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United Provinces of the Río de la Plata

The United Provinces of the Río de la Plata (Spanish: Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata), earlier known as the United Provinces of South America (Spanish: Provincias Unidas de Sudamérica), was a name adopted in 1816 by the Congress of Tucumán for the region of South America that declared independence in 1816, with the Sovereign Congress taking place in 1813, during the Argentine War of Independence (1810–1818) that began with the May Revolution in 1810. It originally comprised rebellious territories of the former Spanish Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata dependencies and had Buenos Aires as its capital.

United Provinces of the Río de la Plata
(United Provinces of South America)
Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata
(Provincias Unidas de Sudamérica)
1810–1831
Anthem: National Anthem of Argentina
CapitalBuenos Aires
Common languagesSpanish
Religion
Christianity
Government
  • Federal constitutional monarchy (1810–1816)
  • Republic (1816–1831)
Head of State 
• 1810–1816
Ferdinand VII of Spain
• 1829–1831
Juan Manuel de Rosas
Historical eraNapoleonic Wars
1806–1807
25 May 1810
9 July 1816
• Battle of Cepeda
End of centralized authority
1 February 1820
8 February 1826
• Treaty of Montevideo
Independence of Uruguay
28 August 1828
4 January 1831
Currency

The name "Provincias del Río de la Plata" (formally adopted during the Cortes of Cádiz to designate the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata)[1] alludes to the Junta Provisional Gubernativa de las Provincias del Río de la Plata [2] or Primera Junta. It is best known in Argentinean literature as Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata ("United Provinces of the River Plate" i.e. river of silver), this being the most common name (since 1811) in use for the country until the enactment of the 1826 Constitution. The Argentine National Anthem refers to the state as "the United Provinces of the South". The Constitution of Argentina recognises Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata as one of the official names of the country, referred to as "Argentine Nation" (Nación Argentina) in modern legislation.[3]

Description Edit

The United Provinces of South America were bordered on the south by the sparsely populated territories of the Pampas and Patagonia, home to the Mapuche, Ranquel and Puelche peoples. To the north, the Gran Chaco was populated by the Guaycuru nations. To the northwest, across the Upper Peru, lay the Spanish Viceroyalty of Peru. Across the Andes, to the west, was the Spanish-controlled Captaincy General of Chile. To the northeast was Colonial Brazil, a part of the Portuguese Empire (in 1815, the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves), later the Empire of Brazil in 1821.

Government Edit

The change from the Viceroyalty into the United Provinces was not merely a change of governors, but a revolutionary process that would replace the Spanish monarchy with an independent republic.

The main influences in this were the Enlightenment in Spain, promoting new ideas, and the Peninsular War that left Spain without a legitimate king after the Abdications of Bayonne. The concept of separation of powers gradually became a tool to prevent despotism.[4]: 12 

The new political situation generated great political conflict between the cities for two reasons. First, the vacatio regis of Ferdinand VII and the French King of Spain, Joseph Bonaparte, there was no clear view about who was the king. Some people thought that it passed to other offices of the Spanish monarchy, while others held the notion of the retroversion of the sovereignty to the people: sovereignty returned to the people, who had now the right to self-governance temporally. [4]: 14 

But, in 1810 under the establishment of the new doctrine of popular sovereignty throughout the Spanish empire, the Spanish government summoned all the nations of America and Spain, to establish Spanish courts for the whole empire, but on the contrary, the patriots, under the same right of popular sovereignty, thought that any nation, both in Spain and America, had the right to self-government and to establish their own country.

History Edit

The freedom of the Provinces of the Río de la Plata was established through a lengthy process that started in May 1810, when the citizens and militias of Buenos Aires, the capital city of the Spanish Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, ousted the Viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros in the May Revolution. Although there was not a declaration of independence at the time, and the government that emerged from the revolution declared loyalty to the king Ferdinand VII, in fact it attempted to reorganise the social, political and economic structures of the Provinces of the Río de la Plata. As it faced immediate resistance in some quarters (namely the Banda Oriental, under the new Spanish Viceroy Javier de Elío, Córdoba and Santiago de Liniers, the local government of Asunción in Paraguay and, notably, the royalist forces from the Viceroyalty of Perú), the revolution soon turned to be a War of Independence.

 
Battle of Maipú, 1819

In the midst of the war of independence, during the entire 1810–1831 period there were serious conflicts among ever-changing factions regarding the organization of the state and the political aims of the revolutionary governments. These conflicts involved coups d'état, mutinies, politically motivated trials, banishments and imprisonments and finally developed into an outright civil war.

 
United Provinces in the 1820s as understood by political cartographers at the time. 1821: Carte physique et politique de l'Amérique méridionale.[5] 1822: The American Atlas by Carey & Lea. 1825: South America by Fisher.

Initial revolutionary governments Edit

Ever since the revolution, there were serious conflicts among diverging views regarding the political organization of the provinces. While some advocated a strong and executive central government with little accountability to the regional interests, a position at first favored by the "enlightened" revolutionary and independentist elements, others sought to integrate representatives from the provinces in a larger deliberative assembly. As the latter position gained the upper hand, the Primera Junta grew to incorporate delegates from the provinces in 1811. However, as it became evident that such an arrangement was not effective enough to lead the war efforts, a triumvirate assumed executive powers while the assembly retained some controlling functions.

Assembly of the year XIII Edit

 
United Provinces represented at the 1813 Congress.

Supreme Directorship Edit

 
Declaration of Independence of the United Provinces of South America (1816)

Declaration of independence Edit

Liga Federal Edit

The Liga Federal (1815–1820), or Liga de los Pueblos Libres (League of the Free Peoples), was an alliance of provinces in what is now Argentina and Uruguay, organised under democratic federalist ideals strongly advocated by its leader, José Gervasio Artigas.

The government of the United Provinces of South America felt threatened by the growing appeal of the Liga Federal, so they did nothing to repel the incoming Portuguese invasion of Misiones Orientales and the Banda Oriental, the stronghold of Artigas. Brazilian General Carlos Frederico Lecor, thanks to their numerical and material superiority, defeated Artigas and his army and occupied Montevideo on January 20, 1817, but the struggle continued for three long years in the countryside. Infuriated by the passivity of Buenos Aires, Artigas declared war on Buenos Aires while he was losing to the Portuguese.

On February 1, 1820, Federal League governors Francisco Ramírez of Entre Ríos and Estanislao López of Santa Fe, defeated a Supreme Directorship diminished army, ending the centralized government of the United Provinces, and established a federal agreement with Buenos Aires Province. Similarly, the Federal League effectively came to an end when its constituent provinces rejoined the United Provinces.

Artigas, defeated by the Portuguese, retreated to Entre Ríos. From there, he denounced the Treaty of Pilar and entered into conflict with his former ally governor Ramírez, who crushed the remnants of Artigas' army. The former Protector of the Free Peoples was exiled in Paraguay until his death. The Eastern Province was annexed by Portugal to its Brazilian dependences in 1821.

Anarchy of the year XX Edit

First presidency Edit

War with Brazil and Independence of Uruguay Edit

Resumption of the Civil War Edit

Break up of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata Edit

The result of the wars was the independence of the provinces. Several new nations appeared, there were:

Bolivia Edit

Five provinces would go on to become Bolivia: Charcas, Cochabamba, Mizque, Chichas, and Tarija.

Uruguay Edit

The Eastern Province (Provincia Oriental) became independent as Uruguay as a consequence of the treaty of Montevideo, partly retaining its old name in its official name: the Eastern Republic of Uruguay. Due to the text of the aforementioned treaty, United Provinces and Imperial Brazil both renounced their claims to the province and agreed to grant it independence, but the treaty did not include nor ask the Orientals' opinion, and also omitted to detail the borders of the new state what would give Brazil a chance to move its borders further south. The Constitutional Assembly approved the Constitution of Uruguay on 10 September 1829 and it was sworn by the citizens on 18 July 1830.[6]

Brazil Edit

Misiones Orientales, after years of Portuguese domain, were recovered with the 1828 Campaign of Fructuoso Rivera at the Misiones Orientales, but it was de jure recognized as Brazilian, following the outcome of the Cisplatine War.

 
The city of Tucumán at the beginning of the 19th century

Argentina Edit

Following a long civil war, the following provinces joined to become the Argentine Republic: Buenos Aires (The outpost of Carmen de Patagones in Patagonia is now part of Buenos Aires Province), Catamarca, Córdoba, Corrientes, Entre Ríos, Jujuy, La Rioja, Mendoza, Salta, San Juan, San Luis, Santa Fe, Santiago del Estero, and Tucumán.

