Restorative Liberal Revolution Explained

Conflict:Restorative Liberal Revolution
Place:Venezuela
Partof:the Venezuelan civil wars and Venezuelan coups d'état
Date:13 February – 23 October 1899
Result:
  • Restorative victory
  • Ignacio Andrade overthrown
  • Beginning of the Andean hegemony
  • End of the hegemony of Yellow Liberalism, in place since 1870
Combatants Header:Belligerents
Combatant1:Restorative Rebels
Combatant2:Government of Ignacio Andrade
Commander1:Cipriano Castro
Juan Vicente Gómez
Luciano Mendoza
Leopoldo Baptista
Samuel Acosta
Luis Lima Loreto
Commander2:Ignacio Andrade
Diego Bautista Ferrer

The Restorative Liberal Revolution, also known as the Invasion of the 60 due to the number of men with whom the movement began,[1] was an expedition of Venezuelans exiled in Colombia under the command of Cipriano Castro that began on 23 May 1899, with the purpose of overthrowing the government of Venezuelan President Ignacio Andrade.

Origin

The political crisis experienced by the regime of Ignacio Andrade, and Yellow Liberalism in general, after the death of Joaquín Crespo in the, was an opportunity for Cipriano Castro to launch the last phase of the revolutionary movement that he had been organizing in his exile in Colombia, since the defeat of the Legalist Revolution in 1893.

Initially, he proposed an alliance with, also in exile, but given the failure of the talks and the fragility of the Andrade government, he decided to rely only on his 60 men and the Castro Restorative Liberal party that awaited him in Táchira. So he began his revolution crossing the border of the Táchira River on 23 May 1899.

Development

The forces of the rebels grew as they entered the Venezuelan Andean center to overthrow the unpopular Andrade government. On 12 September, with already 2,000 troops under his command, Castro defeated 4,000 government soldiers commanded by the Minister of War, General Diego Bautista Ferrer, in the, who lost 2,000 men trying to assault the enemy positions.[2]
Two days later Andrade assumed personal command of the government army and Castro launched a coordinated offensive against Caracas. After this, several warlords and their militias deserted to the rebel side. When Castro was preparing to confront in La Victoria, he was surprised that General Ferrer decided to disobey the government's orders and not confront him. With 10,000 soldiers, Castro entered the capital on 23 October[3] with generals and caudillos Luciano Mendoza, Samuel Acosta and Luis Lima Loreto by his side.[4] Andrade is overthrown in a coup and forced into exile on Curaçao.

Timeline of the revolution

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2016-08-26 . Revolución Liberal Restauradora - #Tochadasnetve . 2022-07-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160826133433/http://tochadas.net.ve/revolucion-liberal-restauradora.html . 2016-08-26 .
  2. Dixon, 2015: 189; Esteves, 2006: 119
  3. Web site: VenezuelaTuya .
  4. Magallanes, Manuel Vicente (1977). Los partidos políticos en la evolución histórica Venezolana. Monte Ávila, pp. 198.