had been competing for leadership, resuting in the forestalling of rebel operations and allowing Melgarejo to exploit this weakness. On Septiember 5, Flores decided to lead an attack against the government forces, however, was defeated and was forced to flee to Argentina. On October 25 Santa Cruz declared itself in support of the revolution. However, on November 22 the government had retaken the city after a brief skirmish. The northern rebels, under the command of General Casto Arguedas, decided to launch an offensive which was ultimately defeated and hastily retreated to Viacha. On January 24, 1866, Melgarejo and his trusted second in command, Quintín Quevedo, met the remainder of the rebels in the hill of Letanias, scoring a major victory and achieving the unconditional surrender of the Constitutionalist rebels.[30]

Administration edit

 
Melgarejo and his cabinet c. 1868.

After proclaiming himself president of Bolivia, Melgarejo proceeded to govern without rivals but with great incompetence. One of his first measures was to violently suppress the opposition and annul the traditional rights of the indigenous population, declaring that the communal lands of the native communities would be property of the State. He then ordered the violent eviction of the communities to grant the lands to allied landowners, an aggression that had not even been carried out during Spanish rule. He also abolished municipalities and local governments, refusing to appoint mayors.

Melgarejo entrusted the public administration to his chancellor, a young lawyer named Mariano Donato Muñoz, especially in foreign policy. Shortly after assuming power, he was visited by a young woman who belonged to a wealthy family from La Paz named Juana Sánchez. She had come to Melgarejo to ask for clemency for the life of her brother Aurelio Sánchez, who had been sentenced to death. Melgarejo not only spare his life, but also took Juana Sánchez as his concubine after holding her hostage in the Palacio Quemado for three consecutive days. Madly in love with the young woman (who succumbed to the personality of the general), Melgarejo gave her and her family great influence in the government, which the Sánchez family took advantage of, enriching themselves at the expense of the treasury.[31]

Melgarejo's government turned out to be increasingly erratic and unstable. While the dictator spent much of his time in orgies with Juana Sánchez, who was as lustful as the general himself and also addicted to alcohol, her family dominated politics and the governing of the nation. In 1866, Melgarejo signed a border treaty with Chile, establishing the common border but recognizing all Chilean commercial interests in the exploitation of saltpeter on the Bolivian coast of Antofagasta. This practically left Bolivia without any compensation other than the right to collect taxes in their own territory.[32] Later, in 1867, he negotiated with the Empire of Brazil the sale of 102,400 km² of Bolivian territory (from the Acre region) through the Treaty of Ayacucho. This in exchange for the payment of two million pounds sterling and the Brazilian commitment to build the Madeira railway in the Mamoré region.[33][34] In 1868, Melgarejo promulgated a new constitution, granting himself omnimodal powers over public administration and attributing to his position the power to "persecute and kill opponents". The promulgation ceremony ended with a banquet and consequent orgy where he made Juana Sánchez participate totally naked.[35][36]

War of the Triple Alliance (1864-1870) edit

 
Scenes from the War of the Triple Alliance.

In 1864, Paraguay had been invaded by Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay in what is known as the War of the Triple Alliance. Melgarejo expressed solidarity with Paraguay, giving his full support to this nation. But his supposed support remained only in words, since Melgarejo in fact maintained a neutral stance and never mobilized troops to help Paraguay.[37]

Franco-Prussian War (1870) edit

In July 1870, when Prussia invaded France, starting the Franco-Prussian War, Melgarejo asked one of his high-ranking generals to immediately send Bolivian troops to help the French army defend Paris. This was city that Melgarejo was fascinated by with its stories of sophistication and elegance but which he did not even know how to locate on a map. The Bolivian general replied that the plan was impossible, since it would take a long time to cross the Atlantic Ocean. Enraged, Melgarejo replied, "Don't be silly! We'll take a shortcut!"

Blinded by anger, Melgarejo arranged to gather a troop of 3,000 men to embark for Europe and help France. Attending a horse race in Oruro, he suffered a broken foot that stopped him for a month, and planned to cross the Amazon jungles of Brazil to reach the Atlantic Ocean and reach Europe. Resuming his march, Melgarejo received news that France had already capitulated to Prussia but he refused to believe such events. In mid-November, he was informed that Great Britain was expelling Bolivian residents from British soil and refusing to recognize the existence of Bolivia in retaliation for the British ambassador to Bolivia having been expelled by Melgarejo from the country, giving him a beating shortly before doing so. While this occurred, the city of Potosí revolted against the government.[37]

Downfall edit

Alarmed, Melgarejo attacked Potosí and crushed the revolt through a series of massacres and cruelties, but soon he learned that, taking advantage of his absence, La Paz, Cochabamba, and other major cities had also joined in a general uprising.[7] Melgarejo gathered his troops and marched on La Paz, but soon his men began to desert en masse. Especially after getting rid of some his most loyal and important men, like José María Calderón, Melgarejo weakened himself to a great extent. Finally, on January 15, 1871, his battered army was completely defeated by the Commander of the Army, General Agustín Morales.[1][4][14][28]

Author Moisés Alcázar describes the jubilant sentiment of the Bolivian people after Melgarejo's overthrow:

Melgarejo's star had definitively died out. Bolivia jubilantly celebrated its liberation, taking in happily the awakening from a terrible nightmare, determined to return to normality, and to reverse the values invested in the dark and mournful times [of Melgarejo's regime] because the world has to regain its balance. In the history of humanity, power is nothing more than frequent alternative. Life is stronger than despotism and errors, and sometimes, gently or painfully, order and progress are restored, without which the existence of peoples would be impossible. Because good is imperative for superior souls, dignifying the human species. The malignant ends by being irretrievably defeated and devastated, although the brutality is supported by force, which is also transitory and variable. And there will be jubilant mornings like that of January 15, 1871, as there will be Melgarejos and crime and barbarism blocks, although only for a short time, the sun of Liberty.[7]

Melgarejo was abandoned to his fate and, lacking troops and allies, had to flee to Chile. Almost in misery, Melgarejo learned in Chile that Juana Sánchez and her family had fled to Lima with part of their wealth.[35][37] The ousted dictator managed to borrow money and went to Lima in search of his former partner. However, Juana Sánchez refused to receive the bankrupt Melgarejo at her residence, who spent days in front of the building crying out to be admitted by his former concubine. Finally, Melgarejo was shot dead on November 23 of the same year in front of Juana's house, at the hands of the man he had pardoned, Juana's brother, Aurelio Sánchez.[9][35][37]

Legacy edit

 
Equestrian statue in honor of Mariano Melgarejo.

As president, Melgarejo quickly became notorious for his erratic behavior. He surrounded himself with other equally eccentric and ruthless characters, such as José María Calderón. He ruthlessly suppressed the opposition, violently crushing protests and dispossessing the country's indigenous population of their land. Melgarejo worked on behalf of a new mining elite in Bolivia, during a period of resurgent silver production and investment from Chile, Peru, North America, England and European capitalists.[38] Despite the rising prices of guano and nitrates on the international market, the government of Bolivia faced recurring financial problems throughout Melgarejo's tenure.

Melgarejo's almost reckless courage and brutal stubbornness are the materials on which legends feed. In the popular anecdotes still in circulation today, 150 years after his death, his deeds, or rather misdeeds, are widely discussed.

Melgarejo was said to have given an immense amount of land to Brazil in exchange for what he described as a "magnificent white horse".[34] The stories say that a Brazilian minister appeared before Melgarejo with a white horse and other gifts. To show his appreciation, Melgarejo took a map of Bolivia, marked it with the horse's hoof, and gave that land, hotly contested by indigenous Bolivians, as a gift to the Brazilian government. This and other incidents, such as the possession and sale of land in the altiplano (high plateau) to the highest bidder which deprived virtually all indigenous people of their land within a few decades, are among the most famous.

His literacy and intelligence is also constantly questioned and analyzed. It is said that Melgarejo, who did not know how to read, took a newspaper, but in reverse. When the guard informed him about his mistake, Melgarejo replied: "Damn! He who knows how to read, just reads."[27]

The loyalty that his subordinates had for him was mixed with fear: on one occasion, while at a social gathering on the second floor of the Palacio Quemado, he called his presidential guard and ordered them to march straight ahead. When the soldiers reached the balcony of the palace, they had to continue marching until they fell to the ground in the Plaza Murillo. It is said that there were some fractures, but no deaths. If they had disobeyed Melgarejo's direct order, another fate would have awaited them.[37]

However, there is more to Melgarejo than simply a mad despot who ruled with terror. Tomas O'Connor D'Arlach describes Melgarejo as follows:

Many have compared him with the tyrants of Paraguay and the Argentine Republic, even with those of ancient Rome. We who judge him calmly - sine amore nec odio - and with the severe impartiality of history, do not see in Melgarejo a scheming and gloomy tyrant like Tiberius, nor the forlorn, suspecting and neurotic Dr. Francia, nor the madly bloodthirsty Rosas. All we see in him is... an ingenuously good man in whom passion, sensual instincts and organic compulsion had driven out the seeds of virtue that a careful education might have salvaged. As a man, as a president, he exercised absolutely no influence on the political life of Bolivia because he represented no idea or party... He was a true soldier, ignorant of civil law and appreciative only of physical force.[11]

But this noble man for some, and despotic tyrant for others, had great signs of compassion and coldness: in the morning he could execute a simple soldier and in the afternoon he could spare the life of a traitor. He was a man with a single indisputable virtue, his courage; Passionate about the arts and the beautiful facts of life, a devout Catholic, he could both laugh out loud when he saw the fire of a town, and cry when a child cries. The closest people knew how unstable Melgarejo's personality was.[22]

Currently, in the Church of Tarata, there is a skull embedded in one of its walls that is attributed to be that of Melgarejo. A popular belief is that this skull can grant wishes to whoever asks for them.

