Uruguay BEGINNINGS OF INDEPENDENT LIFE, 1830-52
Montevideo's Thirty-Three Heroes Obelisk
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
The First Presidents, 1830-38
At the time of independence, Uruguay had an estimated
population of just under 75,000, of which less than 20
percent
resided in Montevideo, the capital. Indeed, the new nation
was born with most of its population scattered throughout the
countryside. Political power centered on local leaders, or
caudillos, who attracted followers because of their power,
bravery, or wealth. There were three major caudillos at
the time
of independence: Rivera, Oribe, and Lavalleja. The first
two were
later elected presidents, Rivera from 1830 to 1835 and
from 1838
to 1843 and Oribe from 1835 to 1838. Their rivalry, which
turned
violent in 1836, led to the formation of the first
political
groups, known as Colorados and Blancos because of the red
and
white hatbands, respectively, worn during armed clashes
beginning
in 1836. The groups would subsequently become the Colorado
Party
and the National Party (the Blancos).
During this period, the economy came to depend
increasingly
on cattle, on the proliferation of saladeros
(meat-salting
establishments), and on the export of salted beef and
leather.
But political instability was the most significant feature
of
this period. Caudillos and their followers were mobilized
because
of disputes arising from deficient land demarcation
between
absentee landowners and squatters and between rightful
owners and
Artigas's followers who were granted land seized by
Artigas.
Rivera remained in the countryside for most of his
presidency,
during which Lavalleja organized three unsuccessful
rebellions.
Rivera was followed as president by Oribe, one of the
ThirtyThree Heroes, but they began to quarrel after Oribe
permitted
Lavalleja and his followers to return from Brazil. In 1836
Rivera
initiated a revolutionary movement against President
Oribe, but
Oribe, aided by Argentine troops, defeated Rivera's forces
at the
Battle of Carpintería on September 19, 1836. In June 1838,
however, the Colorados, led by Rivera, defeated Oribe's
Blanco
forces; Oribe then went into exile in Buenos Aires.
Internationally, the new territory was at the mercy of
the
influence of its neighbors. This resulted from its lack of
clearly defined borders, as well as from Rivera's ties
with
Brazil and Oribe's with Argentina.
Rivera again became the elected president in March
1838. In
1839 President Rivera, with the support of the French and
of
Argentine émigrés, issued a declaration of war against
Argentina's dictator, Juan Manuel de Rosas, and drove
Rosas's
forces from Uruguay. The French, however, reached an
agreement
with Rosas and withdrew their troops from the Río de la
Plata
region in 1840, leaving Montevideo vulnerable to the
forces of
Oribe and his Argentina. For three years, the locus of the
struggle was on Argentine territory. Oribe and the Blancos
allied
themselves with Argentina's federalists, while Rivera and
the
Colorados sided with Argentina's rival unitary forces, who
favored the centralization of the Argentine state. In 1842
Oribe
defeated Rivera and later, on February 16, 1843, laid
siege to
Montevideo, then governed by the Colorados.
Data as of December 1990
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