Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Independence in Latin America Preview • Main Idea / Reading Focus • Early Struggles in Latin America • Independence in Mexico • Map: Independence in Latin America • Revolutionary Leaders in South America • Faces of History: Two Revolutionary Leaders • Quick Facts: Causes and Effects of Revolution in Latin America Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Independence in Latin America Main Idea Revolutionary ideas took hold in Latin America as colonies fought for independence from Europe. Reading Focus • How did early struggles in Latin America affect Haiti and other colonies? • What events led to independence in Mexico? • Who were the key revolutionary leaders in South America, and what did they achieve? Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Early Struggles in Latin America The Enlightenment and the American and French revolutions inspired some in Latin America to seek greater freedom. Haiti Becomes Independent • Saint Domingue, western half of Caribbean island Hispaniola, first Latin American territory to break ties with Europe • Sugar exports made Saint Domingue one of France’s richest possessions • Prosperity built on slave labor • French Revolution had dramatic effect on island Toussaint L’Ouverture • Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen gave vote to all free men, including mulattoes • French settlers on Saint Domingue resisted new law • Toussaint L’Ouverture led bloody revolt against settlers • Toussaint’s military, political actions made him hero in Hispaniola Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Napoleon Concerned French emperor Napoleon worried about revolt in Hispaniola • Sent French general to take control of colony away from Toussaint – Island forces struggled for months – 1802, Toussaint agreed to armistice – French broke agreement, sent him to prison; Toussaint died there, 1803 • Fight for independence continued – 1804, revolutionaries declared independence – Named new nation Haiti Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Colonies of Spain and Portugal Another Kind of Independence • 1800s, Spain controlled most of Latin America; Portugal governed Brazil • In the 1700s Spanish kings had made improvements in colonies, building roads, regulating trade; colonies grew in wealth and prosperity Education and New Ideas • Wealth gave some in Latin America access to education, new ideas • Educated colonists read works of Enlightenment philosophers, learned about revolutions in France, America Tensions Growing • Tensions grew in Latin America between creoles, people of European descent born in colonies, and peninsulares, colonists born in Spain • Similar distinction between Brazilian-born, Portuguese-born colonists Section 3 Reforms, Revolutions, and War Growing Tensions Creoles vs. Peninsulares • Creoles, peninsulares made up highest social class • People of mixed race, Africans, Indians lower on social scale • Creoles excluded from highest levels of government, church • As prosperity grew, creoles resented peninsulares, faraway Spanish rulers Napoleon • 1807, French emperor Napoleon invaded Spain, Portugal • Spanish king imprisoned, Portuguese king fled to Brazil • Invasion weakened Spanish, Portuguese power in Latin America • Creole revolutionaries decided time right for fight for independence Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Sequence How did Haiti win independence from France? Answer(s): A rebellion of slaves and mulattoes became a revolution against France after Napoleon tried to take power from the revolutionary leader Toussaint L'Ouverture. Section 3 Reforms, Revolutions, and War Independence in Mexico Napoleon’s conquest of Spain was the spark for independence in the colony of New Spain, as Mexico was known at the time. Mexico was a Spanish colony with a mixture of creoles, peninsulares, Indians, and people of mixed race. Father Hidalgo • 1810, creole priest, Father Miguel Hidalgo, made first public call for Mexican independence • Had history of challenging authority, eventually met creoles who wanted to take power from peninsulares, helped plan rebellion Call to Revolt • September 16, 1810, Hidalgo delivered famous speech calling for fight against Spanish peninsulares, though not against Spain • Spanish authorities realized Hidalgo behind growing revolution; captured, executed him Hidalgo would later become known as the Father of Mexican Independence. Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Morelos Continues the Revolution • After death of Hidalgo, another creole priest, Jose Maria Morelos, became leader of revolutionary movement • Organized Mexican congress, representatives from many places • Wanted all people born in Mexico, whether Indian, mixed or creole, to be called Americans Independent Republic • Morelos wanted Mexico to be an independent republic with guaranteed freedoms • Strong military leader, took control of parts of Mexico for independence movement • Captured, found guilty of treason, executed by Spanish authorities Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 A Creole King for Mexico Iturbide to Lead Fight • Not all creoles wanted independence from Spain; some were royalists • 1820, Agustin de Iturbide asked to lead final battle against revolutionaries • Spanish authorities believed he could end Mexican independence movement Switching Sides • Iturbide believed liberal revolution underway in Spain might take away some of his power; decided to switch sides, fight for Mexican revolutionaries • Made three-part proposal to leader of revolution Iturbide’s Proposal • Mexico would gain independence but be ruled by monarch • Creoles and peninsulares would have equal rights • Roman Catholic Church would be official church of Mexico Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Different Proposal • Iturbide’s independence proposal different from ideas of Hidalgo, Morelos • After ten years of fighting, the compromise brought together many different groups; creoles and peninsulares, revolutionaries and royalists Independence • Unified under plan, royalists and rebel troops joined Iturbide to win independence • In 1821, Mexico declared independence from Spain • That same year Mexico named Iturbide as its emperor and he became Emperor Agustin I of Mexico Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Compare and Contrast How were the goals of Hidalgo, Morelos, and Iturbide different, and how were they similar? Answer(s): Hidalgo wanted the peasants to revolt against the peninsulares, not against Spain; Morelos wanted independence from Spain and an "American" identity to unify all people born in Mexico; Iturbide wanted to create an independent monarchy, give creoles and peninsulares equal rights, make the Roman Catholic Church the official church of Mexico Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Revolutionary Leaders in South America Inspiration Simon Bolivar • Revolutions in Haiti, Mexico, America, France inspired leaders in South America • Simon Bolivar, most influential leader in South American independence movement • Independence movements began to form, leaders emerged • Known as “the Liberator” Venezuelan Roots Independence • Bolivar born into wealthy creole family, often traveled to Europe • 1811, Venezuela declared independence from Spain • Admired Napoleon’s leadership; in Rome, pledged to liberate South America • Bolivar led military campaigns against Spanish for 10 years, defeated Spanish 1821 Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Bolivar’s Dream Bolivar had dream for newly independent South America • Wanted to form one large, united country called Federation of the Andes • Dream never became reality – Bolivar set up state of Gran Colombia, included what are now Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, Ecuador – Other leaders set up separate countries in Peru, Bolivia, other places • Bolivar complained “America is ungovernable” Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Section 3 Reforms, Revolutions, and War José de San Martin • José de San Martin fought for independence from Spain in south • San Martin had fought against Napoleon in Spain • Born in Argentina, returned home when he learned country rising up against Spanish rule; eventually led independence movement in Argentina and most of southern South America Chile Gran Colombia • 1816, San Martin declared independence for Argentina, moved on to Chile • After Chile, San Martin moved to Gran Colombia, met Simon Bolivar • Led troops over 15,000 foot summit in Andes • Surprised Spanish troops, won independence for Chile • Historians do not know what they discussed when they met • San Martin resigned position after meeting, returned to Europe • Left Bolivar in power Section 3 Reforms, Revolutions, and War Pedro I The story of independence was a bit different in the Portuguese colony of Brazil. John VI in Brazil Son Pedro in Charge • 1807, Portuguese king John VI, family, fled to Brazil when Napoleon invaded Portugal • Status of colony raised having Portuguese monarch there • John VI named Rio de Janeiro capital of Portuguese empire • Allowed Brazil to trade directly with world, rather than through Portugal • John VI returned to Portugal after revolution, 1820 • Left son Pedro to rule Brazil • Brazilian-born colonists began to protest colonial status • Transition happened smoothly, little violence • 1822, Prince Pedro declared Brazil independent, was crowned Emperor Pedro I Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 3 Contrast In what ways was the independence movement in Brazil different from independence movements elsewhere in South America? Answer(s): Brazil won independence more smoothly and without violence.