References edit

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  35. ^ a b c Arguedas, Julio Díaz (1929). Los generales de Bolivia (rasgos biográficos) 1825-1925: prólogo de Juan Francisco Bedregal (in Spanish). Imp. Intendencia General de Guerra.
  36. ^ Blanco y rojo (in Spanish). 1920.
  37. ^ a b c d e d'Arlach, Tomas O'Connor (1914). Rozas, Francia y Melgarejo (in Spanish). Gonzalez y Medina.
  38. ^ Klein, Herbert S. (1998). The American Finances of the Spanish Empire: Royal Income and Expenditures in Colonial Mexico, Peru, and Bolivia, 1680-1809. University of New Mexico Press. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-8263-1832-9.
Political offices
Preceded by President of Bolivia
1864–1871
Succeeded by

mariano, melgarejo, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, melgarejo, second, maternal, family, name, valencia, manuel, valencia, april, 1820, november, 1871, bolivian, military, officer, politician, served, fifteenth, president, bolivia, from, decembe. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Melgarejo and the second or maternal family name is Valencia Manuel Mariano Melgarejo Valencia 13 April 1820 23 November 1871 1 was a Bolivian military officer and politician who served as the fifteenth president of Bolivia from December 28 1864 until his fall on January 15 1871 2 3 Mariano Melgarejo15th President of BoliviaIn office 28 December 1864 15 January 1871Provisional 28 December 1864 15 August 1870Preceded byJose Maria de AchaSucceeded byAgustin MoralesPersonal detailsBornManuel Mariano Melgarejo Valencia 1820 04 13 13 April 1820Tarata United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata now Bolivia Died23 November 1871 1871 11 23 aged 51 Lima PeruManner of deathAssassinationSpouseRosa RojasDomestic partnerJuana SanchezChildrenFederico Melgarejo RojasSevero Melgarejo RojasValentina MelgarejoParent s Ignacio ValenciaLorenza MelgarejoAwardsOrder of the Southern CrossSignatureNickname s Capitan del Siglo Captain of the Century Heroe de Diciembre December Hero Military serviceAllegianceBoliviaBranch serviceBolivian ArmyRankGeneralBattles warsWar of the ConfederationPeruvian Bolivian WarHe assumed power in 1864 after staging a coup d etat against president Jose Maria de Acha thus beginning six year dictatorship popularly known as the Sexenio He would cement his power after personally killing former president Manuel Isidoro Belzu in 1865 4 He was of controversial personality and his dictatorship is remembered in Bolivia mainly for its poor government administration and its abuses against the indigenous population in addition to having signed unfavorable border treaties with Chile and Brazil in 1866 and 1867 which proved to be devastating in coming years 5 6 On January 15 1871 the Commander in Chief of the Army at the time General Agustin Morales along with the support of the people of La Paz tired of the president s despotic actions for almost seven years rose up against Melgarejo and deposed him With the people having risen against Melgarejo a bloody battle ensued in the city of La Paz which has been considered one of the fiercest and most terrible battles in Bolivian history 7 At the end of that day the uprising triumphed over government troops thus managing ending the Melgarejo regime 8 9 Once ousted from power Melgarejo fled Bolivia for Chile where he stayed for a few months While in Santiago de Chile he learned that Juana Sanchez his lover was living in the city of Lima Peru Consequently Melgarejo decided to leave for that country but once he arrived in Lima he was shot to death on November 23 1871 by Juana s brother Jose Aurelio Sanchez 10 Contents 1 Early life 2 Personal life 3 Military career 3 1 Promotions 4 Political career 4 1 Death sentence and presidential pardon 4 2 Political conspiracies 4 3 Rise to power 5 Presidency 1864 1871 5 1 The Constitutionalist Uprising of 1865 1865 5 1 1 The early rebellion 5 1 2 The assassination of Manuel Isidoro Belzu 5 1 3 The May uprising 5 2 Administration 5 2 1 War of the Triple Alliance 1864 1870 5 2 2 Franco Prussian War 1870 5 3 Downfall 6 Legacy 7 ReferencesEarly life editHe was born on April 13 1820 in the town of Tarata current department of Cochabamba Bolivia then belonging to the territory of the Viceroyalty of Peru He was the son of mestiza Ignacia Melgarejo and the Spaniard Jose Linares 11 When he was born his father did not recognize him as his legitimate son and abandoned him 12 13 For this reason Melgarejo had to take the surname of his mother who raised him during his childhood Melgarejo grew up with his mother and spent his childhood in a humble home in the small town of Tarata his house still remains today 2 14 15 16 Personal life editMelgarejo was married to Rosa Rojas the member of a middle class family Together they two sons Federico 1840 1872 and Severo 1842 1905 His younger son was married to Rosaura Sanchez the sister of Juana and Aurelio Sanchez 17 Melgarejo was constantly disloyal to his wife who is often excluded from history and rarely mentioned Military career edit nbsp Melgarejo s childhood home in Tarta Melgarejo began his military career in the city of Cochabamba at a very young age He entered the army at the age of 16 joining in 1836 with the rank of private Melgarejo was present in many different battles during the War of the Confederation