History of Uruguay
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{{History of Uruguay}}
The history of Uruguay comprises different periods: the pre-Columbian time or early history (up to the 16th century), the Colonial Period (1516–1811), the Period of Nation-Building (1811–1830), and the history of Uruguay as an independent country (1830–present).
Written history began with the arrival of Spanish chroniclers in the expedition of Juan Díaz de Solís in 1516 to the Río de la Plata, which marks the beginning of Spanish occupation of the region.
In 1527 the first European settlement was established in the territory of present-day Uruguay. It was called Sán Lázaro and founded by Sebastian Cabot who was in command of a Spanish expedition. In 1777 the Spanish Crown established the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, which began to disintegrate with the Revolution of May 1810.
The territory of present-day Uruguay was invaded by the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarve, initially becoming part of the Portuguese kingdom as Cisplatina Province. Between 1824 it was annexed to the Empire of Brazil, and a year later it declared its independence, which began the Cisplatine War. In 1828, with British mediation, a peace agreement was signed and the independence of Uruguay was recognized. In 1830 the country's first constitution was promulgated.
Native
{{Main|Indigenous peoples in Uruguay}}
{{multiple image|perrow=2|total_width=300|caption_align=center|image1=Toortse Rio de la Plata.png|caption1=Uruguayan Indians, drawing from Hendrick Ottsen journal, 1603 CE|image2=Los últimos Charrúas. Senaca, Vaimaca-Piru, Guyunusa y Tacuabe.JPG|caption2=Monument to Charruas in Montevideo}}
The earliest traces of human presence are about 10,000 years old and belong to the hunter-gatherer cultures of Catalanense and Cuareim cultures, which are extensions of cultures originating in Brazil. The earliest discovered bolas is about 7,000 years old. Examples of ancient rock art have been found at Chamangá. About 4,000 years ago, Charrúa and Guarani people arrived here. During precolonial times, Uruguayan territory was inhabited by small tribes of nomadic Charrúa, Chaná, Arachán, and Guarani peoples who survived by hunting and fishing and probably never reached more than 10,000 to 20,000 people. It is estimated that there were about 9,000 Charrúa and 6,000 Chaná and Guaraní at the time of first contact with Europeans in the 1500s. The native peoples had almost disappeared by the time of Uruguay's independence as a result of European diseases and constant warfare.Jermyn, pp. 17–31.
European genocide culminated on 11 April 1831 with the Massacre of Salsipuedes, when most of the Charrúa men were killed by the Uruguayan army on the orders of President Fructuoso Rivera. The remaining 300 Charrúa women and children were divided as household slaves and servants among Europeans.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
Colonization
{{Main|Banda Oriental}}
During the colonial era, the present-day territory of Uruguay was known as Banda Oriental (east bank of River Uruguay) and was a buffer territory between the competing colonial pretensions of Portuguese Brazil and the Spanish Empire. The Portuguese first explored the region of present-day Uruguay in 1512–1513.{{cite book |last=Bethell |first=Leslie |title=The Cambridge History of Latin America, Volume 1, Colonial Latin America |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1984 |location=Cambridge |page=257}}
The first European explorer to land there was Juan Díaz de Solís in 1516, but he was killed by natives. Ferdinand Magellan anchored at the future site of Montevideo in 1520. Sebastian Cabot in 1526 explored Río de la Plata, but no permanent settlements were established at that time. The absence of gold and silver limited the settlement of the region during the 16th and 17th centuries. In 1603, cattle and horses were introduced by the order of Hernando Arias de Saavedra, and, by the mid-17th century, their number had greatly multiplied. The first permanent settlement on the territory of present-day Uruguay was founded by Spanish Jesuits in 1624 at Villa Soriano on the Río Negro, where they tried to establish a Misiones Orientales system for the Charrúas.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
File:D._Lu%C3%ADs_da_Cunha_-_Memórias_da_Paz_de_Utrecht_(Biblioteca_Nacional_de_Portugal)_(cropped).png negotiated Portugal's annexation of Uruguay at the Congress of Utrecht in 1713–15.]]
