The Peruvian–Bolivian War was a warlike confrontation between Peru and Bolivia in the years 1841 and 1842.
Peruvian–Bolivian War of 1841–1842 | |||||||||
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Battle of Ingavi | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Peru | Bolivia | ||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Agustín Gamarra X Manuel de Mendiburu Juan Buendía José María Lavayén Justo Arias y Aragüez José Rosa Ara Miguel de San Román |
José Ballivián Eusebio Guilarte Jorge Córdova Narciso Campero Manuel Magariños Bernardo Rojas José María García José Velasco | ||||||||
Strength | |||||||||
7,000–9,000 men | 6,800–7,700 men |
In 1841, Agustín Gamarra, President of Peru, tried to annex Bolivia[4] (the former colonial Charcas Audience), which cost the Peruvian president his life on November 18, 1841 at the Battle of Ingavi. The Bolivian Army, under the command of General José Ballivián, occupied the Peruvian provinces of Moquegua, Puno, Tarapacá, Tacna and Arica.
The eviction of Bolivian troops in southern Peru would be achieved by the increased availability of material and human resources in Peru.[5] At the end of the war, the Treaty of Puno was signed on June 7, 1842.
Occupation of La Paz
editPeruvian troops led by President Gamarra began the march to Bolivia on October 1, 1841, crossing the border the next day. After advancing without encountering resistance, on October 15 they entered La Paz without fighting. Ballivián's manifesto to oppose the invaders, however, was soon applied by the population.
On October 21, in the town of Mecapaca, a battle occurred between the Peruvian and Bolivian forces, as that town was occupied by a Peruvian column under the command of Colonel San Román, who was later attacked by the Bolivian 5th Battalion and a detachment of cuirassiers. The Peruvians, taken by surprise, rallied and forced their enemies to retreat in disorder. Soon, however, a crowd from La Paz stormed the city's hospital, where the wounded soldiers and officers had been taken, in order to kill them.
Battle of Ingavi
editThe battle of Ingavi took place on November 18, 1841 in the town of Viacha within Ingavi Province. There, Bolivian troops under the command of José Ballivián clashed with Peruvian troops under Agustín Gamarra, defeating the Peruvian troops and killing General Gamarra in the process.
The defeat of the Peruvian Army gave Ballivián and the Bolivian Army the opportunity to counterattack and invade Peruvian territory, approaching Cuzco and threatening to seek the annexation of the port of Arica, which at the time was claimed by Bolivia since its creation during the Bolivarian era, in order to be able to improve its economy significantly.[6] Bolivian troops occupied the provinces of Tacna, Arica and Tarapacá within the Moquegua Department.
Occupation of Southern Peru
editAt the end of 1841, after the battle of Ingavi, troops of the Bolivian Second Division under General José Ballivián occupied Peru from Moquegua to Tarapacá.
On December 9, 1841, a regiment under the command of Colonel Rodríguez Magariños occupied Tacna, another under the command of Colonel Bernardo Rojas occupied Arica, and another under the command of Colonel José María García occupied Tarapacá, while José Ballivián's forces occupies Moquegua and Puno.
Peruvian counter-attack
editPeruvian counter-attack | |||||||
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Part of the Peruvian–Bolivian War | |||||||
Siege of Tarapacá by Peruvian Army, few of Peruvian Navy and Tarapaqueños Anti-Bolivians | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Peru | Bolivia | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Juan Buendía Juan Bautista Pablo Pimentel Mariano Macedo Manuel Layaven Manuel de Mendiburu |
José Ballivian Juan Landivar José María García † Manuel Magariños † Jorge Córdoba † Juan Zatizábal † Juan Montero † | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
Peruvian Army Peruvian Navy | Bolivian Army | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
600 men | 1,150+ men | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
+165 killed and wounded | 2,000 / |
Colonel Manuel de Mendiburu, who was the military commander of the South, returned from Lima to the south to organize the Peruvian resistance to the Bolivian occupation.