during which the government of Andres de Santa Cruz At the end of the war in 1839 he was promoted to the rank of sergeant In 1841 at the age of 21 Melgarejo participated in the battle of Ingavi a clash between Bolivia and Peru while he was a sergeant under the command of Jose Ballivian Segurola During the battle Melgarejo managed to demonstrate his heroism and bravery on the battlefield for which the Bolivian government promoted him to the rank of second lieutenant 18 After Ingavi Ballivian kept the young soldier Melgarejo by his side with the aim of protecting his government against future military uprisings by the opposition It is worth mentioning that President Ballivian saw defects in the young soldier which is why he kept him assigned to the borders due to Melgarejo s conduct and dangerous behavior caused by his fondness and abuse of alcohol 19 nbsp The death of Marshal Agustin Gamarra at the Battle of Ingavi During his military career Melgarejo managed to rise in the military hierarchy through the adulation of his superiors his willingness to participate in rebellions and in some isolated acts of courage Unlike other soldiers of his time Melgarejo was characterized for being poorly educated but always willful 18 Promotions edit In 1836 he entered the Bolivian army with the rank of soldier at the age of 16 In 1839 he was promoted to the rank of sergeant aged 19 In 1841 he was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant by Jose Ballivian himself after his heroic displays during the Battle of Ingavi 21 years old 18 In 1846 he was promoted to the rank of first lieutenant 26 years old In 1850 he rose to the rank of captain at the age of 30 In 1855 he was promoted to the rank of major at the age of 35 In 1857 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel at the age of 37 In 1859 the president of Bolivia Jose Maria Linares personally promoted Melgarejo to the rank of colonel in gratitude for having helped him overthrow former president Jorge Cordova at the age of 39 20 In 1862 the president of Bolivia Jose Maria de Acha personally promoted Melgarejo to the rank of army general at the age of 42 in gratitude for having helped him overthrow former president Jose Maria Linares This is the maximum degree that can be reached within the Bolivian army In just 26 years Mariano Melgarejo went from being a simple soldier in 1836 to being the general of the entire Bolivian Army in 1862 20 19 16 Political career editDeath sentence and presidential pardon edit nbsp Either you follow me cuirassiers or I blow my brains out an infamous harangue of Melgarejo during his imminent takeover in 1864 In 1854 Melgarejo appears for the first time on the public and political scene of Bolivia At the beginning of that year he mutinied with his troops after carrying out a military uprising in the city of Santa Cruz de la Sierra pronouncing himself against the government of President Manuel Isidoro Belzu but his revolt was quickly crushed by government troops being captured and immediately taken to the city of Cochabamba to stand trial During his trial Melgarejo was tried and charged with high treason and armed uprising against the Bolivian state and was sentenced to death 15 1 7 When Melgarejo was awaiting his execution by firing squad as befitted the military officers of that time some ladies from the high society of Cochabamba very close friends of his met in person with President Belzu at the Palcio Quemado to plead for the life of the prisoner They justified his actions of revolt and military uprising to his alcoholism 7 President Manuel Isidoro Belzu agreeing to the request spared the life of Melgarejo but later in a prophetic way told the women of Cochabamba that one day they would regret asking for mercy for the life of a womanizing and drunk military officer 21 22 After the presidential pardon Melgarejo was released and continued his military career in the Bolivian Army Paradoxically among the various ladies who asked for Melgarejo s life was the mother of the prestigious Bolivian poet and politician Nestor Galindo who eleven years later in 1865 would be cruelly shot fighting in the Battle of the Canteria de Potosi against the Melgarejo government 22 Political conspiracies edit nbsp The assassination of Manuel Isidoro Belzu at the hands of Melgarejo After his military revolt in 1854 Melgarejo acquired a certain notoriety and a moderate leadership among the army troops The governments of presidents Jorge Cordova 1855 1857 and Jose Maria Linares 1857 1861 considered him dangerous and kept him stationed at distant locations in the borderlands far from the main cities Doing so Cordova and Linares reigmes hoped to isolate Melgarejo and prevent him from influencing soldiers and officers with his alcoholism and immorality and at the same time also avoid future military uprisings 22 23 During the government of President Cordova 1855 1857 Melgarejo already held the rank of lieutenant colonel During that time he openly supported the conspiracies of politician Jose Maria Linares had and aided the civilian cause to overthrow Cordova In September 1857 together with Colonel Placido Yanez he rose up in favor of Linares during the coup d etat that ousted Cordova Organizing and commanding the barricades in the city of Cochabamba Melgarejo played a crucial role in the defeat of President Jorge