Juan Antonio Lavalleja
Juan Antonio Lavalleja | |
---|---|
President of Uruguay | |
In office 1853–1853 | |
Preceded by | Venancio Flores |
Succeeded by | Fructuoso Rivera |
This article does not cite any sources. (November 2010) |
Juan Antonio Lavalleja (June 24, 1784 – October 22, 1853) was a Uruguayan revolutionary and political figure. He was born in Minas, nowadays being located in the Lavalleja Department, which was named after him.
Pre-Independence role[]
He led the group called "Thirty-Three Orientals" during Uruguay's Declaration of Independence from Brazil in 1825. His leadership of this group has taken on somewhat mythic proportions in popular Uruguayan historiography.
Post-Independence career[]
After Uruguay's independence in 1825, Lavalleja sought the presidency as a rival to Fructuoso Rivera in 1830, who won. In protest to his loss, Lavalleja staged revolts. He was part of a triumvirate chosen in 1852 to govern Uruguay, but died shortly after his accession to power.
Historical legacy[]
Lavalleja is remembered as a rebel who led the fight against Brazil. But as one of the major figures in early, post-independence Uruguayan history he is identified as a skilled but reactionary warrior who contributed to the culture of intermittent civil war which dogged Uruguay for much of the 19th century.
Family[]
Lavalleja married in 1817; she was sister of José Benito Monterroso, cleric and secretary of José Gervasio Artigas.
Bibliography[]
- , La leyenda del arroyo Monzón, Lavalleja y Rivera. Montevideo: 1935.
See also[]
- Politics of Uruguay
- Treaty of Independence of Cisplatine in a new country, the Uruguay - 1828
- Republic
- History of all constitutions of Brazil
External links[]
- Biografía de Lavalleja - Biography
- Amérique Latine, Histoire & Mémoire - 15 | 2008 : Etat et Nation I (19e siècle) - Article about his
- Genealogy and Ancestry of Lavalleja
- Una flor blanca en el cardal - PerSe - A White Flower in a catholic religious. (The Book do mention to he)
- Political Office-Holders in Uruguay: Education and Culture Ministers of Uruguay, Foreign Ministers of Uruguay, Interior Ministers of Uruguay
- 1784 births
- 1853 deaths
- People from Minas, Uruguay
- People of the Cisplatine War
- Uruguayan cattlemen
- Foreign ministers of Uruguay
- Uruguayan people of Basque descent
- Thirty-Three Orientals
- Argentine generals
- Burials at Montevideo Metropolitan Cathedral
- 19th-century Uruguayan people
- Uruguayan National Army generals
- South American military personnel stubs
- Uruguayan people stubs
- Uruguayan politician stubs