In 1680, Portuguese colonists established Colônia do Sacramento on the northern bank of La Plata river, on the opposite coast from Buenos Aires. Spanish colonial activity increased as Spain sought to limit Portugal's expansion of Brazil's frontiers. In 1726, the Spanish established San Felipe de Montevideo on the northern bank and its natural harbor soon developed into a commercial center competing with Buenos Aires. They also moved to capture Côlonia del Sacramento. The 1750 Treaty of Madrid secured Spanish control over Banda Oriental, settlers were given land here and a local cabildo was created.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
In 1776, the new Viceroyalty of Rio de la Plata was established with its capital at Buenos Aires, and it included the territory of Banda Oriental. By this time, the land had been divided among cattle ranchers, and beef was becoming a major product. By 1800, more than 10,000 people lived in Montevideo and another 20,000 in the rest of the province. Out of these, about 30 percent were African slaves.{{Cite book|last=Ciferri|first=Alberto|title=An Overview of Historical and Socio-economic Evolution in the Americas|publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing|year=2019|isbn=978-1-5275-3513-8|location=United Kingdom|pages=483}}
Uruguay's early 19th-century history was shaped by an ongoing conflict between the British, Spanish, Portuguese, and local colonial forces for dominance of the La Plata Basin. In 1806 and 1807, during the Anglo-Spanish War (1796–1808), the British launched invasions. Buenos Aires was taken in 1806 and then liberated by forces from Montevideo led by Santiago de Liniers. In a new and stronger British attack in 1807, Montevideo was occupied by a 10,000-strong British force. The British forces were unable to invade Buenos Aires for the second time, however, and Liniers demanded the liberation of Montevideo in the terms of capitulation. The British gave up their attacks when the Peninsular War turned Great Britain and Spain into allies against Napoleon.{{Cite book |last1=Kaufman |first1=Will |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9kTPEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA833 |title=Britain and the Americas [3 volumes]: Culture, Politics, and History [3 volumes] |last2=Macpherson |first2=Heidi Slettedahl |date=2005-03-01 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing USA |isbn=978-1-85109-436-3 |page=833 |language=en}}
Struggle for independence, 1811–1828
=Provincial freedom under Artigas=
File:Juan Manuel Blanes - Artigas en la Ciudadela.jpg]]
File:Mapa de argentina en 1816.svg
The May Revolution of 1810 in Buenos Aires marked the end of Spanish rule in the Vice-royalty and the establishment of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata. The Revolution divided the inhabitants of Montevideo between royalists, who remained loyal to the Spanish crown (many of which remained so), and revolutionaries, who supported the independence of the provinces from Spain. This soon led to the First Banda Oriental campaign between Buenos Aires and the Spanish viceroy.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
Local patriots under José Gervasio Artigas issued the Proclamation of 26 February 1811, which called for a war against the Spanish rule. With the help from Buenos Aires, Artigas defeated Spaniards on 18 May 1811 at the Battle of Las Piedras and began Siege of Montevideo. At this point, Spanish viceroy invited Portuguese from Brazil to launch a military invasion of Banda Oriental. Afraid to lose this province to the Portuguese, Buenos Aires made peace with the Spanish viceroy. British pressure persuaded the Portuguese to withdraw in late 1811, leaving the royalists in control of Montevideo. Angered by this betrayal by Buenos Aires, Artigas, with some 4,000 supporters, retreated to Entre Ríos Province. During the Second Banda Oriental campaign in 1813, Artigas joined José Rondeau's army from Buenos Aires and started the second siege of Montevideo, resulting in its surrender to Río de la Plata.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
Artigas participated in the formation of the League of the Free People, which united several provinces that wanted to be free from the dominance of Buenos Aires and create a centralized state as envisaged by the Congress of Tucumán. Artigas was proclaimed Protector of this League. Guided by his political ideas (Artiguism), he launched a land reform, dividing land to small farmers.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
=Brazilian province=
{{Campaignbox Portuguese conquest of the Banda Oriental}}
The steady growth of the influence and prestige of the Liga Federal frightened the Portuguese government, which did not want the League's republicanism to spread to the adjoining Portuguese colony of Brazil. In August 1816, forces from Brazil invaded and began the Portuguese conquest of the Banda Oriental with the intention of destroying Artigas and his revolution. The Portuguese forces included a fully armed force of disciplined Portuguese European veterans of the Napoleonic Wars with local Brazilian troops. This army, with more military experience and material superiority, occupied Montevideo on 20 January 1817. In 1820, Artigas's forces were finally defeated in the Battle of Tacuarembó, after which Banda Oriental was incorporated into Brazil as its Cisplatina province. During the War of Independence of Brazil in 1823–1824, another siege of Montevideo occurred.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
The Thirty-Three
{{multiple image|perrow=1/2|total_width=300|caption_align=center|image1=Boceto para la Jura de la Constitución de 1830.jpg|caption1=Proclamation of Constitution of 1830 CE|image2=Juan Manuel Blanes - El Juramento de los Treinta y Tres Orientales.jpg|caption2=Oath of the Thirty-Three|image3=Flag of the Treinta y Tres.svg|caption3=Flag of the Thirty-Three}}
On 19 April 1825, with the support of Buenos Aires, the Thirty-Three Orientals, led by Juan Antonio Lavalleja, landed in Cisplatina. They reached Montevideo on 20 May. On 14 June, in La Florida, a provisional government was formed. On 25 August, the newly elected provincial assembly declared the secession of Cisplatina province from Empire of Brazil and allegiance to the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata. In response, Brazil launched the Cisplatine War.