Cordova who was overthrown after the Battle of Cochabamba Linares rose to the presidency of Bolivia and thankful for Melgarejo s support promoted Melgarejo to the rank of colonel in 1859 22 23 During the first months of the Linares regime Melgarejo supported him openly However years later he rose up against himin rebellion and was crucial yet again in the overthrow of a president Once Linares was overthrown in 1861 the former Minister of War Jose Maria de Acha rose to the presidency During the coup Melgarejo changed sides and with Acha s victory openly supported the new regime 22 Rise to power edit He crushed countless uprisings and rebellions on behalf of President Acha who in return gave him his friendship and total trust promoting Melgarejo to the rank of army general in 1862 At the beginning of the year 1864 a rumor spread in Bolivian society about the infidelity of President Acha s wife with General Melgarejo Upon discovering they were indeed lovers the morale and health of President Acha seriously declined as well losing respect from the army being discredited by the opposition as a cuckold His wife would die suddenly weeks later also afflicted by a serious illness in August 1864 24 Presidency 1864 1871 edit nbsp Mariano Melgarejo as President of Bolivia 1864 1871 In December 1864 taking advantage of the delicate health of President Acha Melgarejo revolted against him and together with his troops carried out a coup against the government By this point the unpopular government was ruling over a chaotic and anarchic land making Melgarejo s task far simpler Melgarejo rose to the Presidency of Bolivia on December 28 1864 at the age of forty four 25 The Constitutionalist Uprising of 1865 1865 edit The early rebellion edit Even after Belzu had been eliminated Melgarejo still faced widespread discontent from several sector of society and would face nearly a year of rebellions by a collective group called Constitutionalists Having seized power only in December 1864 less than a month later Melgarejo clashed with rebel forces in Tacaquira located in the southern area of the Chuquisaca Department on January 24 1865 The rebels would win this encounter facing government troops again in a bigger battle on the banks of the Oscara River on February 3 and ultimately retreating 26 The assassination of Manuel Isidoro Belzu edit To Melgarejo s dismay former President Manuel Isidoro Belzu who was exiled in Europe returned to Bolivia to dispute the rise of General Melgarejo finally sparking a full civil war On March 22 1865 Belzu s army defeated the government forces in La Paz with the help of the popular masses On March 27 Melgarejo attacked La Paz with his army but was defeated with several of his men choosing to side with Belzu 26 However as soon as Belzu entered the Palacio Quemado for the meeting Melgarejo and his men murdered him New investigations have come up with the theory that since Melgarejo s revolver failed the seller found out that only 1 bullet came out of 5 shots then the bullet that killed Belzu came from the revolver of some soldier who was behind him 4 27 Regardless of what happened that fateful day Belzu was killed and Melgarejo had eliminated a huge threat to his government According to legend when Melgarejo s presence was known a crowd gathered in the Plaza Murillo located in front of the Bolivian Government Palace cheering Belzu s name However Melgarejo appeared on a balcony instead and announced Belzu is dead Who lives now and the crowd gave a bestial cry Long live Melgarejo 28 29 The May uprising edit Only two months after Belzu had been defeated and killed on May 25 another Constitutionalist revolt broke out in La Paz A week later on June 1 a committee was established in Oruro and proclaimed a revolution The rebels managed to capture the government palace and two days later the garrison of Chayanta also rose up against Melgarejo On June 8 the Constitutionalists sent an army toward Oruro in the south being defeated on July 1 by Melgarejo s troops With Oruro now occupied by the government forces Melgarejo still was unable to end the anarchy facing rebellion in many more areas of the country La Paz Oruro and Chayanta joined to create a board to lead the revolution and foment the spread of it to other cities and towns Very quickly Potosi Sucre Cobija Tarija and Cochabamba would join Although all seemed lost for Melgarejo by August 8 he was able to recapture Sucre Cochabamba and Potosi Generals Ildefonso Sanjines and Nicanor Flores had been competing for leadership resuting in the forestalling of rebel operations and allowing Melgarejo to exploit this weakness On Septiember 5 Flores decided to lead an attack against the government forces however was defeated and was forced to flee to Argentina On October 25 Santa Cruz declared itself in support of the revolution However on November 22 the government had retaken the city after a brief skirmish The northern rebels under the command of General Casto Arguedas decided to launch an offensive which was ultimately defeated and hastily retreated to Viacha On January 24 1866 Melgarejo and his trusted second in command Quintin Quevedo met the remainder of the rebels in the hill of Letanias scoring a major victory and achieving the unconditional surrender of the Constitutionalist rebels 30 Administration edit nbsp Melgarejo and his