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Quintín Quevedo

Quintín Quevedo Ferrari (31 October 1825 – 24 August 1876) was a Bolivian military officer who rose to prominence after aiding Mariano Melgarejo in the overthrow of President José María de Achá in 1864. He was also a famous and early explorer of the Bolivian Amazon, exploring the Madeira River and the Beni savannah frontier. In 1872 he launched an invasion from Valparaíso, Chile, resulting in an international crisis which is believed to have led to a secret alliance treaty between Peru and Bolivia against Chile. Said alliance became effective with the Chilean occupation of Antofagasta and the Bolivian Litoral Department, leading to the War of the Pacific.

Quintín Quevedo
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Representing Mizque
In office
31 May 1855 – 18 May 1856
Preceded byJuan de Dios La Lastra
Succeeded byCarlos Manuel Ruiloba
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Representing Cochabamba
In office
14 May 1873 – 29 June 1874
Preceded byDiego de la Tapia Terrazas
Succeeded byPedro Augusto Antezana
Personal details
Born(1825-10-31)October 31, 1825
Caminiaga, Córdoba, Argentina
Died(1876-08-24)August 24, 1876
Puno, Peru
SpouseModesta Carrasco
Children3
Parent(s)Rafael Quevedo Laira
Carmen Ferrari García
Alma materInstituto Nacional General José Miguel Carrera
OccupationMilitary officer
Military service
AllegianceBolivia
Branch/serviceBolivian Army
RankBrigadier general

After the overthrow of Melgarejo, Quevedo would relentlessly conspire against the governments of Agustín Morales, Adolfo Ballivián, and Tomás Frías. He was only finally defeated when the elderly Frías himself led his pacifying army to victory at the Battle of Chacoma, where Quevedo was soundly defeated. However, much like Quevedo's earlier expedition to Cobija, his rebellion in 1875 greatly affected Bolivian politics, as only a few months later revolts broke out throughout the country, even resulting in the burning of the Government Palace that same year. The fractured and weak state of the country and its government allowed for Hilarión Daza's coup in 1876 to easily succeed. Without a doubt, Quevedo played a crucial role in Bolivian history, affecting so much of the nation's destiny in a period of only four years.

Early life edit

Quevedo was born in the town of Caminiaga, near the city of Córdoba, Argentina, on October 31, 1825, the son of Rafael Quevedo and Carmen Ferrari. His father had supported the patriot cause in Upper Peru during the Spanish American wars of independence, leading to his exile to the Argentine Republic. With the independence of the Bolivia achieved, his family returned to Bolivia, and in 1836 he was sent to Chile to study at the Instituto Nacional General José Miguel Carrera. Quevedo returned to Bolivia in 1841, the same year the Battle of Ingavi took place. He wrote a poem about the battle called the Canto a Ingavi. Many praised this work and when José Ballivián was touring the major cities of Bolivia, he invited Quevedo to join the garrison of the city as a second lieutenant.[1]

Military career edit

Quevedo would accept and chose to join as an artillery officer. He was commissioned with opening an academy specialized in training artillery units in Viacha. This was, however, ended by the sudden rebellion of Fructuoso Peña in 1843. Nonetheless, Quevedo continued rising rapidly through the ranks. By 1844, Quevedo had risen to the rank of captain.[2] In 1846, he married Modesta Carrasco, the only child of General Manuel Carrasco.[3]

In 1847, President Ballivián faced rebellion throughout the country. One of his main detractors was General José Miguel de Velasco, whose cause Quevedo would join. The Santo Domingo rebellion of Cochabamba, in which he played a role, declared itself against Ballivián and in support of Velasco. Seeing his support waning, Ballivián decided to resign. Velasco would reward Quevedo with the rank of lieutenant colonel[2] and allowed him to create El Independiente, a newspaper based in Cochabamba. It was in this newspaper that Quevedo published many of his poetic works, which proved to be successful and popular. In 1848, he was made Consul to Peru in Tacna. Later that year, however, Manuel Isidoro Belzu ousted Velasco after the bloody Battle of Yamparaez, on December 6 of that year. Although Belzu offered him to keep his position as Consul, Quevedo declined and remained exiled in Tacna.[4]

Political career edit

Commutation of the death sentence of Mariano Melgarejo edit

During his exile, Quevedo founded a trading company and would support the Legalista Party of José María Linares. However, in 1850, he stopped his support after a failed attempt to oust Belzu headed by Linares and Ballivián. On September 6, 1850, the legalistas launched an insurrection after an attempt on the life of President Belzu had been made. To the plotter’s dismay, not only had their rebellion been crushed by the military, but Belzu still lived. In 1852, Quevedo returned to Bolivia under the pretext of his mercantile business. At the time of his return, Mariano Melgarejo, then a colonel, was under arrest and had been sentenced to death for treason. Quevedo put his several connections to use in hopes of saving the life of Melgarejo. The cause was successful and, in 1854, Melgarejo was spared by Belzu.[5]

A jubilant Melgarejo wrote to those that had pleaded for his life, including Quevedo, a pamphlet dated February 14, 1854, stating the following:[6]

In gratitude to: Pedro Reyes Dorado, Marcos Rojas, José Gregorio Salamanca, Quintín Quevedo, and Lucas Merubia.

