Title: Revolutions in Latin America: 19c-Early 20c
1Latin American Revolutions 1800s
2European Conquest Colonization
Explorers
Conquistadores
OfficialEuropeanColony!
Missionaries
PermanentSettlers
3European Empires in Latin America 1660s
Spain
France
Portugal
4 Colonial Social Class System
- Colonial society was divided into six classes
based on birth
Peninsulares
(men born in Spain)
Creoles
(Spaniards born in Latin America)
Mestizos
Mulattos
(mixed European Indian ancestry)
(mixed European African ancestry)
Native Indians
Black Slaves
(majority enslaved)
(of little economic value)
5 Catholic Church Latin America
Our Lady of Guadalupe
Guadalajara Cathedral
Spanish Mission
6 The Economy incolonial Latin America
Economy based on the ideas of Mercantilism Defi
nition Economic system of colonial Europe based
on establishing favorable
balance of trade
- Required land ? colonies
- Lands are used for natural resources
(harvested/mined and traded) - Africans American Indians used as slave labor
7The Columbian Exchange
Squash Avocado Peppers Sweet Potatoes
Turkey Pumpkin Tobacco Quinine
Cocoa Pineapple Cassava POTATO
Peanut TOMATO Vanilla MAIZE
Syphilis
Trinkets
Liquor
GUNS
Olive COFFEE BEAN Banana Rice
Onion Turnip Honeybee Barley
Grape Peach SUGAR CANE Oats
Citrus Fruits Pear Wheat HORSE
Cattle Sheep Pigs Smallpox
Flu Typhus Measles Malaria
Diptheria Whooping Cough
8Causes of Latin AmericanRevolutions
- Inspired by Enlightenment ideas
- Creole discontent
- Motivated by the successful American and French
Revolutions. - Preoccupation of Spain Portugal in fighting in
other wars (the Napoleonic Wars) - Economic policies benefited Europeans at the
expense of the native Latin Americans
9EnlightenmentThinkers
New ideas about freedom, rights, and liberty!
10Creole Discontent
Want a voice in government and economy but are
not allowed due to birth!
11Inspiration of American French Revolutions
Declaration of the Rights of Man of the
Citizen, 1789
Declaration of Independence, 1776
12Preoccupation of Spain Portugal In Fighting
Napoleonic Wars
Provides a model a diversion!
13Latin American Revolutions!
14Toussaint LOuvetureLeads a Revolutionin
Haiti(1804)
15- First Colony to revoltHaiti
- Home Country French colony
- Date of Independence 1804
- Independence Leaders
- - Toussiant-Louverture (former slave)
- - Jean-Jaques Dessalines (Toussaints general)
- Haitian Independence
- 1791 slave revolt
- 1801 Toussaint seized 2/3 of Haiti (frees
slaves) - 1802 French troops arrive agreement made
- to stop revolution
- 1804 Dessalines starts revolution again and
- declares independence
16Argentina
- Home Country Spanish colony
- Date of Independence 1816
- Independence Leaders
- - Jose de San Martin (Spanish military
officer) - Argentiaian Independence
- 1816 Creole colonist rebel seize government
- 1816 Martin declares independence
-
17The Muscle of the Revolution
Bolivar coming from the North.
José de St. MartÃn and Bernard OHiggins cross
the Andes Mountains.
18Chile
- Home Country Spanish colony
- Date of Independence 1817
- Independence Leaders
- - Jose de San Martin (Spanish
military officer) - - Bernard OHiggins (military officer)
- Chile Independence
- 1817 San Martin leads his army across the
- Andes into Chile
- 1817 Joins forces with OHiggins and defeat
- the Spanish and declare independence
-
19Simón Bolivar The Brainsof theRevolution
- Creole leader of the revolutions in Venezuela.
- Spent time in Europe and the newly-independent
United States.
20- Home Country Spanish colony
- Date of Independence 1821/1822
- Independence Leaders
- - Simon Bolivar (Venezulan Creole/military
general) - Gran Columbia Independence
- 1811 Venezuela declares independence
- 1811-1821 Revolts against Spanish
- 1821 Bolivar wins independence
- 1821 Rebellion goes to Columbia, Ecuador,
- Panama
- 1822 Bolivar elected president the new
nation - called Gran Columbia established
-
Venezuela, Columbia, and Panama
21Bolivars Accomplishment
22Simón Bolivar Meets José de San Martin
23Bolivar San Martin Fight for Independence!
24Peru
- Home Country Spanish colony
- Date of Independence 1824
- Independence Leaders
- - Jose de San Martin (Spanish military officer)
- - Simon Bolivar (Venezuelan Creole/military
general) - Peruvian Independence
- 1821 San Martin takes army to Lima, Peru to
- drive out the remaining Spanish
- 1822 San Martin joins Bolivar/combines army
- 1822 San Martin leaves for Europe
- 1822 Carries rebellion to Columbia, Ecuador,
- and Panama
- 1822 Bolivar defeats Spanish at Battle of
Ayacucho
25Bolivia
- Home Country Spanish colony
- Date of Independence 1825
- Independence Leaders
- - Simon Bolivar (Venezuelan Creole/military
general) - Bolivian Independence
- 1824 Bolivar drives out the remaining Spanish
- from Peru
- 1825 Upper Peru separates and names itself
- Bolivia (after Simon Bolivar)
-
26Bolivars Failure
- After uniting Venezuela, Columbia, Ecuador into
Gran Columbia, he left to help free the rest of
Latin America - He died a year later, with his goal of uniting
all of South America unfulfilled!
27LatinAmerican StatesAfter the Revolutions
28Results of the Latin American Revolutions
291.) Brazil Freed from Portugal
- The Portuguese royal family escaped Napoleon by
fleeing to Brazil. - Pedro I set up a new, independent kingdom in 1821
when his father returned to Portugal. - Pedro II assumed full power after Pedro I
abdicated his throne.
30Brazil
- Home Country Portuguese colony
- Date of Independence 1822
- Independence Leaders
- - Dom Joao/King John(leader of Portugal)
- - Dom Pedro (son of King John)
- Brazillian Independence
- 1807 Prince John flees to Brazil to escape
from - Napoleon rules from Portugal
(14 yrs) - 1815 Napoleon defeated
- 1822 Brazilian creoles demand independence
- 1822 petition by Brazilians ask for Dom
Pedro - to rule Brazil King John agrees
312.) Independence for Spanish Portuguese Latin
America
- By the mid-1820s, revolts create many
newly-independent nations. - Toussaint LOuveture Haiti
- BolÃvar, San MartÃn, OHiggins in Paraguay,
Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Peru, Bolivia, the
United Provinces of Central America, and Gran
Columbia!
323.) No Unity!
- Failure of Bolivars dream for a united South
America - Civil wars erupt in many newly independent
countries. - By 1830s, geographic barriers (mts., the Amazon,
etc.), vast distances, plus cultural differences
defeated attempts at unification. - Gran Columbia.
- United Provinces of Central America.
334.) Independence Brought More Poverty
- The wars disrupted trade.
- The wars devastated the cities and the
countryside.
345.) Left Many Countries in the Control of
Caudillos
- WHO WERE THEY?
- Mid-19c military dictators
- Mostly wealthy creole aristocrats.
- Followed the fight for independence.
- Posed as reformers.
- BUTonce in power overthrew govt. took away
basic human rights. - Attempted improvements, but most just cared about
themselves and their families and friends
nepotism. - Power changes usually occurred at bayonet-point
coup detats!
35What is the Message?
36Additional Problems
- Feuds among leaders.
- Geographic barriers.
- The social hierarchy continued from the past.
- Conservatives favored the old social order.
- Liberals wanted land reform.
- Dependence on foreign nations for capital and for
economic investments.
37The CaribbeanAn American Lake
38Big Stick Foreign Policy
39The Colossus of the North
- US dominated affairs in theAmericas.
- 1823 Monroe Doctrine.
- US takes Texas and Mexican Cession.
- US gains independence for Cuba.
- Roosevelt Corollary US will police the
America. - US sent troops to Cuba, Haiti, Mexico, Honduras,
Nicaragua. - US built Panama Canal Yankee imperialism.
40The Panama Canal
41Cause of the Mexican Revolution of 1910?
42Mexico
- Home Country Spanish colony
- Date of Independence 1821
- Independence Leaders
- - Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla (priest
and leader of revolution) - - Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon (priest rebel
leader) - - General Augustin de Ituribe (Creole officer)
- - Venustiano Carranza (President of Mexico after
revolution) - Mexican Independence
- 1810 Costilla starts rebellion against Spanish
- 1811 Costilla defeated, captured, and executed
- 1811 Pavon leads Mexican Revolution (next 4
years) - 1815 Ituribe helps Spanish defeat Pavon
- 1821 turns on Spanish over loss of rights
makes - peace with Pavon declares
independence!
43Mexican Revolutionaries
EmilianoZapata
Pancho Villa
VenustianoCarranza
Francisco I Madero
Porfirio Diaz
44Economic Imperialism
United States and European nations invest in
Latin American lands and in return get their
resources and get cheap labor
45U. S. Global Investmentsin 1914