cabinet c 1868 After proclaiming himself president of Bolivia Melgarejo proceeded to govern without rivals but with great incompetence One of his first measures was to violently suppress the opposition and annul the traditional rights of the indigenous population declaring that the communal lands of the native communities would be property of the State He then ordered the violent eviction of the communities to grant the lands to allied landowners an aggression that had not even been carried out during Spanish rule He also abolished municipalities and local governments refusing to appoint mayors Melgarejo entrusted the public administration to his chancellor a young lawyer named Mariano Donato Munoz especially in foreign policy Shortly after assuming power he was visited by a young woman who belonged to a wealthy family from La Paz named Juana Sanchez She had come to Melgarejo to ask for clemency for the life of her brother Aurelio Sanchez who had been sentenced to death Melgarejo not only spare his life but also took Juana Sanchez as his concubine after holding her hostage in the Palacio Quemado for three consecutive days Madly in love with the young woman who succumbed to the personality of the general Melgarejo gave her and her family great influence in the government which the Sanchez family took advantage of enriching themselves at the expense of the treasury 31 Melgarejo s government turned out to be increasingly erratic and unstable While the dictator spent much of his time in orgies with Juana Sanchez who was as lustful as the general himself and also addicted to alcohol her family dominated politics and the governing of the nation In 1866 Melgarejo signed a border treaty with Chile establishing the common border but recognizing all Chilean commercial interests in the exploitation of saltpeter on the Bolivian coast of Antofagasta This practically left Bolivia without any compensation other than the right to collect taxes in their own territory 32 Later in 1867 he negotiated with the Empire of Brazil the sale of 102 400 km of Bolivian territory from the Acre region through the Treaty of Ayacucho This in exchange for the payment of two million pounds sterling and the Brazilian commitment to build the Madeira railway in the Mamore region 33 34 In 1868 Melgarejo promulgated a new constitution granting himself omnimodal powers over public administration and attributing to his position the power to persecute and kill opponents The promulgation ceremony ended with a banquet and consequent orgy where he made Juana Sanchez participate totally naked 35 36 War of the Triple Alliance 1864 1870 edit nbsp Scenes from the War of the Triple Alliance In 1864 Paraguay had been invaded by Brazil Argentina and Uruguay in what is known as the War of the Triple Alliance Melgarejo expressed solidarity with Paraguay giving his full support to this nation But his supposed support remained only in words since Melgarejo in fact maintained a neutral stance and never mobilized troops to help Paraguay 37 Franco Prussian War 1870 edit In July 1870 when Prussia invaded France starting the Franco Prussian War Melgarejo asked one of his high ranking generals to immediately send Bolivian troops to help the French army defend Paris This was city that Melgarejo was fascinated by with its stories of sophistication and elegance but which he did not even know how to locate on a map The Bolivian general replied that the plan was impossible since it would take a long time to cross the Atlantic Ocean Enraged Melgarejo replied Don t be silly We ll take a shortcut Blinded by anger Melgarejo arranged to gather a troop of 3 000 men to embark for Europe and help France Attending a horse race in Oruro he suffered a broken foot that stopped him for a month and planned to cross the Amazon jungles of Brazil to reach the Atlantic Ocean and reach Europe Resuming his march Melgarejo received news that France had already capitulated to Prussia but he refused to believe such events In mid November he was informed that Great Britain was expelling Bolivian residents from British soil and refusing to recognize the existence of Bolivia in retaliation for the British ambassador to Bolivia having been expelled by Melgarejo from the country giving him a beating shortly before doing so While this occurred the city of Potosi revolted against the government 37 Downfall edit Alarmed Melgarejo attacked Potosi and crushed the revolt through a series of massacres and cruelties but soon he learned that taking advantage of his absence La Paz Cochabamba and other major cities had also joined in a general uprising 7 Melgarejo gathered his troops and marched on La Paz but soon his men began to desert en masse Especially after getting rid of some his most loyal and important men like Jose Maria Calderon Melgarejo weakened himself to a great extent Finally on January 15 1871 his battered army was completely defeated by the Commander of the Army General Agustin Morales 1 4 14 28 Author Moises Alcazar describes the jubilant sentiment of the Bolivian people after Melgarejo s overthrow Melgarejo s star had definitively died out Bolivia jubilantly celebrated its liberation taking in happily the awakening from a terrible nightmare determined to return to normality and to reverse the values invested in the dark and mournful times of Melgarejo s regime because the world has to regain its balance In the history of humanity power is nothing more than frequent alternative Life is stronger than despotism and errors and sometimes gently or painfully order and progress are restored without which the existence of peoples would be impossible Because good is imperative for superior souls dignifying the human species The malignant ends by being irretrievably defeated and devastated although the brutality is supported by force which is also transitory and variable And there will be jubilant mornings like that of January 15 1871 as there will be Melgarejos and crime and barbarism blocks although only for a short time the sun of Liberty 7 Melgarejo was abandoned to his fate and lacking troops and allies had to flee to Chile Almost in misery Melgarejo learned in Chile that Juana Sanchez and her family had fled to Lima with part of their wealth 35 37 The ousted dictator managed to borrow money and went to Lima in search of his former partner However Juana Sanchez refused to receive the bankrupt Melgarejo at her residence who spent days in front of the building crying out to be admitted by his former concubine Finally Melgarejo was shot dead on November 23 of the same year in front of Juana s house at the hands of the man he had pardoned Juana s brother Aurelio Sanchez 9 35 37 Legacy edit nbsp Equestrian statue in honor of Mariano Melgarejo As president Melgarejo quickly became notorious for his erratic behavior He surrounded himself with other equally eccentric and ruthless characters such as Jose Maria Calderon He ruthlessly suppressed the opposition violently crushing protests and dispossessing the country s indigenous population of their land Melgarejo worked on behalf of a new mining elite in Bolivia during a period of resurgent silver production and investment from Chile Peru North America England and European capitalists 38 Despite the rising prices of guano and nitrates on the international market the government of Bolivia faced recurring financial problems throughout Melgarejo s tenure Melgarejo s almost reckless courage and brutal stubbornness are the materials on which legends feed In the popular anecdotes still in circulation today 150 years after his death his deeds or rather misdeeds are widely discussed Melgarejo was said to have given an immense amount of land to Brazil in exchange for what he described as a magnificent white horse 34 The stories say that a Brazilian minister appeared before Melgarejo with a white horse and other gifts To show his appreciation Melgarejo took a map of Bolivia marked it with the horse s hoof and gave that land hotly contested by indigenous Bolivians as a gift to the Brazilian government This and other incidents such as the possession and sale of land in the altiplano high plateau to the highest bidder which deprived virtually all indigenous people of their land within a few decades are among the most famous His literacy and intelligence is also constantly questioned and analyzed It is said that Melgarejo who did not know how to read took a newspaper but in reverse When the guard informed him about his mistake Melgarejo replied Damn He who knows how to read just reads 27 The loyalty that his subordinates had for him was mixed with fear on one occasion while at a social gathering on the second floor of the Palacio Quemado he called his presidential guard and ordered them to march straight ahead When the soldiers reached the balcony of the palace they had to continue marching until they fell to the ground in the Plaza Murillo It is said that there were some fractures but no deaths If they had disobeyed Melgarejo s direct order another fate would have awaited them 37 However there is more to Melgarejo than simply a mad despot who ruled with terror Tomas O Connor D Arlach describes Melgarejo as follows Many have compared him with the tyrants of Paraguay and the Argentine Republic even with those of ancient Rome We who judge him calmly sine amore nec odio and with the severe impartiality of history do not see in Melgarejo a scheming and gloomy tyrant like Tiberius nor the forlorn suspecting and neurotic Dr Francia nor the madly bloodthirsty Rosas All we see in him is an ingenuously good man in whom passion sensual instincts and organic compulsion had driven out the seeds of virtue that a careful education might have salvaged As a man as a president he exercised absolutely no influence on the political life of Bolivia because he represented no idea or party He was a true soldier ignorant of civil law and appreciative only of physical force 11 But this noble man for some and despotic tyrant for others had great signs of compassion and coldness in the morning he could execute a simple soldier and in the afternoon he could spare the life of a traitor He was a man with a single indisputable virtue his courage Passionate about the arts and the beautiful facts of life a devout Catholic he could both laugh out loud when he saw the fire of a town and cry when a child cries The closest people knew how unstable Melgarejo s personality was 22 Currently in the Church of Tarata there is a skull embedded in one of its walls that is attributed to be that of Melgarejo A popular belief is that this skull can grant wishes to whoever asks for them References edit a b c O Connor d Arlach Tomas 1913 El general Melgarejo