Caudillos in Spanish America 1800-1850
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Product details:
- Publisher Clarendon Press
- Date of Publication 2 April 1992
- ISBN 9780198211358
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages486 pages
- Size 224x144x33 mm
- Weight 796 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 3 maps 0
Categories
Long description:
The caudillo of Spanish America was both regional chieftain and, in the turbulent years of the early nineteenth century, national leader. His power base rested on ownership of land and control of armed bands. He was the rival of constitutional rulers and the precursor of modern dictators. His is a dominant figure in Latin American history. John Lynch explores the changing perception of the caudillo - bandit chief, guerrilla leader, republican hero - and examines his multi-faceted role as regional strongman, war leader, landowner, distributor of patronage, and the `necessary gendarme' who maintained social order.
Professor Lynch traces the origins and development of the caudillo tradition, and sets it in its contemporary context. His scholarly analysis of this central theme in the history of Spanish America is underpinned by detailed case-studies of four major caudillos: Juan Manuel de Rosas (Argentina), José Antonio Páez (Venezuela), Antonio López de Santa Anna (Mexico), and Rafael Carrera (Guatemala). This is an important contribution to our understanding of political and social structures during the formative period of the nation-state in Spanish America.
'important and original book ... Lynch is better equipped than many of today's narrowly focused historians to tackle this grand and complex theme ... Throughout this absorbing book, Lynch mixes grand themes and illuminating details. As a "top-down" study of the caudillos of early republican Spanish America, it is original, wide-ranging, and suggestive, a major contribution to Latin American historiography which is all the more valuable in that it illuminates a particularly murky period of the continent's history.'
Times Literary Supplement