At the same time, Juan Bautista Ramos, a Major in the Peruvian Army from Arica, organized a guerrilla war with local volunteers where they attacked and defeated the Bolivian forces of Bernardo Rojas in Arica on December 25, 1841. In Sama, Colonel José María Lavayén organized local forces that managed to defeat the Bolivian forces of Colonel Rodríguez Magariños. In Locumba, Colonel Manuel de Mendiburu also organized forces, including Justo Arias y Aragüez in 1842.
José Rosa Ara also organized a column in Locumba, Tacna, composed of Peruvian soldiers and peasants and in the Battle of the Altos de Chipe they defeated a Bolivian regiment.
The Bolivian Army did not have enough troops to maintain the occupation. In the Recapture of Tarapacá, Peruvian montoneros formed by Major Juan Buendía, coming from Iquique, defeated on January 7, 1842, the detachment led by Colonel José María García, who was killed in the confrontation. Thus, the Bolivian troops vacated Tacna, Arica and Tarapacá in February 1842, retreating towards Moquegua and Puno.
Two more Bolivian defeats at Battle of Motoni (March 20) and Battle of Orurillo (April 3) in Puno subsequently forced the withdrawal of the last Bolivian forces that occupied Peruvian territory, exposing Bolivia to an other invasion.
Treaty of Puno
editPreliminary Treaty of Peace and Friendship between Peru and Bolivia[7] | |
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Type | Peace treaty |
Signed | 7 June 1842 |
Location | Puno, Peru |
Signatories | |
Languages | Spanish |
Full text | |
es:Tratado de Puno at Wikisource |
The two nations signed the Treaty of Puno on June 7, 1842, officially ending the war. Both countries agreed to remain as separate sovereign states and the retreat of the last Bolivian troops on Peruvian territory was accomplished eight days later.[8]
The Bolivian army that had invaded southern Peru was defeated by the Peruvian army and forced to withdraw. Bolivia also promised to deliver Gamarra remains to Peru.[9]
Bolivia unconditionally renounced all claims in southern Peruvian territory, but nevertheless, the treaty did not manage to solve the border problem between the two states.
The conflict ended with a return to the situation before the war. Despite this, Peruvian historiography argues that their victories in all the battles on Peruvian soil, overshadow the one defeat at Ingavi, leaving Peru in a more favorable outcome after the end of the war.[10]
Although in the document Bolivia and Peru agreed not to touch on the issue of unification as a single state, in 1880 Presidents Nicolás de Piérola and Narciso Campero began a project for the national union of the two countries known as the United States of Peru–Bolivia, which ended up never happening. With the re-emergence of nationalism and anti-Chilean sentiment as a consequence of the War of the Pacific, the prospect of unification again began to become more common in political discourse between both states.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Porras Barrenechea, Raúl (1926). Historia de los Límites del Perú. Lima, Peru: Librería Francesa y Casa Editorial E. Rosay.
- ^ "La guerra entre Perú y Bolivia de 1841 y 1842". Chilean Society of History and Geography. 2018-10-03.
- ^ The history of the latest time, Ernst Wernicke vol. 1, Berlín, 4.a edición aumentada y mejorada.1872, p. 280.; Gebrüder Paetel
- ^ Biografías de Bolivianos Célebres Archived September 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Historia de límites del Perú; Editorial Francesa Científica
- ^ Herbert Morote (2007). BOLÍVAR, LIBERTADOR Y ENEMIGO Nº 1 DEL PERÚ (PDF). Jaime Campodónico / Editor SRL.
- ^ Novak, Fabián; Namihas, Sandra (2013). Las Relaciones entre el Perú y Bolivia (1826-2013). Konrad Adenauer Foundation. p. 46. ISBN 978-9972-671-18-0.
- ^ Preliminary Treaty of Peace and Friendship between Peru and Bolivia (PDF). Congress of Peru. 1842.
- ^ Basadre Grohmann, Jorge. Historia de la República del Perú (1822-1933) (in Spanish). Producciones Cantabria. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
- ^ Basadre Grohmann, Jorge Alfredo (1937). Historia de la República del Perú. National Library of Peru: Producciones Cantabria. ISBN 978-612-306-353-5.