{{Cite book
|last=Barroso
|first=Gustavo
|author-link=Gustavo Barroso
|url=https://www2.senado.leg.br/bdsf/bitstream/handle/id/574648/001148523_Historia_militar_Brasil.pdf
|title=História Militar do Brasil
|publisher=Senado Federal
|year=2019
|isbn=978-85-7018-495-5
|location=Brasilia
|language=pt
|last=Carneiro
|first=David
|url=https://bdor.sibi.ufrj.br/bitstream/doc/332/1/246%20PDF%20-%20OCR%20-%20RED.pdf
|title=História da Guerra Cisplatina
|publisher=Companhia Editora Nacional
|year=1946
|location=São Paulo
|language=pt
This war ended on 27 August 1828 when Treaty of Montevideo was signed. After mediation by Viscount Ponsonby, a British diplomat, Brazil and Argentina agreed to recognize an independent Uruguay as a buffer state between them. As with Paraguay, however, Uruguayan independence was not completely guaranteed, and only the Paraguayan War secured Uruguayan independence from the territorial ambitions of its larger neighbors.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}} The Constitution of 1830 was approved in September 1829 and adopted on 18 July 1830.Burford, p. 17.
The "Guerra Grande", 1839–1852
{{Main|Uruguayan Civil War}}
File:Juan Manuel Blanes - Retrato del General Fructuoso Rivera.png
File:Joaquín Suárez - Montevideo.jpg
Soon after achieving independence, the political scene in Uruguay became split between two new parties, both splinters of the former Thirty-Three: the conservative Blancos ("Whites") and the liberal Colorados ("Reds"). The Colorados were led by the first President Fructuoso Rivera and represented the business interests of Montevideo; the Blancos were headed by the second President Manuel Oribe, who looked after the agricultural interests of the countryside and promoted protectionism.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
Both parties took their informal names from the color of the armbands that their supporters wore. Initially, the Colorados wore blue, but, when it faded in the sun, they replaced it with red. The parties became associated with warring political factions in neighboring Argentina. The Colorados favored the exiled Argentinian liberal Unitarios, many of whom had taken refuge in Montevideo, while the Blanco president Manuel Oribe was a close friend of the Argentine ruler Juan Manuel de Rosas.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
Oribe took Rosas's side when the French navy blockaded Buenos Aires in 1838. This led the Colorados and the exiled Unitarios to seek French backing against Oribe, and, on 15 June 1838, an army, led by the Colorado leader Rivera, overthrew Oribe who fled to Argentina. The Argentinian Unitarios then formed a government-in-exile in Montevideo, and, with secret French encouragement, Rivera declared war on Rosas in 1839. The conflict would last 13 years and become known as the Guerra Grande (the Great War).{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
In 1840, an army of exiled Unitarios attempted to invade northern Argentina from Uruguay but had little success. In 1842, the Argentinian army overran Uruguay on Oribe's behalf. They seized most of the country but failed to take the capital. The Great Siege of Montevideo, which began in February 1843, lasted nine years. The besieged Uruguayans called on resident foreigners for help. French and Italian legions were formed. The latter was led by the exiled Giuseppe Garibaldi, who was working as a mathematics teacher in Montevideo when the war broke out. Garibaldi was also made head of the Uruguayan navy.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
During this siege, Uruguay had two parallel governments:
- Gobierno de la Defensa in Montevideo, led by Joaquín Suárez (1843–1852).{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
- Gobierno del Cerrito (with headquarters at Cerrito de la Victoria neighborhood), ruling the rest of the country, led by Manuel Oribe (1843–1851).{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
The Argentinian blockade of Montevideo was ineffective as Rosas generally tried not to interfere with international shipping on the River Plate, but, in 1845, when access to Paraguay was blocked, Great Britain and France allied against Rosas, seized his fleet, and began a blockade of Buenos Aires, while Brazil joined in the war against Argentina. Rosas reached peace deals with Great Britain and France in 1849 and 1850, respectively. The French agreed to withdraw their legion if Rosas evacuated Argentinian troops from Uruguay. Oribe still maintained a loose siege of the capital. In 1851, the Argentinian provincial strongman Justo José de Urquiza turned against Rosas and signed a pact with the exiled Unitarios, the Uruguayan Colorados, and Brazil against him. Urquiza crossed into Uruguay, defeated Oribe, and lifted the siege of Montevideo. He then overthrew Rosas at the Battle of Caseros on 3 February 1852. With Rosas's defeat and exile, the "Guerra Grande" finally came to an end. Slavery was officially abolished in 1852.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}} A ruling triumvirate consisting of Rivera, Lavalleja, and Venancio Flores was established, but Lavalleja died in 1853, Rivera in 1854, and Flores was overthrown in 1855.Burford, p. 18.
