Colombia's Military and Brazil's Monarchy: Undermining the Republican Foundations of South American IndependenceBloomsbury Academic, 1996 M08 23 - 256 páginas This important new study relates the origin of the decline of republican politics in South America to the existence of monarchic rule in Brazil. Millington suggests that if the European-oriented monarchy in Brazil had been overthrown at the time of independence—something that the South American republics, led by Colombian power, had within their power to accomplish—the independence movements in Spanish South America would have been able to collaborate with emergent republican forces in Brazil in the construction of a continental, American-style system. By failing to challenge the monarchy in Brazil, the South American republics lost an important opportunity to disavow European-oriented principles of elitism in the New World. |
Contenido
Independence Movements | 5 |
SpanishAmerican Liberators and Monarchism | 12 |
Europes Monarchic Orientation | 26 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 10 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Colombia's Military and Brazil's Monarchy: Undermining the Republican ... Thomas Millington Vista de fragmentos - 1996 |
Colombia's Military and Brazil's Monarchy: Undermining the Republican ... Thomas Millington Sin vista previa disponible - 1996 |
Términos y frases comunes
Alvear and Díaz-Vélez American Angostura Archivo de Sucre Arenales Arequipa Arequipa decree Argentina Argentine provinces assembly audiencia Ayacucho Bogotá Bolí Bolívar's power Bolivarian Bolivian constitution Braganza Brazilian monarchy Britain British Buenos Aires Canning's Caracas Cartas caudillos centralists Chile Chuquisaca Colombian army colonies command congress Creación de Bolivia Cúcuta delegates diplomatic Documentos Referentes Dorrego Eastern Bank Ecuador empire envoy Europe European federation Ferdinand forces Funes Gamarra García Granada Guayaquil Heras Historia Holy Alliance ibid independence José La Paz letter liberal Lima Madrid mediation Memorias military mission monarchy in Brazil negotiations O'Leary Olañeta Páez Pedro Peru and Bolivia Peru's Plata political porteño Portugal Portuguese Potosí Press Quito republican republics revolution Riva Aguero Rivadavia role San Martín Santa Cruz Santander Simón Bolívar South America Spain Spanish Spanish-American Sucre and Bolívar Sucre to Bolívar Sucre's Sucre's decree Tarija tion treaty troops Upper Peru Upper Peruvian Venezuela Vicente Lecuna viceroyalty wanted
Referencias a este libro
States, Nations, and the Great Powers: The Sources of Regional War and Peace Benjamin Miller Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |