Uruguay THE STRUGGLE FOR SURVIVAL, 1852-75
Montevideo's Old City, ca. 1900
Courtesy Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress
Intervention by Neighboring Countries
After Rosas went into exile in Britain in 1852,
internal
strife in Argentina continued until 1861, when the country
was
finally unified. Uruguay was affected because each
Uruguayan
faction expressed solidarity with various contenders in
Argentina
or was, in turn, supported by them.
Brazil's intervention in Uruguay was intensified both
because
of Argentina's temporary weakness and because of Brazil's
desire
to expand its frontiers to the Río de la Plata. Brazil
intervened
militarily in Uruguay as often as it deemed necessary, in
accordance with the 1851 treaties. In 1865 the Triple
Alliance--
formed by the emperor of Brazil, the president of
Argentina, and
General Venancio Flores (1854-55, 1865-66), the Uruguayan
head of
government whom they both had helped to gain
power--declared war
on Paraguay. Francisco Solano López, Paraguay's
megalomaniac
dictator, had been verbally rattling his saber against
Argentina
and Brazil. The conflict lasted five years (1865-70) and
ended
with the invasion of Paraguay and its defeat by the armies
of the
three countries. Montevideo, which was used as a supply
station
by the Brazilian navy, experienced a period of prosperity
and
relative calm during the war.
After the war with Paraguay, the balance of power was
restored between Argentina and Brazil, the guarantors of
Uruguayan independence. Thus, Uruguay was able to
internalize its
political struggles, an indispensable condition for
consolidation
of its independence.
Data as of December 1990
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