=Foreign relations=
The government of Montevideo rewarded Brazil's financial and military support by signing five treaties in 1851 that provided for a perpetual alliance between the two countries. Montevideo confirmed Brazil's right to intervene in Uruguay's internal affairs. Uruguay also renounced its territorial claims north of the Río Cuareim, thereby reducing its area to about {{convert|176000|km2|sqmi|sp=us}} and recognized Brazil's exclusive right of navigation in the Laguna Merin and the Rio Yaguaron, the natural border between the countries.Handelmann, Heinrich, and Lucia Furquim Lahmeyer. Historia do Brasil / por Henrique Handelmann [traducção brasileira feita pelo Instituto historico e geographico brasileiro]. Translated by Lucia Furquim Lahmeyer. Rio de Janeiro: Imprensa nacional, 1931.
In accordance with the 1851 treaties, Brazil intervened militarily in Uruguay as often as it deemed necessary.{{cite web |url=http://countrystudies.us/uruguay/7.htm |title=The Struggle for Survival, 1852–1875 (Chapter 7) |work=Uruguay: A Country Study |editor1=Rex A. Hudson |editor2=Sandra W. Meditz |year=1990 |publisher=Library of Congress Country Studies |location=Washington DC |access-date=23 February 2011}} In 1865, the Treaty of the Triple Alliance was signed by the Emperor of Brazil, the President of Argentina, and the Colorado general Venancio Flores, the Uruguayan head of government whom they had both helped to gain power. The Triple Alliance was created to wage a war against the Paraguayan leader Francisco Solano López. The resulting Paraguayan War ended with the invasion of Paraguay and its defeat by the armies of the three countries. Montevideo, which was used as a supply station by the Brazilian navy, experienced a period of prosperity and relative calm during this war.
The Uruguayan War, 1864–65
{{Main|Uruguayan War}}
The Uruguayan War was fought between the governing Blancos and an alliance of the Empire of Brazil with the Colorados who were supported by Argentina. In 1863, the Colorado leader Venancio Flores launched the Liberating Crusade aimed at toppling President Bernardo Berro and his Colorado–Blanco coalition (Fusionist) government. Flores was aided by Argentina's President Bartolomé Mitre. The Fusionist coalition collapsed as Colorados joined Flores's ranks.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}
The Uruguayan civil war developed into a crisis of international scope that destabilized the entire region. Even before the Colorado rebellion, the Blancos had sought an alliance with Paraguayan dictator Francisco Solano López. Berro's now purely Blanco government also received support from Argentine Federalists, who opposed Mitre and his Unitarians. The situation deteriorated as the Empire of Brazil was drawn into the conflict. Brazil decided to intervene to reestablish the security of its southern frontiers and its influence over regional affairs. In a combined offensive against Blanco strongholds, the Brazilian–Colorado troops advanced through Uruguayan territory, eventually surrounding Montevideo. Faced with certain defeat, the Blanco government capitulated on 20 February 1865.{{cite web |title=Caudillos and Political Stability |url=http://countrystudies.us/uruguay/9.htm |website=Country Studies US |access-date=28 May 2020}}
The short-lived war would have been regarded as an outstanding success for Brazilian and Argentine interests, had Paraguayan intervention in support of the Blancos (with attacks upon Brazilian and Argentine provinces) not led to the long and costly Paraguayan War.{{Citation needed|reason=the idea that the war dragged on due to Paraguyan intervention is not common knowledge|date=July 2024}} In February 1868, former Presidents Bernardo Berro and Venancio Flores were assassinated.{{Cite book |last=Bethell |first=Leslie |url=https://sas-space.sas.ac.uk/3585/1/B28_-_The_Paraguayan_War_%281864-1870%29.pdf |title=THE PARAGUAYAN WAR (1864-1870) |publisher=Institute of Latin American Studies, University of London |year=1996 |isbn=1-900039-08-7 |pages=34}}
Return to factions, 1865–75
File:Cerro de Montevideo desde la ciudad. Año 1865 (no watermark).jpgWith the inauguration of Venancio Flores as president of Uruguay, the fusionist policy ended, once again strengthening and separating the Blanco and Colorado factions. The Colorados ruled without interruption from 1865 until 1958 despite internal conflicts, conflicts with neighboring states, political and economic fluctuations, and a wave of mass immigration from Europe.{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/15/travel/uruguay.html|title=Uruguay|date=15 July 2004|publisher=The New York Times|website=www.nytimes.com|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231118233736/https://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/15/travel/uruguay.html|archive-date=18 November 2023|url-status=dead}}