Generous emissaries of the noblest of peoples, I have not forgotten you! Today our people enthusiastically greet your virtue, and I have wanted to join them to speak to you now, especially. Your glory is greater than that of those people who represent the masses only for their political interests, you have represented them in their desires for humanity. Glory to you who have been chosen for such a holy task. You have saved my life, and from today there is an indissoluble bond between you and me; You have removed the chains that already bound me to death. May God give me an opportunity to show you that my gratitude is a chain to my heart that will never be broken. I cannot emphasize this more: your name, at the top of this paper, and mine, at the bottom, means more than my lips can express. 

Mariano Melgarejo.

The presidencies of Córdova and Linares edit

 
General Mariano Melgarejo.

Quevedo supported his friend, Jorge Córdova, in the elections of 1855. Córdova would defeat the legalistas and Linares, ensuring that the army remained loyal to the government. For the first time in Bolivian history, the transition of power had been concluded by the Congress in Sucre. Quevedo was sworn into the Chamber of Deputies, representing the province of Mizque.[2] In 1855, Córdova would pardon any political fugitives and exiles through supreme decree.[7]

In September of 1857, Linares would revolt against the government and incite the rebellion of the city of Cochabamba. Although Córdova would siege the city, he was eventually forced to withdraw to Oruro. Quevedo had declared himself in support of the government, which earned him the rank of colonel. It was during the retreat to Oruro that Quevedo was given 10,000 pesos and tasked with the purchase of military equipment in Tacna. However, Linares triumphed and Quevedo gave the purchased equipment to the new government, opting to withdraw to private life and continuing his mercantile enterprise.[8]

 
Quevedo as a Colonel.

Although Linares had promoted himself as a constitutionalist, he would establish himself as Dictator and persecute those who had opposed him in the past. Instead of representing the pacifist and democratic ideals which he professed in past years, he was as, if not more, oppressive than Belzu. He became relentless and almost neurotic, riding from city to city and town to town in order to crush the many rebellions he faced. The dictatorial decree of March 31, 1858, placed the life and rights of the citizen at the mercy of the government, suppressing the ordinary jurisdiction for political crimes, removing the freedom of the press, and imposing severe penalties on those who expressed their opinion on the government.[9]

Internal exile in the Beni savannah edit

 
General Quevedo in 1870.

Quevedo soon joined the many plots which began to abound against the Dictator Linares, especially after Belzu’s return to Bolivia in 1860. The goal was to reinstate Córdova as President and have Belzu as Commander in Chief of the Army. Quevedo launched an invasion from Peruvian territory and was supposed to be joined along the way by other rebellious battalions. Linares, however, had been informed by his secret police of the invasion and was able to crush the insurrection in Sucre and then have Quevedo captured in the fields of Yaro. A military jury condemned him to death on October 31 of that year. Many pleaded for the colonel’s life, resulting in his internal exile to the border with Brazil and the commutation of his death sentence.[2][10]

Quevedo would spend his time in exile in the distant oriental Department of Beni, exploring uncharted lands. He is said to have discovered incredibly beautiful and astonishing waterfalls as well as potential routes for commerce. Travelling down the Madeira River, he wrote poems and reports on everything he witnessed during his explorations.[11] He remained in exile until José María de Achá overthrew the government in 1861, whereupon Quevedo was allowed to return.[12]

The Presidencies of Achá Melgarejo edit

A triumvirate was established in the wake of the revolutionary triumph, and it was composed of Achá, Ruperto Fernández, and General Manuel Antonio Sánchez. This triumvirate promulgated the new Constitution of 1861 and eventually elected Achá as President. The newly appointed head of state sent Quevedo as Prefect and military governor or Beni,[2] a position he held until 1864. When Achá was ousted that year by Mariano Melgarejo, Quevedo did not participate. Surprisingly, however, Melgarejo asked Quevedo to remain as governor of the Beni.[13]

The Constitutionalist Revolution of 1865-1866 and diplomatic missions edit

 
General Casto Arguedas proclaimed the Constitutionalist Revolution against Melgarejo in 1865.

Belzu would revolt against Melgarejo, in 1865, and even after the former’s death, a Constitutionalist Revolution, which had no clear leader, also emerged. Among those who claimed leadership were Ildefonso Sanjinés, Casto Arguedas, and Nicanor Flores. In a long speech that Quevedo published that year, he declared himself a lover of peace and order who believed that the Constitutionalists were all charlatans and liars. Pledging his full support for Melgarejo, Quevedo ended his long Declaración.[14]

In Toledo, Quevedo defeated the rebellion of Tito Andrade, whose goal was to occupy the city of Cochabamba. After Melgarejo scored a major victory on September 7 at Cantería, Quevedo was left as military governor of Cochabamba. However, shortly afterwards, he was defeated by Colonel Prudencio Barrientos and was forced to retreat to Melgarejo’s camp. There, he was given command of a battalion and fought at Letanías, the last battle of the Constitutionalist Revolution, on January 24, 1866.[15] Quevedo was appointed Prefect of Cobija,[16] serving until July 3, 1867. That year, he was commissioned by Melgarejo to act as Minister Plenipotentiary to Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay. Instead of heading to Rio de Janeiro, where he was ordered to go, he was given a special mission to Mexico instead. There, he congratulated the government of Benito Juárez for defeating the foreign and monarchist invaders during the Second French intervention in Mexico. After a month, Quevedo headed to Brazil to complete the treaty of friendship and commerce that was to be signed that year.[17]

Later career edit

The fall of Melgarejo and early plots edit

 
The Mejillones Bay, where Quevedo's expedition landed.

