José María Paz
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General Brigadier José María Paz y Haedo (born September 9, 1791 in Córdoba – died October 22, 1854 in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine military figure, notable in the independence of Argentina.
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[edit] Childhood
Born to criollos José Paz and Tiburcia Haedo, Paz y Haedo studied philosophy and theology at the Seminario de Loreto intern school, then at the Universidad de Córdoba, receiving his bachelor of arts degree with orientation in mathematics, Latin and law. After the Revolución de Mayo he joined the army that would fight the Spanish forces and allow the independence of Argentina.
[edit] Battles for independence
José Paz was sent to Alto Peru in 1811, and participated in the 1812 victories of General Manuel Belgrano. As assistant to Baron von Holmberg (Belgrano's secretary), he was awarded with the "Defenders of the Nation" insignia, and promoted to Captain.
Paz then participated in the defeats at the battles of Vilcapugio, Ayohuma, and in Venta y Media in which his arm was wounded and crippled; hence he became known as the "One-arm Paz" (El Manco Paz). In 1814, Supreme Director Juan Martín de Pueyrredón put him in front of the "Dragons of the Nation" (Dragones de la Nación) battalions, and named him Coronel.
[edit] Civil wars
In 1817, Belgrano was sent to fight the civil war that opposed Buenos Aires centralism. Paz was sent to fight Estanislao López, chief of the Federal forces, and beat him at La Herradura, Córdoba.
[edit] Arequito revolt
On January 8, 1820, General Juan Bautista Bustos, followed by Alejandro Heredia and Paz himself, with the hope of staying away of the internal conflicts, organised a revolt within the forces that were near Arequito, returning to Buenos Aires in order to fight the Spanish forces once again.
They returned to Córdoba Province where Bustos attempted to take control of the province, against the will of Paz and others who intended to reach the northern border that was threatened by the Spanish and other Royalists. Paz, already a General, was separated from the army and sent to Santiago del Estero, where he spent two years away from politics. In 1823, he went to Catamarca Province to give instruction to some 200 soldiers, whom he had already directed in battles in Salta Province, calling them the "Battalion of Hunters" (Batallón de Cazadores), and he would again direct during the war against Brazil.
[edit] War against Brazil
The so-called Argentina-Brazil War (known in Brazil as the Guerra da Cisplatina) pitted the two countries against each other for the territories at that time called Provincia Oriental (nowadays Uruguay) and the Misiones Orientales (in Argentine Mesopotamia) occupied by the Brazilians since their victory of the Battle of Tacuarembó over José Gervasio Artigas in 1820. The war between Argentina and Brazil started in 1825 and concluded with the Argentine victory three years later.
In the Battle of Ituzaingó, and in numerical inferiority, Paz gained terrain over the Brazilian forces, and later obtained their surrender. By order of president Bernardino Rivadavia he was named Commander General, and when Carlos María de Alvear became Supreme Director of the united provinces, Paz was named Commander General, the first one from military school in Argentina.
After the end of the war with Brazil, Paz returned to Buenos Aires, where General Juan Lavalle ordered him to prepare the army to combat the many caudillos that are emerging in the provinces. Thus, Paz supported the Unitarians, fighting the Federales in the civil war.
[edit] Caudillos
In his writings, especially in Memorias, Paz tells about his astonishment to see farm owners fighting and declaring war against the central government, and that the population supported them. Unlike in Buenos Aires Province, influenced by ideals from the French Revolution, in the inner provinces there persisted a colonial structure, though based on Caudillos such as Güemes, Bustos, Quiroga, López, Aldao or Ibarra, who could confront and defeat a constituted army.
General Paz decided to start his campaign against the Caudillos in Córdoba Province where, with over 1,000 men, he defeated Bustos in the Battle of San Roque on April 22, 1829, and took the seat of provincial governor. Bustos went to Facundo Quiroga for help, but Quiroga was also defeated at the Battle of La Tablada on June 23; the military strategy of Paz neutralised the Cudillos' more improvised ways.
Quiroga returned a year later, only to face defeat a second time at the Battle of Oncativo (called by the Federals as Battle of Laguna Larga). By August 1830, nine of the fourteen existing provinces were under the control of Paz and the Unitary government that had then paradoxically declared as main enemy the government of Buenos Aires, now declared Federal.
[edit] Prisoner of López
The Pacto Federal was signed in 1831 between the armies of Buenos Aires Province and Santa Fe, who joined to invade Córdoba. Paz, in a preemptive attempt against Estanislao López, fell prisoner of the Federal forces of Córdoba and Santa Fe while on an inspection mission.
General Paz was delivered to López in the city of Santa Fe, where he spent four years in prison, before being handed over to Juan Manuel de Rosas to spend yet another three years in Luján (Buenos Aires). Rosas had asked for Paz's head previously, but López refused to kill him. Yet upon the assassination of Quiroga, Paz was handed to Rosas, perhaps due to López' poor health condition.
[edit] Life in prison
During his time as a prisoner in Santa Fe, Paz started writing Memories ("Memoirs"). He also married on March 21, 1835 his niece Margarita Weild, who served him while in prison and fell pregnant. He was then moved to Luján, to receive privilege freedom in April 1839, under oath of keeping away from Rosas' opponents. Fearing for the life of his wife and children, he escaped to Montevideo on April 3, 1840. In order to keep Paz from restarting his military activities, Rosas offered him a diplomatic mission in exile. Paz declined the offer and went to Corrientes to join the Unitarian army that was under the command of Juan Lavalle.
[edit] Paz in Corrientes
Once in Corrientes, Paz had to deal with a series of shortcomings. He had to build an army of youngsters and teenagers with two hundred rifles, some gunpowder, and only a few of his old Hunters of the war against Brazil. In spite of his improvised army, Paz defeated Entre Ríos Province caudillo Pascual Echagüe on November 28, 1841 at the Battle of Caaguazú.
In 1842, he took La Bajada (present Paraná city) chasing Echagüe, and set himself up in Entre Ríos. However, Pedro Ferré, governor of Corrientes Province by that time, found it presumptuous that Paz had named himself governor of Entre Ríos, and decided to withdraw his support for Paz, forcing him back to his family in Montevideo.
[edit] Exile
While in Montevideo, Paz was named commander chief of the reserve army that faced Manuel Oribe's siege on Montevideo, which was supported by Rosas. Paz coordinated that army until mid 1843, when he returned to Corrientes through Brazil, to became Director of War against Rosas by the new governor of Corrientes, Joaquín Madariaga, and was given the command of the Fourth Army.
[edit] Corrientes again
Knowing that Rosas intended to annex Paraguay as a province of the Confederation, Paraguayan governor Carlos Antonio López signed with Madariaga and Paz on November 11, 1845 a treaty (Tratado de Alianza y Convicción Adicional). Together they planned to attack Entre Ríos, debilitated by Justo José de Urquiza absence and, if possible, reach Buenos Aires.
Yet Madariaga and Paz did not trust each other. Madariaga took away Paz's command, but Paz already expecting such move, attacked and defeated Madariaga, taking him prisoner at Laguna Limpia. Paz moved to the Ubajay swamps at Easter Entre Ríos, and Urquiza, fearing to face Paz, fell back to the west of the province.
[edit] Last years
Political instability forced him to live Corrientes and start a journey to Paraguay that would extend to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Submersed in poverty, he settled as a farmer. His wife died on June 5, 1848 while giving bith to their ninth child, leaving Paz the task of raising the children, of which six died at a young age. Paz continued during those years his memoirs that he had started while imprisoned.
When news of Urquiza's uprising against Rosas reached him, Paz travelled to Montevideo to await Urquiza's triumph. On September 11, 1853, already in Buenos Aires, Urquiza named him, yet unconvinced, General Brigadier, and governor Manuel Pinto asked him to talk the provinces into favoring Buenos Aires' position. Buenos Aires abstained from participating in the Constitution, and prepared an attack. Paz was named General-in-Chief and moved to the border with Santa Fe Province.
Later Hilario Lagos besieged Buenos Aires and Paz had to organise the resistance. General Pinto thus named him Minister of War and Navy of the State of Buenos Aires. In spite of Paz's visible position against the Constituent Congress, he was elected member of the convention, which he did not attend regularly due to health problems. On April 11, 1854, day of the approval of the constitution, he was present to express his disagreement with the document that named Buenos Aires an independent state.
That was his last political act; he died a few months later, and buried with highest honours for his patriotism. During Domingo Sarmiento's presidency, his body was taken to the Córdoba Cathedral, together with the recuperated remains of his wife.
The highway that separates the federal capital Buenos Aires from the Buenos Aires Province was named General Paz Avenue after the cordobés who organised the defence of Buenos Aires.