In the 1860s Uruguay was going through a period of prosperity. Montevideo became a major economic center of the region. Thanks to its natural harbor, it became an entrepôt, or distribution hub, for goods from Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay. The towns of Paysandú and Salto, both on the Uruguay River, also experienced similar development.Raúl A. Molina (1948, 151-64) emphasizes the centrality of early-17th c. colonialist explorer Hernandarias de Saavedra in his choice of settlements, up to the present day. Discussed more recently in Gustavo Verdesio, [https://books.google.com/books?id=tnw7GmI2ZCgC Forgotten Conquests: Rereading New World History from the Margins] (Phila. PA: Temple University Press, 2001), ch. 3, "The Pacific Penetration." {{ISBN|9781566398343}} In addition, new neighborhoods emerged in the city and numerous buildings began to be built. In addition, the European immigration that had begun after the Civil War continued, and Villa Cosmópolis —current Villa del Cerro— expanded.{{Cite web |title=La villa convertida en barrio y en república {{!}} Municipio A |url=https://municipioa.montevideo.gub.uy/comunicacion/noticias/la-villa-convertida-en-barrio-y-en-republica |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=municipioa.montevideo.gub.uy}}
The economy saw a steep upswing after the Civil War, above all in livestock raising and export. Between 1860 and 1868, the number of sheep rose from 3 to 17 million. The reason for this increase lay above all in the improved methods of husbandry introduced by European immigrants.Johan Martin Gerard Kleinpenning, [https://books.google.com/books?id=Yf4DAQAAIAAJ Peopling the Purple Land: A Historical Geography of Rural Uruguay, 1500-1915] (Amsterdam: Centrum voor Studie en Documentatie van Latijns Amerika, 1965/1995)
In 1866 the country's first railway network was built.{{Cite web |title=Trains of Uruguay – Railway Wonders of the World |url=https://www.railwaywondersoftheworld.com/trains-uruguay.html |access-date=2022-06-26 |website=railwaywondersoftheworld.com}} The Italians set up the Camera di Commercio Italiana di Montevideo ({{literally|Italian Chamber of Commerce of Montevideo}}) which played a strategic role in trade with Italy and building up the Italian middle class in the city.See A. Beretta Curi (2002), [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/298654806_The_contribution_of_Italian_emigration_to_the_formation_of_urban_entrepreneurship_in_Uruguay_The_creation_of_the_Camera_di_Commercio_Italiana_di_Montevideo_1883-1933 La Camera di Commercio Italiana di Montevideo 1883–1933]. Montevideo: Camera de Commercio Italiana. Some translated to English (2009) as essay, The contribution of Italian emigration to the formation of urban entrepreneurship in Uruguay: The creation of the Camera di Commercio Italiana di Montevideo, 1883-1933
The government of General Lorenzo Batlle y Grau suppressed the Revolution of the Lances, which started in September 1870 under the leadership of Blanco Timoteo Aparicio. After two years of struggle, a peace agreement was signed on 6 April 1872 when a power-sharing agreement was signed giving the Blancos control over four out of the thirteen departments of Uruguay—Canelones, San Jose, Florida, and Cerro Largo—and a guaranteed, if limited representation in Parliament.{{cite web |url=http://countrystudies.us/uruguay/9.htm |title=Caudillos and Political Stability (Chapter 9) |work=Uruguay: A Country Study |editor1=Rex A. Hudson |editor2=Sandra W. Meditz |year=1990 |publisher=Library of Congress Country Studies |location=Washington DC |access-date=23 February 2011}} This establishment of the policy of coparticipation represented the search for a new formula of compromise, based on the coexistence of the party in power and the party in opposition.
Militarism and modernization, 1875–1890
The power-sharing agreement of 1872 split the Colorados into two factions—the principistas, who were open to cooperation with the Blancos, and the netos, who were against it. In the 1873 Presidential election, the netos supported election of José Eugenio Ellauri, who was a surprise candidate with no political powerbase. Five days of rioting in Montevideo between the two Colorado factions led to a military coup on 15 January 1875. Ellauri was exiled and neto representative Pedro Varela assumed the Presidency.Scheina, ch. 25.
In May 1875, the principistas began the Tricolor Revolution, which was defeated later in the year by an unexpected coalition of Blanco leader Aparicio Saravia and the Army under the command of Lorenzo Latorre. Between 1875 and 1890, the military became the center of political power.{{cite web |url=http://countrystudies.us/uruguay/10.htm |title=Modern Uruguay, 1875–1903 (Chapter 10) |work=Uruguay: A Country Study |editor1=Rex A. Hudson |editor2=Sandra W. Meditz |year=1990 |publisher=Library of Congress Country Studies |location=Washington DC |access-date=23 February 2011}} The country was going through an unstable situation, so representatives of the two major pressure groups, the Asociación Rural del Uruguay —which brought together the hacendados— and the Alto Comercio Montevideano —which brought together businessmen dedicated to foreign trade—, offered Latorre to take power.