Quevedo was made Prefect of Cochabamba in 1870 and was elected Senator for the Department of Tarata, having held the presidency of the National Congress that had met in Oruro that year. The same Congress granted him the promotion to brigadier general, on September 3, declaring him an “Enlightened Citizen of Bolivia” as a reward for the eminent services he had rendered to the Bolivia in his diplomatic career.[16]

After the fall of Melgarejo, on January 15, 1871, Quevedo, one of the favorites of the infamous caudillo, emigrated again to Peru and then moved to Chile, where he began to conspire tirelessly. In Valparaíso, he embarked on the steamer Tomé, carrying 104 mercenaries hired to make a revolution and several boxes of ammunition, weapons, and military uniforms, which were seized by the mayor of the city. Quevedo was a candidate for the presidency of the republic in 1872, and was defeated by his contender General Agustín Morales. He conspired again from Chilean coast, joined by other melgarejistas. Hopeful to obtain the support of the Chilean Government and, thus, fulfill his aspirations, Quevedo continued to scheme in Valparaíso. He left Valparaíso aboard the steamer Paquete de los Vilos on August 1, 1872, leading 180 men, Chileans and Bolivians, well armed and equipped.[18] Furthermore, he also brought the brigantine María Luisa, containing 700 rifles, four mountain cannons and plenty of ammunition.[19] He landed in Chimba (Antofagasta), proclaiming himself Supreme Chief of Bolivia; However, he defeated by the Prefect of the Litoral, Ruperto Fernández, who was aware of the landing and had left Cobija in command of the Omasuyos battalion, the police, and two pieces of artillery. Quevedio took refuge in the Morro and López de Gama steamers, which belonged to Chilean industrialists.[20][21] The Quevedo Expedition, as it had become known, had serious consequences, as it pushed Bolivia further toward Peru[22] and soured relations with Chile.[23][24][25]

The General Elections of 1873 edit

 
Cobija, Bolivia's main port.

Although Quevedo had been defeated in his earlier expedition, he was to participate in the General Elections of 1873 as a candidate. Adolfo Ballivián and Casimiro Corral were the other two candidates and represented their own groups, usually deemed constitutionalist parties. These were the rojos and the corralistas. On the other hand, Quevedo represented the recently defeated group of the melgarejistas. This faction hoped to retake the lands which had been repatriated to its previous owners, seized by the government of Melgarejo and bestowed to his loyal allies.[26] The top three candidates of the elections were Ballivián, Corral, and Quevedo, receiving 6,442, 5,352, and 3,313 votes respectively. There was a total of 16,674 votes, and none of the candidates achieved the majority necessary according to the Constitution, meaning that the National Assembly was now tasked to choose among the three candidates with the most votes. The first round concluded in 31 votes for Ballivián, 20 for Corral, and 6 for Quevedo. The second round, contested between Ballivián and Corral ended with the former obtaining 41 votes and the latter 19. Thus, Ballivián defeated both Corral and Quevedo and was proclaimed President of Bolivia.[27] Quevedo, as he had promised prior to his candidature, accepted and acknowledged the victor of the elections as the legitimate successor to the Presidency.[28]

Member of the Chamber of Deputies edit

The quevedista party would remain prominent in the government, with Quevedo himself being elected as a Deputy for Cochabamba.[29] In August of 1873, a discussion as to whether a constitutional reform should be made caused great disparities in the government. The calls for reform emanated from Article 70 of the Constitution which stated that in case of the sudden death, illness, or extended absence of the President, the President of the Council of State shall call elections and fulfill the remainder of their predecessor's term. It was proposed that instead of staying for the remainder of the term, that after four months the elect assume the presidency. Quevedo would actually oppose the proposal, leading to the outright rejection of the "unnecessary reform".[30]

On August 21, 1873, the signing of the boundary treaty with Chile was announced as government legislature, one which Quevedo, alongside the majority of the Chamber of Deputies, approved.[31] However, with the death of Ballivián in 1874, Frías found himself again as President of Bolivia. Quevedo, alongside several other rebellious generals, would incite insurrection, namely in his native Cochabamba.

A final defeat edit

 
Tomás Frías led the government forces and defeated Quevedo at Chacoma.

Although Quevedo had been defeated in the elections of 1873, he did not surrender his aspirations of occupying the Palacio Quemado and continued conspiring to take power by any means, plotting with even more tenacity. Joining his contender, Casimiro Corral, he organized an army of thousand two hundred men, having left La Paz on the morning of January 10, 1875. At the center of the government forces, President Tomás Frías personally led the government troops, having left Calamarca on the 14th at the head of an army of 600 men.[32]

Quevedo stationed his army at the ranch of Chacoma, a place that was dominated by a gentle slope in the direction of Calamarca, exactly where Frias was coming from. On January 18, the government forces arrived and, catching the rebels by surprise, attacked. At first, there was heavy fire from rebel machine guns, their smoke darkening the atmosphere for a moment. Their projectiles fell two meters in front of the government army’s line, which, throwing a general hurrah, continued marching forward. Colonel Ramon González advanced with his company, which fought with reckless courage. Colonel Juan Granier entered the fight on foot at the head of his company. President Frias, present at the battlefield, participated in the early stages of the action. He continued even after the combat began to harden, and with his two ministers, Mariano Baptista and Daniel Calvo, refused to withdraw to the reserves. His son, Carlos Frías, tried to stop him, warning his father that he could get killed. The 70-year-old President replied: "What does it matter?" He then signaled his troops ahead in the midst of the bullets. The impetuous and brave advance of the constitutional forces on enemy lines stood firm and organized. The fighting of the government troops was so ferocious that, after sustaining a 25-minute fire, they found the rebel forces completely dispersed and defeated. Very few casualties were inflicted on the constitutional forces. Among the dead were: Colonel Jacinto Matos, who was in the vanguard as captain, and two soldiers from the 1st battalion; Casto Eizaguirre, of the same company, and Lieutenant Colonel Rudesindo Niño de Guzmán, and 8 soldiers. Quevedo's troops suffered 100 casualties, and only 583 prisoners were taken since many rebel soldiers had fled at the beginning of the battle.[33]