See also Edit


References Edit

  1. ^ Roca, Eduardo (1999). América en el ordenamiento jurídico de las Cortes de Cádiz (in Spanish). p. 32.
  2. ^ Casajús (2012). España y América en el Bicentenario de las Independencias. p. 35.
  3. ^ The Constitution: "Art. 35. – Las denominaciones adoptadas sucesivamente desde 1810 hasta el presente, a saber: Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata; República Argentina, Confederación Argentina, serán en adelante nombres oficiales indistintamente para la designación del Gobierno y territorio de las provincias, empleándose las palabras 'Nación Argentina' en la formación y sanción de las leyes."
    ("Article 35. The denominations successively adopted from 1810 to the present – United Provinces of the Río de la Plata and Argentine Republic, Argentine Confederation – shall henceforth be interchangeable official names to describe the Government and territory of the provinces. The phrase 'Argentine Nation' is used for the formulation and the enactment of laws.")
  4. ^ a b Ternavasio, Marcela; Luis Alberto Romero (2007). Gobernar la Revolución. Buenos Aires: Siglo veintiuno editores. ISBN 978-987-1220-96-0.
  5. ^ Brué, Adrien-Hubert (1821), Carte physique et politique de l'Amérique méridionale : Physical and political map of South America (in French), Goujon, OCLC 494185362
  6. ^ Frega, Ana (2012). "SOBERANÍA Y ORDEN EN LA BANDA ORIENTAL DEL URUGUAY. ESPACIOS DE FRONTERA Y TIEMPOS DE REVOLUCIÓN". In Annino, Antonio; Ternavasio, Marcela (eds.). El laboratorio constitucional iberoamericano: 1807/1808-1830 (in Spanish). Spain: AHILA / Iberoamericana / Vervuert. pp. 237–260. doi:10.31819/9783865279996-013. ISBN 9783865279996.

Bibliography Edit

34°40′00″S 58°24′00″W / 34.6667°S 58.4000°W / -34.6667; -58.4000

united, provinces, río, plata, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jst. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata Spanish Provincias Unidas del Rio de la Plata earlier known as the United Provinces of South America Spanish Provincias Unidas de Sudamerica was a name adopted in 1816 by the Congress of Tucuman for the region of South America that declared independence in 1816 with the Sovereign Congress taking place in 1813 during the Argentine War of Independence 1810 1818 that began with the May Revolution in 1810 It originally comprised rebellious territories of the former Spanish Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata dependencies and had Buenos Aires as its capital United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata United Provinces of South America Provincias Unidas del Rio de la Plata Provincias Unidas de Sudamerica 1810 1831Top Flag 1817 1818 Bottom Flag 1818 1826 Coat of armsAnthem National Anthem of Argentina source source track track track track track track track CapitalBuenos AiresCommon languagesSpanishReligionChristianityGovernmentFederal constitutional monarchy 1810 1816 Republic 1816 1831 Head of State 1810 1816Ferdinand VII of Spain 1829 1831Juan Manuel de RosasHistorical eraNapoleonic Wars British invasions of the Rio de la Plata1806 1807 May Revolution25 May 1810 Declaration ofIndependence9 July 1816 Battle of CepedaEnd of centralized authority1 February 1820 First Presidency8 February 1826 Treaty of MontevideoIndependence of Uruguay28 August 1828 Pacto Federal4 January 1831CurrencyReal from 1813 Sol from 1815 Peso fuerte from 1826 Preceded by Succeeded byViceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata Argentine ConfederationBoliviaEmpire of BrazilUruguayThe name Provincias del Rio de la Plata formally adopted during the Cortes of Cadiz to designate the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata 1 alludes to the Junta Provisional Gubernativa de las Provincias del Rio de la Plata 2 or Primera Junta It is best known in Argentinean literature as Provincias Unidas del Rio de la Plata United Provinces of the River Plate i e river of silver this being the most common name since 1811 in use for the country until the enactment of the 1826 Constitution The Argentine National Anthem refers to the state as the United Provinces of the South The Constitution of Argentina recognises Provincias Unidas del Rio de la Plata as one of the official names of the country referred to as Argentine Nation Nacion Argentina in modern legislation 3 Contents 1 Description 2 Government 3 History 3 1 Initial revolutionary governments 3 2 Assembly of the year XIII 3 3 Supreme Directorship 3 4 Declaration of independence 3 5 Liga Federal 3 6 Anarchy of the year XX 3 7 First presidency 3 8 War with Brazil and Independence of Uruguay 3 9 Resumption of the Civil War 4 Break up of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata 4 1 Bolivia 4 2 Uruguay 4 3 Brazil 4 4 Argentina 5 See also 6 References 7 BibliographyDescription EditThe United Provinces of South America were bordered on the south by the sparsely populated territories of the Pampas and Patagonia home to the Mapuche Ranquel and Puelche peoples To the north the Gran Chaco was populated by the Guaycuru nations To the northwest across the Upper Peru lay the Spanish Viceroyalty of Peru Across the Andes to the west was the Spanish controlled Captaincy General of Chile To the northeast was Colonial Brazil a part of the Portuguese Empire in 1815 the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves later the Empire of Brazil in 1821 Government EditThe change from the Viceroyalty into the United Provinces was not merely a change of governors but a revolutionary process that would replace the Spanish monarchy with an independent republic The main influences in this were the Enlightenment in Spain promoting new ideas and the Peninsular War that left Spain without a legitimate king after the Abdications of Bayonne The concept of separation of powers gradually became a tool to prevent despotism 4 12 The new political situation generated great political conflict between the cities for two reasons First the vacatio regis of Ferdinand VII and the French King of Spain Joseph Bonaparte there was no clear view about who was the king Some people thought that it passed to other offices of the Spanish monarchy while others held the notion of the retroversion of the sovereignty to the people sovereignty returned to the people who had now the right to self governance temporally 4 14 But in 1810 under the establishment of the new doctrine of popular sovereignty throughout the Spanish empire the Spanish government summoned all the nations of America and Spain to establish Spanish courts for the whole empire but on the contrary the patriots under the same right of popular sovereignty thought that any nation both in Spain and America had the right to self government and to establish their own country History EditSee also May Revolution and Argentine war of independence The freedom of the Provinces of the Rio de la Plata was established through a lengthy process that started in May 1810 when the citizens and militias of Buenos Aires the capital city of the Spanish Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata ousted the Viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros in the May Revolution Although there was not a declaration of independence at the time and the government that emerged from the revolution declared loyalty to the king Ferdinand VII in fact it attempted to reorganise the social political and economic structures of the Provinces of the Rio de la Plata As it faced immediate resistance in some quarters namely the Banda Oriental under the new Spanish Viceroy Javier de Elio Cordoba and Santiago de Liniers the local government of Asuncion in Paraguay and notably the royalist forces from the Viceroyalty of Peru the revolution soon turned to be a War of Independence nbsp Battle of Maipu 1819In the midst of the war of independence during the entire 1810 1831 period there were serious conflicts among ever changing factions regarding the organization of the state and the political aims of the revolutionary governments These conflicts involved coups d etat mutinies politically motivated trials banishments and imprisonments and finally developed into an outright civil war nbsp United Provinces in the 1820s as understood by political cartographers at the time 1821 Carte physique et politique de l Amerique meridionale 5 1822 The American Atlas by Carey amp Lea 1825 South America by Fisher Initial revolutionary governments Edit Main articles Primera Junta Junta Grande Cry of Asencio and First Triumvirate Argentina See also Cornelio Saavedra Mariano Moreno Juan Jose Castelli and Paraguay campaign Ever since the revolution there were serious conflicts among diverging views regarding the political organization of the provinces While some advocated a strong and executive central government with little accountability to the regional interests a position at first favored by the enlightened revolutionary and independentist elements others sought to integrate representatives from the provinces in a larger deliberative assembly As the latter position gained the upper hand the Primera Junta grew to incorporate delegates from the provinces in 1811 However as it became evident that such an arrangement was not effective enough to lead the war efforts a triumvirate assumed executive powers while the assembly retained some controlling functions Assembly of the year XIII Edit nbsp United Provinces represented at the 1813 Congress Main articles Revolution of October 8 1812 Second Triumvirate Argentina and Assembly of the year XIII See also Army of the North and Regiment of Mounted Grenadiers Supreme Directorship Edit Main article Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata See also Army of the Andes and Carlos Maria de Alvear nbsp Declaration of Independence of the United Provinces of South America 1816 Declaration of independence Edit Main articles Congress of Tucuman and Argentine declaration of independence See also Inca Plan and Juan Martin de Pueyrredon Liga Federal Edit Main articles Liga Federal and Argentine Civil War The Liga Federal 1815 1820 or Liga de los Pueblos Libres League of the Free Peoples was an alliance of provinces in what is now Argentina and Uruguay organised under democratic federalist ideals strongly advocated by its leader Jose Gervasio Artigas The government of the United Provinces of South America felt threatened by the growing appeal of the Liga Federal so they did nothing to repel the incoming Portuguese invasion of Misiones Orientales and the Banda Oriental the stronghold of Artigas Brazilian General Carlos Frederico Lecor thanks to their numerical and material superiority defeated Artigas and his army and occupied Montevideo on January 20 1817 but the struggle continued for three long years in the countryside Infuriated by the passivity of Buenos Aires Artigas declared war on Buenos Aires while he was losing to the Portuguese On February 1 1820 Federal League governors Francisco Ramirez of Entre Rios and Estanislao Lopez of Santa Fe defeated a Supreme Directorship diminished army ending the centralized government of the United Provinces and established a federal agreement with Buenos Aires Province Similarly the Federal League effectively came to an end when its constituent provinces rejoined the United Provinces Artigas defeated by the Portuguese retreated to Entre Rios From there he denounced the Treaty of Pilar and entered into conflict with his former ally governor Ramirez who crushed the remnants of Artigas army The former Protector of the Free Peoples was exiled in Paraguay until his death The Eastern Province was annexed by Portugal to its Brazilian dependences in 1821 Anarchy of the year XX Edit See also Argentine Constitution of 1819 Battle of Cepeda 1820 and Treaty of Pilar First presidency Edit See also Bernardino Rivadavia War with Brazil and Independence of Uruguay Edit Main articles Cisplatine War and 1828 Treaty of Montevideo Resumption of the Civil War Edit Main articles Argentine civil wars Unitarian League and Pacto Federal See also Manuel Dorrego Juan Lavalle Jose Maria Paz Juan Manuel de Rosas and Argentine ConfederationBreak up of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata EditThe result of the wars was the independence of the provinces Several new nations appeared there were Bolivia Edit Five provinces would go on to become Bolivia Charcas Cochabamba Mizque Chichas and Tarija Uruguay Edit The Eastern Province Provincia Oriental became independent as Uruguay as a consequence of the treaty of Montevideo partly retaining its old name in its official name the Eastern Republic of Uruguay Due to the text of the aforementioned treaty United Provinces and Imperial Brazil both renounced their claims to the province and agreed to grant it independence but the treaty did not include nor ask the Orientals opinion and also omitted to detail the borders of the new state what would give Brazil a chance to move its borders further south The Constitutional Assembly approved the Constitution of Uruguay on 10 September 1829 and it was sworn by the citizens on 18 July 1830 6 Brazil Edit Misiones Orientales after years of Portuguese domain were recovered with the 1828 Campaign of Fructuoso Rivera at the Misiones Orientales but it was de jure recognized as Brazilian following the outcome of the Cisplatine War nbsp The city of Tucuman at the beginning of the 19th centuryArgentina Edit Following a long civil war the following provinces joined to become the Argentine Republic Buenos Aires The outpost of Carmen de Patagones in Patagonia is now part of Buenos Aires Province Catamarca Cordoba Corrientes Entre Rios Jujuy La Rioja Mendoza Salta San Juan San Luis Santa Fe Santiago del Estero and Tucuman See also EditName of Argentina Second Triumvirate Argentina Viceroyalty of Rio de la Plata Rise of the Argentine Republic Argentine War of Independence Etymology of ArgentinaReferences Edit Roca Eduardo 1999 America en el ordenamiento juridico de las Cortes de Cadiz in Spanish p 32 Casajus 2012 Espana y America en el Bicentenario de las Independencias p 35 The Constitution Art 35 Las denominaciones adoptadas sucesivamente desde 1810 hasta el presente a saber Provincias Unidas del Rio de la Plata Republica Argentina Confederacion Argentina seran en adelante nombres oficiales indistintamente para la designacion del Gobierno y territorio de las provincias empleandose las palabras Nacion Argentina en la formacion y sancion de las leyes Article 35 The denominations successively adopted from 1810 to the present United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata and Argentine Republic Argentine Confederation shall henceforth be interchangeable official names to describe the Government and territory of the provinces The phrase Argentine Nation is used for the formulation and the enactment of laws a b Ternavasio Marcela Luis Alberto Romero 2007 Gobernar la Revolucion Buenos Aires Siglo veintiuno editores ISBN 978 987 1220 96 0 Brue Adrien Hubert 1821 Carte physique et politique de l Amerique meridionale Physical and political map of South America in French Goujon OCLC 494185362 Frega Ana 2012 SOBERANIA Y ORDEN EN LA BANDA ORIENTAL DEL URUGUAY ESPACIOS DE FRONTERA Y TIEMPOS DE REVOLUCIoN In Annino Antonio Ternavasio Marcela eds El laboratorio constitucional iberoamericano 1807 1808 1830 in Spanish Spain AHILA Iberoamericana Vervuert pp 237 260 doi 10 31819 9783865279996 013 ISBN 9783865279996 Bibliography Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata Simbolos Nacionales de la Republica Argentina ISBN 950 691 036 7 34 40 00 S 58 24 00 W 34 6667 S 58 4000 W 34 6667 58 4000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata amp oldid 1174371798, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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