On 10 March 1876, Lorenzo Latorre overthrew the Pedro Varela Olivera government and established a strong executive Presidency, which began the period known as {{Language with name/for|es|Militarismo|Militarism}}.{{Cite news |last=Arregui |first=Miguel |title=Latorre, el Militarismo y la modernidad |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/latorre-el-militarismo-y-la-modernidad-20171213500 |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=El Observador}} The main objectives of the Latorre's regime were the achievement of internal peace, order (especially in the countryside) and the affirmation of the right to private property.{{Cite web|url=https://contenidoseducativosdigitales.edu.uy/files/052-el-militarismo.pdf|title=Militarism – ANEP|accessdate=31 July 2024}} To achieve them, reforms were implemented that led to the modernization of the country and the establishment of a modern state apparatus.
To ensure peace and order, the security forces were professionalized and modernized. The National Army obtained a monopoly on Mauser and Remington rifles, which allowed it to have supremacy against any uprising, while also serving as a deterrent method for seditionists.In addition, the Rural Police was created to prevent livestock theft and rustling. To guarantee private property, the Rural Code was also drafted, which provided for the mandatory fencing of fields, and the {{Language with name/for|es|Oficina de Marcas y Señales|Trademark and Signals Office}} was created to keep track of livestock and their owner.
In 1877 the "Common Education Law" was passed, which was based on a bill by José Pedro Varela and which laid the foundations of the Uruguayan educational system. Also known as the {{Language with name/for|es|Reforma Vareliana|Varelian Reform}}, it established universal, compulsory and free education.{{Cite web |title=19 de marzo: Natalicio de José Pedro Varela {{!}} Administración Nacional de Educación Pública |url=https://www.anep.edu.uy/15-d/19-marzo-natalicio-jos-pedro-varela |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=anep.edu.uy}} At first it was intended that it would also be secular, but it was decided not to so as not to deteriorate relations between the government and the Catholic Church. On the other hand, it was established that parents had to clarify if they wanted catechism classes to be taught to their children.{{Cite web |title=El visionario que transformó la educación en un derecho igualitario y accesible para todos {{!}} Administración Nacional de Educación Pública |url=https://www.anep.edu.uy/destacada-1/el-visionario-que-transform-educaci-n-en-un-derecho-igualitario-y-accesible-para-todos |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=anep.edu.uy}} The establishment of public education contributed to the strengthening of the Spanish language in areas close to the borders of Portuguese-speaking Brazil as well as to the integration of immigrants.{{Cite book |last=Arteaga |first=Juan José |title=Historia Contemporánea del Uruguay |publisher=Ediciones Cruz del Sur |year=2018 |isbn=978-9974-675-92-6 |location=Montevideo |pages=93 |language=es |trans-title=Contemporary History of Uruguay}}
File:Estacion_central_artigas.jpg was inaugurated in 1897 and has served as Montevideo's main station ever since.]]
With the passing of the "General Law of Railway Routes", the railway network was regulated and expanded, with the formation of the first companies with British capital.{{Cite web |title=Historia |url=https://www.afe.com.uy/historia/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221113153510/https://www.afe.com.uy/historia/ |archive-date=13 November 2022 |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=A.F.E. |language=es }} The railways converged in Montevideo, which made it possible to transport raw materials and manufactured products to the country's main port, as well as enabling the faster movement of troops to any part of the territory in the event of an armed uprising.{{Cite web|url=http://contenidoseducativosdigitales.edu.uy/files/056-el-tren-y-el-telegrafo.pdf|title=Tren y telégrafo – ANEP|accessdate=31 July 2024}} In addition, the telegraph line was expanded throughout the country.