Quevedo withdrew, leaving the aforementioned 538 prisoners, two cannons, two machine guns and forty five ammunition boxes.[34] After this defeat, he was sentenced to death by the courts of justice. Quevedo managed to flee to the Peru, where he continued to plot with Corral. With the coup d'état of General Hilarión Daza, Quevedo "felt discarded from the political scene and he dies as he was born, ostracized, far from the land of his parents and his home, the beautiful Cochabamba".[35] His days as a plotter and his endless conspiracies had finally come to an end.

Death and burial edit

His excessive ambition for power and bad luck in his revolutionary enterprises took a toll on him, leading to the poor health which ended his life. Quevedo died on August 24, 1876, at 51 years old. By supreme decree, promulgated on November 21, 1878,[36] his remains were repatriated from the city of Puno to Cochabamba, arriving in La Paz on December 9 of the same year, where a military funeral with full honors, corresponding to his rank, was held.[37]

Bibliography edit

  • Velarde, Juan Francisco; Carranza, Angel Justiniano (1868). Rasgos biograficos del Coronel Quintin Quevedo: enviado extraordinario y Ministro Plenipotenciario de Bolivia en el Brasil y Republicas del Plata (in Spanish). Imprenta de Mayo.
  • Díaz Arguedas, Julio (1929). Los generales de Bolivia (rasgos biográficos) 1825-1925: prólogo de Juan Francisco Bedregal (in Spanish). Imp. Intendencia General de Guerra.
  • Sanjinés, Jenaro (1902). Apuntes para la historia de Bolivia bajo las administraciones de don Adolfo Ballivián I [i.e. y] don Tomás Frías (in Spanish). Impr. Bolivar de M. Pizarro.

References edit

  1. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 6–7.
  2. ^ a b c d e Díaz Arguedas 1929, pp. 596.
  3. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 8.
  4. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 9–10.
  5. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 10–11.
  6. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 12.
  7. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 13–14.
  8. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 15–17.
  9. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 18.
  10. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 19–20.
  11. ^ Church, George Earl; Company, National Bolivian Navigation (1875). Explorations Made in the Valley of the River Madeira, from 1749 to 1868. Published for the National Bolivian Navigation Company.
  12. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 20–24.
  13. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 24–27.
  14. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 27–30.
  15. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 31–32.
  16. ^ a b Díaz Arguedas 1929, pp. 597.
  17. ^ Velarde 1868, pp. 32–34.
  18. ^ Sanjinés, Jenaro (1898). Apuntes para la historia de Bolivia bajo la administración del jeneral D. Agustín Morales (in Spanish). El ComercioImp. de "El Comercio". p. 161.
  19. ^ Cariola, Juan Eduardo Vargas; Vargas, Fernando Silva (2019). Historia de la República de Chile: La búsqueda de un orden republicano. 1826- 1881. Volumen 2. Segunda parte (in Spanish). Ediciones UC. p. 66. ISBN 978-956-14-2456-2.
  20. ^ Díaz Arguedas 1929, pp. 597–598.
  21. ^ Arguedas, Alcides (1929). Los caudillos bárbaros: historia -- resurrección.--La tragedia de un pueblo (Melgarejo--Morales) 1864-1872 (in Spanish). Viuda de L. Tasso. pp. 329–332.
  22. ^ Caivano, Tommaso (1900). Historia de la guerra de América entre Chile, Perú y Bolivia (in Spanish). Imprenta, Libréría y Encuadernación Gmo. Stolte. p. 132.
  23. ^ Orrego, Emilio Ruiz-Tagle (1992). Bolivia y Chile: el conflicto del Pacífico (in Spanish). Andres Bello. pp. 82–88. ISBN 978-956-13-0954-8.
  24. ^ María, Ignacio Santa (1919). Guerra del Pacífico ... (in Spanish). Imprenta universitaria. pp. 71–72.
  25. ^ Farcau, Bruce W. (2000). The Ten Cents War: Chile, Peru, and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific, 1879-1884. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-275-96925-7.
  26. ^ Sanjinés 1902, pp. 28.
  27. ^ Sanjinés 1902, pp. 35–36.
  28. ^ Sanjinés 1902, pp. 94.
  29. ^ Sanjinés 1902, pp. 131.
  30. ^ Sanjinés 1902, pp. 135–136.
  31. ^ Sanjinés 1902, pp. 184–185.
  32. ^ Sanjinés 1902, pp. 217–218.
  33. ^ Sanjinés 1902, pp. 219–220.
  34. ^ Arguedas, Julio Díaz (1940). Historia del Ejército de Bolivia, 1825-1932 (in Spanish). Imprenta Int. Central del Ejército. p. 219.
  35. ^ Díaz Arguedas 1929, pp. 598.
  36. ^ "DECRETO SUPREMO No 21-11-1878 del 21 de Noviembre de 1878 > D-Lex Bolivia | Gaceta Oficial de Bolivia | Derechoteca". www.derechoteca.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-10-25.
  37. ^ Díaz Arguedas 1929, pp. 599.

