Title: The Independence of Spanish America
1The Independence of Spanish America
- The Napoleonic Crisis in Europe
- San MartÃn and the Southern Independence Movement
- BolÃvar and the Northern Independence Movement
- The Independence of New Spain
2The Napoleonic Crisis in Europe and its Aftermath
- Criollos, Peninsulares, Bourbon Reforms, and the
Enlightenment - 1795 Spain allies with Napoleon
- Portugal and the Continental System
- The abdication of Charles IV
- Liberals and Royalists in the Americas
- 1810 The Cortes of Cádiz
- The Constitution of 1812
- 1814 The Restoration of Ferdinand VII
- Revocation of the Constitution
- Attempts to rein in American juntas
- 1820 Mutiny of Major Riego y Núñez
3The Americas After the Bourbon Reforms (map)
4San MartÃn and the Southern Independence Movement
- 1806 British take Buenos Aires
- Viceroy unable to repel
- Criollos take matters into their own hands
- May 1810 the Cabildo Abierto
- Buenos Aires vs. the Provinces
- Uruguay, Paraguay, and Upper Peru
- San MartÃn, OHiggins, and Chile
- Tupac Amaru The Reticence of the Peruvian Elite
- Also Indians
5Latin American Independence (map)
6BolÃvar and the Northern Independence Movement
- Comuneros, St. Domingue, and Criollo Fears
- 1810 Liberal Junta in New Granada
- 1811 formal break with Spain
- 1812 Liberals under BolÃvar defeated
- 1813 guerra a muerte
- 1815 1816 BolÃvar defeated again (and again)
7BolÃvar and the Northern Independence Movement
(cont.)
- The Liberalism of the Liberators
- 1817 Independence Movements Revitalized
- 1819 Fall of Bogotá
- 1819 Congress of Angostura, Gran Colombia
- 1821 Liberation of Venezuela and New Granada
- 1822 Campaign in Ecuador and Perú
- Meeting with San MartÃn in Guayaquil
- 1824 Battle of Ayacucho
- Antonio José de Sucre
8The Independence of New Spain
- Viceregal Government in Mexico puts down liberal
juntas. - Salon Conspiracy in Dolores
- Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla
- Grito de Dolores
- My children a new dispensation comes to us
today. Will you receive it? Will you free
yourselves? Will you recover the lands stolen
three hundred years ago from you forefathers by
the hated Spaniards? We must act at once. Will
you not defend your religion and your rights as
true patriots? Long live our Lady of Guadalupe!
Death to bad government! Death to gachupines! - Virgen de Guadalupe as the symbol of the rebellion
9The Independence of New Spain (cont)
- Guanajuato and the Alhondiga massacre
- Gente de Razón support Royalists
- Hidalgo mob abandons México and loses Battle of
Calderón on Jan. 18, 1811 - March 1811 Hidalgo and other leaders captured.
- July 31 Hidalgo defrocked and executed
- Rebellion becomes guerilla war led by José MarÃa
Morelos y Pavón - 1813 Declaration of Independence and Republican
Constitution at Chilpancingo (Indians vs.
Spaniards) - Morelos caught, defrocked and shot Dec. 22, 1815
10Mexican Independence (map)
11The Independence of New Spain (cont)
- Restoration of Ferdinand VII reinforces status
quo in México until 1820 - Riego rebellion causes conservative backlash
- AgustÃn de Iturbide becomes leader of the
Royalists but negotiates with rebel leader
Vincente Guererro - Plan de Iguala and the Three Guarantees
- Constitutional Monarchy
- Supremacy of Roman Catholic Church
- Equality of Peninsulares and Criollos
12The Independence of New Spain (cont)
- August 24, 1821 ODonojú signs Treaty of Córdoba
recognizing Independence of México - Crown repudiates
- Iturbide becomes Emperor