Bolivia Gonzales y Medina p 8 a b Biografia de Mariano Melgarejo www biografiasyvidas com Retrieved 28 September 2022 RED ESCUELA Mariano Melgarejo Valencia www redescuela org Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b c Scheina Robert L 31 January 2003 Latin America s Wars Potomac Books Inc ISBN 978 1 59797 477 6 Invocando el espiritu de Mariano Melgarejo Los Tiempos in Spanish 14 September 2018 Retrieved 28 September 2022 El Tratado de 1866 primer tratado de limites entre Bolivia y Chile plumainquieta lamula pe in Spanish Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b c d e Alcazar Moises 1980 Drama y comedia en el Congreso in Spanish Libreria Editorial Juventud LA ALIANZA ENTRE AGUSTIN MORALES Y LAS MASAS INDIGENAS PARA DERROCAR A MARIANO MELGAREJO Historias de Bolivia LA ALIANZA ENTRE AGUSTIN MORALES Y LAS MASAS INDIGENAS PARA DERROCAR A MARIANO MELGAREJO Historias de Bolivia Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b Mariano Melgarejo el capitan del siglo in Spanish Infinito Proyectos Editoriales 2016 Muertes tragicas de presidentes de Bolivia El Potosi in Spanish Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b Dunkerley James 17 November 2000 Americana The Americas in the World Around 1850 Verso p 470 ISBN 978 1 85984 753 4 Wilgus Alva Curtis 1963 South American Dictators During the First Century of Independence Russell amp Russell p 334 Jeanete 25 October 2021 Mariano Melgarejo nacio en Toco sabia leer y escribir El Diario Bolivia in Spanish Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b Mariano Melgarejo General de Division de Chile www eldiario net in Spanish Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b Tiempo Casa Editorial El 3 May 1998 JARANAS DE MELGAREJO Y SU CABALLO El Tiempo in Spanish Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b Fernandez Tomas Tamaro Elena 2004 Biografia de Mariano Melgarejo Biografias y Vidas La enciclopedia biografica en linea Retrieved 8 November 2021 Dunkerley James 17 November 2000 Americana The Americas in the World Around 1850 Verso ISBN 978 1 85984 753 4 a b c Canales Jose Carlos 1947 Mariano Melgarejo dictator president of Bolivia 1864 1871 in Spanish University of California a b Church George Earl 1877 The Route to Bolivia Via the River Amazon A Report to the Governments of Bolivia and Brazil Waterlow a b Gomez Juan Pablo 1980 Vida pasion y muerte del General Mariano Melgarejo in Spanish Ediciones Puerta del Sol EL PRESIDENTE MANUEL ISIDORO BELZU PERDONA LA VIDA AL SARGENTO MARIANO MELGAREJO Historias de Bolivia EL PRESIDENTE MANUEL ISIDORO BELZU PERDONA LA VIDA AL SARGENTO MARIANO MELGAREJO Historias de Bolivia Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b c d e f Cortes Jose Domingo 1866 El jeneral Mariano Melgarejo rasgos biograficos in Spanish a b Crow John A 17 January 1992 The Epic of Latin America Fourth Edition University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07723 2 Clayton Lawrence A 1984 The Bolivarian Nations of Latin America Lawrence Clayton ISBN 978 0 88273 603 7 Lewis Paul H 2006 Authoritarian Regimes in Latin America Dictators Despots and Tyrants Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 3739 2 a b Dixon Jeffrey S Sarkees Meredith Reid 18 September 2015 A Guide to Intra state Wars An Examination of Civil Regional and Intercommunal Wars 1816 2014 CQ Press p 155 ISBN 978 1 5063 1798 4 a b juancarloslazcano La historia del Palacio de Gobierno se caracterizo por varios hechos tragicos RTP Bolivia in Spanish Retrieved 28 September 2022 a b Klein Herbert S 9 December 2021 A Concise History of Bolivia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 84482 6 Chasteen John Charles Wood James A 2004 Problems in Modern Latin American History Sources and Interpretations Completely Revised and Updated Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8420 5061 6 Dixon Jeffrey S Sarkees Meredith Reid 18 September 2015 A Guide to Intra state Wars An Examination of Civil Regional and Intercommunal Wars 1816 2014 CQ Press pp 155 156 ISBN 978 1 5063 1798 4 Morales Waltraud Q 14 May 2014 A Brief History of Bolivia Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 0820 9 Chile 1898 Documentos oficiales relativos a los limites entre Chile Bolivia i la Republica Arjentina en la rejion de Atacama 1866 1895 in Spanish Imprenta Mejia Elizalde Rufino de 1882 Bolivia orijen de su nacionalidad y sus derechos territorales in Spanish Imprenta de Pablo E Coni a b Jacobs Frank 3 April 2012 How Bolivia Lost Its Hat New York Times Opinionator Retrieved 2 November 2021 a b c Arguedas Julio Diaz 1929 Los generales de Bolivia rasgos biograficos 1825 1925 prologo de Juan Francisco Bedregal in Spanish Imp Intendencia General de Guerra Blanco y rojo in Spanish 1920 a b c d e d Arlach Tomas O Connor 1914 Rozas Francia y Melgarejo in Spanish Gonzalez y Medina Klein Herbert S 1998 The American Finances of the Spanish Empire Royal Income and Expenditures in Colonial Mexico Peru and Bolivia 1680 1809 University of New Mexico Press p 136 ISBN 978 0 8263 1832 9 Political officesPreceded byJose Maria de Acha President of Bolivia1864 1871 Succeeded byAgustin Morales Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mariano Melgarejo amp oldid 1184410693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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