quintín, quevedo, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, quevedo, second, maternal, family, name, ferrari, ferrari, october, 1825, august, 1876, bolivian, military, officer, rose, prominence, after, aiding, mariano, melgarejo, overthrow, president, jos. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Quevedo and the second or maternal family name is Ferrari Quintin Quevedo Ferrari 31 October 1825 24 August 1876 was a Bolivian military officer who rose to prominence after aiding Mariano Melgarejo in the overthrow of President Jose Maria de Acha in 1864 He was also a famous and early explorer of the Bolivian Amazon exploring the Madeira River and the Beni savannah frontier In 1872 he launched an invasion from Valparaiso Chile resulting in an international crisis which is believed to have led to a secret alliance treaty between Peru and Bolivia against Chile Said alliance became effective with the Chilean occupation of Antofagasta and the Bolivian Litoral Department leading to the War of the Pacific Quintin QuevedoMember of the Chamber of DeputiesRepresenting MizqueIn office 31 May 1855 18 May 1856Preceded byJuan de Dios La LastraSucceeded byCarlos Manuel RuilobaMember of the Chamber of DeputiesRepresenting CochabambaIn office 14 May 1873 29 June 1874Preceded byDiego de la Tapia TerrazasSucceeded byPedro Augusto AntezanaPersonal detailsBorn 1825 10 31 October 31 1825Caminiaga Cordoba ArgentinaDied 1876 08 24 August 24 1876Puno PeruSpouseModesta CarrascoChildren3Parent s Rafael Quevedo LairaCarmen Ferrari GarciaAlma materInstituto Nacional General Jose Miguel CarreraOccupationMilitary officerMilitary serviceAllegianceBoliviaBranch serviceBolivian ArmyRankBrigadier general After the overthrow of Melgarejo Quevedo would relentlessly conspire against the governments of Agustin Morales Adolfo Ballivian and Tomas Frias He was only finally defeated when the elderly Frias himself led his pacifying army to victory at the Battle of Chacoma where Quevedo was soundly defeated However much like Quevedo s earlier expedition to Cobija his rebellion in 1875 greatly affected Bolivian politics as only a few months later revolts broke out throughout the country even resulting in the burning of the Government Palace that same year The fractured and weak state of the country and its government allowed for Hilarion Daza s coup in 1876 to easily succeed Without a doubt Quevedo played a crucial role in Bolivian history affecting so much of the nation s destiny in a period of only four years Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career 3 Political career 3 1 Commutation of the death sentence of Mariano Melgarejo 3 2 The presidencies of Cordova and Linares 3 2 1 Internal exile in the Beni savannah 3 3 The Presidencies of Acha Melgarejo 3 3 1 The Constitutionalist Revolution of 1865 1866 and diplomatic missions 4 Later career 4 1 The fall of Melgarejo and early plots 4 2 The General Elections of 1873 4 3 Member of the Chamber of Deputies 4 4 A final defeat 5 Death and burial 6 Bibliography 7 ReferencesEarly life editQuevedo was born in the town of Caminiaga near the city of Cordoba Argentina on October 31 1825 the son of Rafael Quevedo and Carmen Ferrari His father had supported the patriot cause in Upper Peru during the Spanish American wars of independence leading to his exile to the Argentine Republic With the independence of the Bolivia achieved his family returned to Bolivia and in 1836 he was sent to Chile to study at the Instituto Nacional General Jose Miguel Carrera Quevedo returned to Bolivia in 1841 the same year the Battle of Ingavi took place He wrote a poem about the battle called the Canto a Ingavi Many praised this work and when Jose Ballivian was touring the major cities of Bolivia he invited Quevedo to join the garrison of the city as a second lieutenant 1 Military career editQuevedo would accept and chose to join as an artillery officer He was commissioned with opening an academy specialized in training artillery units in Viacha This was however ended by the sudden rebellion of Fructuoso Pena in 1843 Nonetheless Quevedo continued rising rapidly through the ranks By 1844 Quevedo had risen to the rank of captain 2 In 1846 he married Modesta Carrasco the only child of General Manuel Carrasco 3 In 1847 President Ballivian faced rebellion throughout the country One of his main detractors was General Jose Miguel de Velasco whose cause Quevedo would join The Santo Domingo rebellion of Cochabamba in which he played a role declared itself against Ballivian and in support of Velasco Seeing his support waning Ballivian decided to resign Velasco would reward Quevedo with the rank of lieutenant colonel 2 and allowed him to create El Independiente a newspaper based in Cochabamba It was in this newspaper that Quevedo published many of his poetic works which proved to be successful and popular In 1848 he was made Consul to Peru in Tacna Later that year however Manuel Isidoro Belzu ousted Velasco after the bloody Battle of Yamparaez on December 6 of that year Although Belzu offered him to keep his position as Consul Quevedo declined and remained exiled in Tacna 4 Political career editCommutation of the death sentence of Mariano Melgarejo edit During his exile Quevedo founded a trading company and would support the Legalista Party of Jose Maria Linares However in 1850 he stopped his support after a failed attempt to oust Belzu headed by Linares and Ballivian On September 6 1850 the legalistas launched an insurrection after an attempt on the life of President Belzu had been made To the plotter s dismay not only had their rebellion been crushed by the military but Belzu still lived In 1852 Quevedo returned to Bolivia under the pretext of his mercantile business At the time of his return Mariano Melgarejo then a colonel was under arrest and had been sentenced to death for treason Quevedo put his several connections to use in hopes of saving the life of Melgarejo The cause was successful and in 1854 Melgarejo was spared by Belzu 5 A jubilant Melgarejo wrote to those that had pleaded for his life including Quevedo a pamphlet dated February 14 1854 stating the following 6 In gratitude to Pedro Reyes Dorado Marcos Rojas Jose Gregorio Salamanca Quintin Quevedo and Lucas Merubia Generous emissaries of the noblest of peoples I have not forgotten you Today our people enthusiastically greet your virtue and I have wanted to join them to speak to you now especially Your glory is greater than that of those people who represent the masses only for their political interests you have represented them in their desires for humanity Glory to you who have been chosen for such a holy task You have saved my life and from today there is an indissoluble bond between you and me You have removed the chains that already bound me to death May God give me an opportunity to show you that my gratitude is a chain to my heart that will never be broken I cannot emphasize this more your name at the top of this paper and mine at the bottom means more than my lips can express Mariano Melgarejo The presidencies of Cordova and Linares edit nbsp General Mariano Melgarejo Quevedo supported his friend Jorge Cordova in the elections of 1855 Cordova would defeat the legalistas and Linares ensuring that the army remained loyal to the government For the first time in Bolivian history the transition of power had been concluded by the Congress in Sucre Quevedo was sworn into the Chamber of Deputies representing the province of Mizque 2 In 1855 Cordova would pardon any political fugitives and exiles through supreme decree 7 In September of 1857 Linares would revolt against the government and incite the rebellion of the city of Cochabamba Although Cordova would siege the city he was eventually forced to withdraw to Oruro Quevedo had declared himself in support of the government which earned him the rank of colonel It was during the retreat to Oruro that Quevedo was given 10 000 pesos and tasked with the purchase of military equipment in Tacna However Linares triumphed and Quevedo gave the purchased equipment to the new government opting to withdraw to private life and continuing his mercantile enterprise 8 nbsp Quevedo as a Colonel Although Linares had promoted himself as a constitutionalist he would establish himself as Dictator and persecute those who had opposed him in the past Instead of representing the pacifist and democratic ideals which he professed in past years he was as if not more oppressive than Belzu He became relentless and almost neurotic riding from city to city and town to town in order to crush the many rebellions he faced The dictatorial decree of March 31 1858 placed the life and rights of the citizen at the mercy of the government suppressing the ordinary jurisdiction for political crimes removing the freedom of the press and imposing severe penalties on those who expressed their opinion on the government 9 Internal exile in the Beni savannah edit nbsp General Quevedo in 1870 Quevedo soon joined the many plots which began to abound against the Dictator Linares especially after Belzu s return to Bolivia in 1860 The goal was to reinstate Cordova as President and have Belzu as Commander in Chief of the Army Quevedo launched an invasion from Peruvian territory and was supposed to be joined along the way by other rebellious battalions Linares however had been informed by his secret police of the invasion and was able to crush the insurrection in Sucre and then have Quevedo captured in the fields of Yaro A military jury condemned him to death on October 31 of that year Many pleaded for the colonel s life resulting in his internal exile to the border with Brazil and the commutation of his death sentence 2 10 Quevedo would spend his time in exile in the distant oriental Department of Beni exploring uncharted lands He is said to have discovered incredibly beautiful and astonishing waterfalls as well as potential routes for commerce Travelling down the Madeira River he wrote poems and reports on everything he witnessed during his explorations 11 He remained in exile until Jose Maria de Acha overthrew the government in 1861 whereupon Quevedo was allowed to return 12 The Presidencies of Acha Melgarejo edit A triumvirate was established in the wake of the revolutionary triumph and it was composed of Acha Ruperto Fernandez and General Manuel Antonio Sanchez This triumvirate promulgated the new Constitution of 1861 and eventually elected Acha as President The newly appointed head of state sent Quevedo as Prefect and military governor or Beni 2 a position he held until 1864 When Acha was ousted that year by Mariano Melgarejo Quevedo did not participate Surprisingly however Melgarejo asked Quevedo to remain as governor of the Beni 13 The Constitutionalist Revolution of 1865 1866 and diplomatic missions edit nbsp General Casto Arguedas proclaimed the Constitutionalist Revolution against Melgarejo in 1865 Belzu would revolt against Melgarejo in 1865 and even after the former s death a Constitutionalist Revolution which had no clear leader also emerged Among those who claimed leadership were Ildefonso Sanjines Casto Arguedas and Nicanor Flores In a long speech that Quevedo published that year he declared himself a lover of peace and order who believed that the Constitutionalists were all charlatans and liars Pledging his full support for Melgarejo Quevedo ended his long Declaracion 14 In Toledo Quevedo defeated the rebellion of Tito Andrade whose goal was to occupy the city of Cochabamba After Melgarejo scored a major victory on September 7 at Canteria Quevedo was left as military governor of Cochabamba However shortly afterwards he was defeated by Colonel Prudencio Barrientos and was forced to retreat to Melgarejo s camp There he was given command of a battalion and fought at Letanias the last battle of the Constitutionalist Revolution on January 24 1866 15 Quevedo was appointed Prefect of Cobija 16 serving until July 3 1867 That year he was commissioned by Melgarejo to act as Minister Plenipotentiary to Brazil Argentina Uruguay and Paraguay Instead of heading to Rio de Janeiro where he was ordered to go he was given a special mission to Mexico instead There he congratulated the government of Benito Juarez for defeating the foreign and monarchist invaders during the Second French intervention in Mexico After a month Quevedo headed to Brazil to complete the treaty of friendship and commerce that was to be signed that year 17 Later career editThe fall of Melgarejo and early plots edit nbsp The Mejillones Bay where Quevedo s expedition landed Quevedo was made Prefect of Cochabamba in 1870 and was elected Senator for the Department of Tarata having held the presidency of the National Congress that had met in Oruro that year The same Congress granted him the promotion to brigadier general on September 3 declaring him an Enlightened Citizen of Bolivia as a reward for the eminent services he had rendered to the Bolivia in his diplomatic career 16 After the fall of Melgarejo on January 15 1871 Quevedo one of the favorites of the infamous caudillo emigrated again to Peru and then moved to Chile where he began to conspire tirelessly In Valparaiso he embarked on the steamer Tome carrying 104 mercenaries hired to make a revolution and several boxes of ammunition weapons and military uniforms which were seized by the mayor of the city Quevedo was a candidate for the presidency of the republic in 1872 and was defeated by his contender General Agustin Morales He conspired again from Chilean coast joined by other melgarejistas Hopeful to obtain the support of the Chilean Government and thus fulfill his aspirations Quevedo continued to scheme in Valparaiso He left Valparaiso aboard the steamer Paquete de los Vilos on August 1 1872 leading 180 men Chileans and Bolivians well armed and equipped 18 Furthermore he also brought the brigantine Maria Luisa containing 700 rifles four mountain cannons and plenty of ammunition 19 He landed in Chimba Antofagasta proclaiming himself Supreme Chief of Bolivia However he defeated by the Prefect of the Litoral Ruperto Fernandez who was aware of the landing and had left Cobija in command of the Omasuyos battalion the police and two pieces of artillery Quevedio took refuge in the Morro and Lopez de Gama steamers which belonged to Chilean industrialists 20 21 The Quevedo Expedition as it had become known had serious consequences as it pushed Bolivia further toward Peru 22 and soured relations with Chile 23 24 25 The General Elections of 1873 edit nbsp Cobija Bolivia s main port Although Quevedo had been defeated in his earlier expedition he was to participate in the General Elections of 1873 as a candidate Adolfo Ballivian and Casimiro Corral were the other two candidates and represented their own groups usually deemed constitutionalist parties These were the rojos and the corralistas On the other hand Quevedo represented the recently defeated group of the melgarejistas This faction hoped to retake the lands which had been repatriated to its previous owners seized by the government of Melgarejo and bestowed to his loyal allies 26 The top three candidates of the elections were Ballivian Corral and Quevedo receiving 6 442 5 352 and 3 313 votes respectively There was a total of 16 674 votes and none of the candidates achieved the majority necessary according to the Constitution meaning that the National Assembly was now tasked to choose among the three candidates with the most votes The first round concluded in 31 votes for Ballivian 20 for Corral and 6 for Quevedo The second round contested between Ballivian and Corral ended with the former obtaining 41 votes and the latter 19 Thus Ballivian defeated both Corral and Quevedo and was proclaimed President of Bolivia 27 Quevedo as he had promised prior to his candidature accepted and acknowledged the victor of the elections as the legitimate successor to the Presidency 28 Member of the Chamber of Deputies edit The quevedista party would remain prominent in the government with Quevedo himself being elected as a Deputy for Cochabamba 29 In August of 1873 a discussion as to whether a constitutional reform should be made caused great disparities in the government The calls for reform emanated from Article 70 of the Constitution which stated that in case of the sudden death illness or extended absence of the President the President of the Council of State shall call elections and fulfill the remainder of their predecessor s term It was proposed that instead of staying for the remainder of the term that after four months the elect assume the presidency Quevedo would actually oppose the proposal leading to the outright rejection of the unnecessary reform 30 On August 21 1873 the signing of the boundary treaty with Chile was announced as government legislature one which Quevedo alongside the majority of the Chamber of Deputies approved 31 However with the death of Ballivian in 1874 Frias found himself again as President of Bolivia Quevedo alongside several other rebellious generals would incite insurrection namely in his native Cochabamba A final defeat edit nbsp Tomas Frias led the government forces and defeated Quevedo at Chacoma Although Quevedo had been defeated in the elections of 1873 he did not surrender his aspirations of occupying the Palacio Quemado and continued conspiring to take power by any means plotting with even more tenacity Joining his contender Casimiro Corral he organized an army of thousand two hundred men having left La Paz on the morning of January 10 1875 At the center of the government forces President Tomas Frias personally led the government troops having left Calamarca on the 14th at the head of an army of 600 men 32 Quevedo stationed his army at the ranch of Chacoma a place that was dominated by a gentle slope in the direction of Calamarca exactly where Frias was coming from On January 18 the government forces arrived and catching the rebels by surprise attacked At first there was heavy fire from rebel machine guns their smoke darkening the atmosphere for a moment Their projectiles fell two meters in front of the government army s line which throwing a general hurrah continued marching forward Colonel Ramon Gonzalez advanced with his company which fought with reckless courage Colonel Juan Granier entered the fight on foot at the head of his company President Frias present at the battlefield participated in the early stages of the action He continued even after the combat began to harden and with his two ministers Mariano Baptista and Daniel Calvo refused to withdraw to the reserves His son Carlos Frias tried to stop him warning his father that he could get killed The 70 year old President replied What does it matter He then signaled his troops ahead in the midst of the bullets The impetuous and brave advance of the constitutional forces on enemy lines stood firm and organized The fighting of the government troops was so ferocious that after sustaining a 25 minute fire they found the rebel forces completely dispersed and defeated Very few casualties were inflicted on the constitutional forces Among the dead were Colonel Jacinto Matos who was in the vanguard as captain and two soldiers from the 1st battalion Casto Eizaguirre of the same company and Lieutenant Colonel Rudesindo Nino de Guzman and 8 soldiers Quevedo s troops suffered 100 casualties and only 583 prisoners were taken since many rebel soldiers had fled at the beginning of the battle 33 Quevedo withdrew leaving the aforementioned 538 prisoners two cannons two machine guns and forty five ammunition boxes 34 After this defeat he was sentenced to death by the courts of justice Quevedo managed to flee to the Peru where he continued to plot with Corral With the coup d etat of General Hilarion Daza Quevedo felt discarded from the political scene and he dies as he was born ostracized far from the land of his parents and his home the beautiful Cochabamba 35 His days as a plotter and his endless conspiracies had finally come to an end Death and burial editHis excessive ambition for power and bad luck in his revolutionary enterprises took a toll on him leading to the poor health which ended his life Quevedo died on August 24 1876 at 51 years old By supreme decree promulgated on November 21 1878 36 his remains were repatriated from the city of Puno to Cochabamba arriving in La Paz on December 9 of the same year where a military funeral with full honors corresponding to his rank was held 37 Bibliography editVelarde Juan Francisco Carranza Angel Justiniano 1868 Rasgos biograficos del Coronel Quintin Quevedo enviado extraordinario y Ministro Plenipotenciario de Bolivia en el Brasil y Republicas del Plata in Spanish Imprenta de Mayo Diaz Arguedas Julio 1929 Los generales de Bolivia rasgos biograficos 1825 1925 prologo de Juan Francisco Bedregal in Spanish Imp Intendencia General de Guerra Sanjines Jenaro 1902 Apuntes para la historia de Bolivia bajo las administraciones de don Adolfo Ballivian I i e y don Tomas Frias in Spanish Impr Bolivar de M Pizarro References edit Velarde 1868 pp 6 7 a b c d e Diaz Arguedas 1929 pp 596 Velarde 1868 pp 8 Velarde 1868 pp 9 10 Velarde 1868 pp 10 11 Velarde 1868 pp 12 Velarde 1868 pp 13 14 Velarde 1868 pp 15 17 Velarde 1868 pp 18 Velarde 1868 pp 19 20 Church George Earl Company National Bolivian Navigation 1875 Explorations Made in the Valley of the River Madeira from 1749 to 1868 Published for the National Bolivian Navigation Company Velarde 1868 pp 20 24 Velarde 1868 pp 24 27 Velarde 1868 pp 27 30 Velarde 1868 pp 31 32 a b Diaz Arguedas 1929 pp 597 Velarde 1868 pp 32 34 Sanjines Jenaro 1898 Apuntes para la historia de Bolivia bajo la administracion del jeneral D Agustin Morales in Spanish El ComercioImp de El Comercio p 161 Cariola Juan Eduardo Vargas Vargas Fernando Silva 2019 Historia de la Republica de Chile La busqueda de un orden republicano 1826 1881 Volumen 2 Segunda parte in Spanish Ediciones UC p 66 ISBN 978 956 14 2456 2 Diaz Arguedas 1929 pp 597 598 Arguedas Alcides 1929 Los caudillos barbaros historia resurreccion La tragedia de un pueblo Melgarejo Morales 1864 1872 in Spanish Viuda de L Tasso pp 329 332 Caivano Tommaso 1900 Historia de la guerra de America entre Chile Peru y Bolivia in Spanish Imprenta Libreria y Encuadernacion Gmo Stolte p 132 Orrego Emilio Ruiz Tagle 1992 Bolivia y Chile el conflicto del Pacifico in Spanish Andres Bello pp 82 88 ISBN 978 956 13 0954 8 Maria Ignacio Santa 1919 Guerra del Pacifico in Spanish Imprenta universitaria pp 71 72 Farcau Bruce W 2000 The Ten Cents War Chile Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 Greenwood Publishing Group p 37 ISBN 978 0 275 96925 7 Sanjines 1902 pp 28 Sanjines 1902 pp 35 36 Sanjines 1902 pp 94 Sanjines 1902 pp 131 Sanjines 1902 pp 135 136 Sanjines 1902 pp 184 185 Sanjines 1902 pp 217 218 Sanjines 1902 pp 219 220 Arguedas Julio Diaz 1940 Historia del Ejercito de Bolivia 1825 1932 in Spanish Imprenta Int Central del Ejercito p 219 Diaz Arguedas 1929 pp 598 DECRETO SUPREMO No 21 11 1878 del 21 de Noviembre de 1878 gt D Lex Bolivia Gaceta Oficial de Bolivia Derechoteca www derechoteca com in Spanish Retrieved 2022 10 25 Diaz Arguedas 1929 pp 599 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quintin Quevedo amp oldid 1198052070, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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