In 1879, the Civil Status Registry was created for the registration of births, marriages and deaths, which until then was in charge of the Catholic Church.{{Cite web|url=https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/Documents/Issues/Children/BirthRegistration/Uruguay.pdf|title=Registro de Estado Civil|accessdate=31 July 2024}} That year, the existing vicariate in the country was promoted to the Diocese of Montevideo on 13 July 1878 by Pope Leo XIII and Jacinto Vera was appointed as the first bishop of Montevideo.{{Cite web |date=2023-05-06 |title=La historia de Jacinto Vera, el obispo uruguayo que está a un paso de ser santo |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/vida-actual/la-historia-de-jacinto-vera-el-obispo-uruguayo-que-esta-a-un-paso-de-ser-santo |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=EL PAIS |language=es-UY}}File:Lazareto_-_Isla_de_Flores.tif served as a lazaretto for thousands of immigrants to complete quarantines before entering the country.|left]]
During the militarism the arrival of a large number of European immigrants that had begun after the Civil War continued. It led to the creation of large Italian Uruguayan and Spanish Uruguayan communities that heavily influenced the culture and demographics of the country.{{Cite web |title=Inmigrantes {{!}} 1811-2011 |url=http://www.1811-2011.edu.uy/B1/content/inmigrantes |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130629010125/http://www.1811-2011.edu.uy/B1/content/inmigrantes |url-status=dead |archive-date=29 June 2013 |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=www.1811-2011.edu.uy }} Within a few decades, the population of Uruguay doubled and Montevideo's tripled as most of the recent immigrants settled there. The number of immigrants rose from 48 percent of the population in 1860 to 68 percent in 1868. In the 1870s, a further 100,000 Europeans arrived, so that, by 1879, about 438,000 people were living in Uruguay, a quarter of them in Montevideo.Goebel, pp. 191–229. Due to immigration, Uruguay's population reached one million in the early 20th century.{{Cite book|title=Uruguay: A Country Study|last=Hudson|first=Rex|publisher=Federal Research Division|year=1992|isbn=0844407372|location=Washington D.C|pages=[https://archive.org/details/uruguaycountryst00huds/page/65 65]|url=https://archive.org/details/uruguaycountryst00huds/page/65}}File:Curacion de Máximo Santos.jpgIn addition, the economy was stabilized and exports, mainly of Hereford beef and Merino wool, increased. In Fray Bentos corned beef production started.{{cite book |author=John Hartley |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OH5iBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA87 |title=Bully Beef and Biscuits: Food in the Great War |date=28 February 2015 |publisher=Pen and Sword |isbn=978-1-4738-5490-1 |pages=86–87}} In 1880, Lorenzo Latorre resigned from the presidency, being succeeded by Francisco Antonino Vidal, who finished his term. In 1882 he was succeeded by Máximo Santos.{{Cite web |title=Almorzando con Máximo Santos |url=http://viajes.elpais.com.uy/2019/09/01/almorzando-con-maximo-santos/ |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=viajes.elpais.com.uy |language=en-ES}} In 1886 the Quebracho Revolution took place, in which revolutionary forces that brought together Blanco and Colorado supporters faced off against the forces of the militarist government.{{Cite web |date=2018-04-08 |title=El día que Quebracho se quedó solo |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/que-pasa/el-dia-que-quebracho-se-quedo-solo |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} In August 1886, President Santos survived an assassination attempt that led him to leave office.{{Cite web|url=https://mume.montevideo.gub.uy/sites/mume.montevideo.gub.uy/files/articulos/descargas/maximo_santos_y_el_militarismo_1.pdf|title=Máximo Santos and the militarist regime - Museo de la Memoria|accessdate=31 July 2024}}
Máximo Santos was succeeded by General Máximo Tajes, who had led the government forces during the Quebracho Revolution.{{Cite web |title=TAJES, Máximo Teniente General |url=http://wwwf.ejercito.mil.uy/index.php/es/23-todos/88-tajes-maximo-teniente-general |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=wwwf.ejercito.mil.uy}} He carried out an opening policy, which allowed the reorganization of the then existing political parties. Furthermore, during the Tajes administration there was economic prosperity in which the construction of European-style buildings increased in Montevideo, and the gas lighting service was replaced by electric lighting in a large part of the city.{{Cite web|url=https://www.audhe.org.uy/images/stories/upload/Revista/Revista_18/Waiter.pdf|title=TRAYECTORIA TECNOLÓGICA, ASPECTOS ECONÓMICOS E INSTITUCIONALES: INICIOS DE LA GENERACIÓN DE ENERGÍA ELÉCTRICA EN URUGUAY|accessdate=31 July 2024}}
Return to civil rule and collectivism, 1890–1903
By 1890 the country continued to undergo transformations, with increasing urbanization, mass European immigration, an increase in the educational level due to compulsory education and the development of the middle class. In the political sphere, the period that would last until 1903 was characterized by the political predominance of the upper bourgeoisie, to the detriment of the caudillismo that had prevailed for decades.
