Ecuador
The Struggle for Independence
The struggle for
independence in the Quito Audiencia was part of a
movement throughout Spanish America led by criollos (persons
of pure Spanish descent born in the New World). The criollos
resentment of the privileges enjoyed by the peninsulares
was the fuel of revolution against colonial rule. The spark
was Napoleon's invasion of Spain, after which he deposed
King Ferdinand VII and, in July 1808, placed his brother
Joseph Bonaparte on the Spanish throne.
Shortly afterward,
Spanish citizens, unhappy at the usurpation of the throne by
the French, began organizing local juntas loyal to
Ferdinand. A group of Quito's leading citizens followed
suit, and on August 10, 1809, they seized power from the
local representatives of Joseph Bonaparte in the name of
Ferdinand. Thus, this early revolt against colonial rule
(one of the first in Spanish America) was, paradoxically, an
expression of loyalty to the Spanish king.
It quickly became
apparent that Quito's criollo rebels lacked the anticipated
popular support for their cause. As loyalist troops
approached Quito, therefore, they peacefully turned power
back to the crown authorities. Despite assurances against
reprisals, the returning Spanish authorities (Bonaparte's
men) proved to be merciless with the rebels and, in the
process of ferreting out participants in the Quito revolt,
jailed and abused many innocent citizens. They actions, in
turn, bred popular resentment among Quiteños, who, after
several days of street fighting in August 1810, won an
agreement to be governed by a junta to be dominated by
criollos, although with the president of the Audiencia of
Quito acting as its figurehead leader.
In spite of widespread
opposition within the rest of the Quito Audiencia,
the junta called for a congress in December 1811 in which it
declared the entire area of the audiencia to be
independent. Two months later, the junta approved a
constitution for the state of Quito that provided for
democratic governing institutions but also granted
recognition to the authority of Ferdinand should he return
to the Spanish throne. Shortly thereafter, the junta elected
to launch a military offensive against the Spanish, but the
poorly trained and badly equipped troops were no match for
those of the viceroy of Peru, which finally crushed the
Quiteño rebellion in December 1812.
The second chapter in
Ecuador's struggle for emancipation from Spanish colonial
rule began in Guayaquil, where independence was proclaimed
in October 1820 by a local patriotic junta under the
leadership of the poet José Joaquín Olmedo. By this time,
the forces of independence had grown continental in scope
and were organized into two principal armies, one under the
Venezuelan Simón Bolívar Palacios in the north and the
other under the Argentine José de San Martín in the south.
Unlike the hapless Quito junta, the Guayaquil patriots were
able to appeal to foreign allies, Argentina and Venezuela,
each of whom soon responded by sending sizable contingents
to Ecuador. Antonio José de Sucre Alcalá, the brilliant
young lieutenant of Bolívar who arrived in Guayaquil in May
1821, was to become the key figure in the ensuing military
struggle against the royalist forces.
After a number of initial
successes, Sucre's army was defeated at Ambato in the
central Sierra and he appealed for assistance from San Martín,
whose army was by now in Peru. With the arrival from the
south of 1,400 fresh soldiers under the command of Andrés
de Santa Cruz Calahumana, the fortunes of the patriotic army
were again reversed. A string of victories culminated in the
decisive Battle of Pichincha, on the slopes of the volcano
of that name on the western outskirts of Quito, on May 24,
1822. A few hours after the victory by the patriots, the
last president of the Audiencia of Quito signed a formal
capitulation of his forces before Marshal Sucre. Ecuador was
at last free of Spanish rule.
Two months later Bolívar,
the liberator of northern South America, entered Quito to a
hero's welcome. Later that July, he met San Martín in
Guayaquil and convinced the Argentine general, who wanted
the port to return to Peruvian jurisdiction, and the local
criollo elite in both major cities of the advantage of
having the former Quito Audiencia join with the
liberated lands to the north. As a result, Ecuador became
the District of the South within the Confederation of Gran
Colombia, which also included present-day Venezuela and
Colombia and had Bogotá as its capital. This status was
maintained for eight tumultuous years.
They were years in which
warfare dominated the affairs of Ecuador. First, the country
found itself on the front lines of Bolívar's war to
liberate Peru from Spanish rule between 1822 and 1825;
afterward, in 1828 and 1829, Ecuador was in the middle of an
armed struggle between Peru and Gran Colombia over the
location of their common border. After a campaign that
included the near destruction of Guayaquil, the forces of
Gran Colombia, under the leadership of Sucre and Venezuelan
General Juan José Flores, proved victorious. The Treaty of
1829 fixed the border on the line that had divided the Quito
audiencia and the Viceroyalty of Peru before
independence.
The population of Ecuador
was divided during these years among three segments: those
favoring the status quo, those supporting union with Peru,
and those advocating autonomous independence for the former audiencia.
The latter group was to prevail following Venezuela's
withdrawal from the confederation during an 1830
constitutional congress that had been called in Bogotá in a
futile effort to combat growing separatist tendencies
throughout Gran Colombia. In May of that year, a group of
Quito notables met to dissolve the union with Gran Colombia,
and in August, a constituent assembly drew up a constitution
for the State of Ecuador, so named for its geographic
proximity to the equator, and placed General Flores in
charge of political and military affairs. He remained the
dominant political figure during Ecuador's first fifteen
years of independence.
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