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Bernardo O'Higgins

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Bernardo O'Higgins
3rd Supreme Director of Chile
In office
February 16, 1817 – January 28, 1823
Preceded byJosé Miguel Carrera
Succeeded byRamón Freire
Personal details
BornAugust 20, 1778
Chillán, Chile
DiedOctober 24, 1842
Lima, Peru

Bernardo O'Higgins Riquelme (August 20, 1778October 24, 1842), South American Independentist leader and first effective head of state (Supreme Director, 1817–23) of an independent Chile. He commanded the military forces that won independence from Spain in the Chilean War of Independence.

Early life

O'Higgins was born in Chillán, Chile. As noted in his certificate of baptism, he was the illegitimate son of Ambrosio O'Higgins, Marquis of Osorno, a Spanish officer from County Sligo in Ireland, who became governor of Chile and later viceroy of Peru. His mother was Isabel Riquelme, a prominent Chillán lady. O'Higgins spent his early years with his mother's family in Central-south Chile. He had a distant relationship with his father, who supported him financially and was concerned with his education, but the two never met in person. Spanish government officials in America were forbidden to marry locals [1]

File:Clarence House, Richmond, Surrey.jpg
Clarence House, Richmond, Surrey.

As Ambrose O'Higgins became Viceroy of Peru, young Bernardo was sent to London to complete his studies. There, Bernardo became acquainted with American-independist ideas: he knew Venezuelan Francisco de Miranda and joined the Logia Lautaro.

Role in the Chilean Independence and Government

In 1810, he joined the nationalist rebels fighting for independence from Spain. In 1814, his Chilean rebels were defeated by the Spanish and retreated into the Andes. In 1817, O'Higgins went back on the offensive with the aid of Argentine General José de San Martín. On February 12, 1817, he led a cavalry charge that won the Battle of Chacabuco. He became the first leader of independent Chile, and was granted dictatorial powers as Supreme Director on February 16, 1817. On February 12, 1818, Chile was proclaimed an independent republic.

His six-year rule saw the founding of the Military Academy and the approval of the new (and current) Chilean flag. However, his more radical and liberal reforms, (such as the establishment of democracy and abolishment of nobility titles) were resisted by the powerful conservative large-land owners. During his government, he founded the cities of La Unión and Vicuña. From his later exile in Peru, he promoted the Chilean expansion southward, concluding in the foundation of Punta Arenas in 1845. Also, his government was involved - presumably under the pressure of the Lautaro Lodge - in the murder of adversary independist leaders José Miguel Carrera, his brothers Juan José and Luis in Argentina, and Carreras' friend and guerrilla leader Manuel Rodríguez. He was deposed by a conservative coup on January 28, 1823.

During his government, he also assisted José de San Martín to organize the Expedition and an Army and Navy to support the Independence of Peru. He also organized the Chilean Army and the first Chilean Navy, under the command of the Scottish Lord Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald and Manuel Blanco Encalada.

Later life

File:O'Higgins blue plaque.jpg
O'Higgins' blue plaque

After his deposition, O'Higgins spent the rest of his life in exile, and died in Lima, Perú in 1842.

After his death, his remains were repatriated to Chile in 1869; moved in 1979 from the Military School to a place of honor in the Altar de la Patria's mausoleum in front of the Palacio de La Moneda government palace; and then back again temporarily to the Military School, in 2004, for a year, during transformation of the Altar de la Patria into the new Plaza de la Ciudadanía (Citizens' Square).

There is a statue of O'Higgins in Richmond upon Thames, in south-west London in a square named after him, O'Higgins Square, and a blue plaque was erected in his honour at Clarence House in Richmond, the house at 2 The Vineyard in which he lived while studying in London.

There is also a plaque in his honor in Merrion Square in Dublin and in the Garavogue River Walkway in Sligo, Ireland, and a sculpture at Central Railway Station on Elizabeth St in Sydney, Australia.

See also

  • Sepúlveda, Alfredo [1] "Bernardo O'Higgins: The Rebel Son of a Viceroy"
Preceded by Supreme Director of Chile
1817 - 1823
Succeeded by
Preceded by Army Commander-in-chief
1819-1823
Succeeded by
Preceded by Army Commander-in-chief
1813-1814
Succeeded by

Template:Link FA

  1. ^ Crow, John A.; The Epic of Latin America (Fourth Edition); University of California Press, 1992; Page 166. Here he discusses that Viceroys and their subordinates could not contract marriage.