In 1890, Colorado Julio Herrera y Obes took office as president which marked the end of militarism and the return to civil rule.{{Cite web |date=2020-07-31 |title=Julio Herrera y Obes: brillo y carisma {{!}} La Mañana |url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/cultura/julio-herrera-y-obes-brillo-y-carisma/ |access-date=2024-02-07 |language=es}} He proposed the {{Language with name/for|es|Influencia directriz|Directive influence}}, a political thesis that postulates that the president in office must choose candidates for high elective positions.{{Cite web|url=https://contenidoseducativosdigitales.edu.uy/files/068-el-colectivismo.pdf|title=Colectivismo en Uruguay – ANEP|accessdate=31 July 2024}} Thus, collectivism emerged, in which the members of La Colectividad, a sector of the Colorado Party, ensured successive control of the presidency.{{Cite web |last=Grèzes |first=Daniel Iglesias |title=El estatismo de los uruguayos |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/el-estatismo-de-los-uruguayos-201981210159 |access-date=2024-02-07 |website=El Observador}}
In the months after Herrera and Obes took office, the Baring Crisis broke out, greatly affecting the Uruguayan economy.{{Cite web |date=2022-08-18 |title=Las turbulencias económicas nunca pudieron abatirnos {{!}} La Mañana |url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/actualidad/las-turbulencias-economicas-nunca-pudieron-abatirnos/ |access-date=2024-02-07 |language=es}} In 1894 Juan Idiarte Borda —a member of La Colectividad— succeeded Herrera y Obes as president. During his administration, the state bank, Banco de la Republica, was established.Banco de la República Oriental del Uruguay, Sinopsis económica y financiera del Uruguay (Montevideo: Impresara Uruguaya, 1933); and Simon G. Hanson, Utopia in Uruguay: Chapters in the Economic History of Uruguay (Oxford University Press, 1938).Discussed more recently in Ronn F. Pineo, Cities of Hope: People, Protests, And Progress in Urbanizing Latin America, 1870-1930 (London: Routledge, 2018). https://books.google.com/books?id=E8mWDwAAQBAJ
{{ISBN|9780429970191}} Due to collectivism, which left state politics in the president's inner circle and ensured the supremacy of the Colorado Party, the National Party was excluded and without representation due to electoral legislation, in addition to denouncing fraud in the 1896 elections.{{Cite web |date=2019-06-24 |title=La Revolución de 1897 |url=https://www.carasycaretas.com.uy/la-revolucion-de-1897 |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=carasycaretas.com.uy |language=es-ES}}File:Práctica de tiro de fuerzas nacionalistas en la Revolucion de 1897 en Uruguay.jpg]]In March 1897 there was an uprising led by the Blanco caudillo Aparicio Saravia, known as the Revolution of 1897.{{Cite web |date=2003-06-18 |title=Allá por el año de 1896 |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/opinion/columnistas/alla-por-el-ano-de-1896 |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} The confrontation ended with the signing of the Pacto de la Cruz, in which greater political representation and coparticipation was agreed upon. Thus, the governors of the departments of Cerro Largo, Treinta y Tres, Rivera, Maldonado, Flores and San José would be appointed by the Honorable Board, the National Party's central body.{{Cite web |title=126° aniversario del Pacto de La Cruz |url=https://www.gub.uy/intendencia-florida/comunicacion/noticias/126-aniversario-del-pacto-cruz |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=Intendencia de Florida |language=es}}
On 25 August 1897, President Juan Idiarte Borda was assassinated while attending Independence Day celebrations.{{Cite web |date=2021-08-17 |title=Juan Idiarte Borda y un enigma que persiste: por qué lo mataron |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/cultural/juan-idiarte-borda-y-un-enigma-que-persiste-por-que-lo-mataron |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} He was succeeded by Juan Lindolfo Cuestas who held the position until 1903.{{Cite web |date=2020-01-15 |title=El gato de Cuestas {{!}} La Mañana |url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/cultura/el-gato-de-cuestas/ |access-date=2024-02-08 |language=es}}
Due to the high educational and cultural level of Uruguayan society at the end of the 19th century, the "Generation of 900" emerged, an influential group of writers, poets and intellectuals. It was made up of Florencio Sánchez, María Eugenia Vaz Ferreira, Julio Herrera y Reissig, Delmira Agustini and Horacio Quiroga, among others.{{Cite web |last=Cervantes |first=Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de |title=La generación del 900 |url=https://www.cervantesvirtual.com/obra-visor/la-generacion-del-900/html/89f292c4-920b-4537-b756-f17be774f5f8_7.html |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes |language=es}}
Batlle era, 1903–33
File:Palaciosalvouruguay.jpg, built in Montevideo from 1925 to 1928, was once the tallest building in Latin America.]]
José Batlle y Ordóñez, President from 1903 to 1907 and again from 1911 to 1915, set the pattern for Uruguay's modern political development and dominated the political scene until his death in 1929. Batlle was opposed to the coparticipation agreement because he considered division of departments among the parties to be undemocratic. The Blancos feared loss of their power if a proportional election system was introduced and started their last revolution in 1904 —led by Aparicio Saravia— which ended with the Colorado victory at the Battle of Masoller.Wade C. Roof, ed., