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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Argentinian History, Biographies > Juan Facundo Quiroga
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Juan Facundo Quiroga, Argentinian History, Biographies

Related Category: Argentinian History, Biographies

Juan Facundo Quiroga[hwAn fAkOOthO kErO´gA] Pronunciation Key, 1790–1835, Argentine caudillo. One of the most brutal of the early gaucho chieftains, he was called el tigre de los llanos (the tiger of the plains). After a turbulent youth, Quiroga participated briefly in the 1810 revolution against Spain and then rose rapidly to become, by 1822, virtual overlord of the Andean provinces of Argentina. Anxious to preserve control over his fiefdoms, he became a supporter of federalism. With other provincial caudillos he rejected the unitarian constitution of 1826, thus contributing to the downfall of President Bernardino Rivadavia and to the installation (1827) of Manuel Dorrego, a federalist, as governor of Buenos Aires. When Juan Lavalle rose against Dorrego and had him executed, Quiroga and Juan Manuel de Rosas joined Estanislao LOpez, caudillo of Santa Fe, in putting down the insurrection and in destroying temporarily but with ruthless thoroughness the unitarian cause. In 1834, Quiroga came to Buenos Aires, which was then ruled by Rosas. Quiroga was assassinated while returning from a mission to the northern provinces, and it was believed that Rosas, who was angered by the rival caudillo, had instigated the killing. A famous study of Quiroga and his era is Domingo F. Sarmiento's Facundo (tr. Life in the Argentine Republic in the Days of the Tyrants, 6th ed. 1961).



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

caudillo
Manuel Dorrego
gaucho
Juan Lavalle
Bernardino Rivadavia
Juan Manuel de Rosas
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento

Related Categories:

People > History
History > Latin America and the Caribbean
History > Biographies


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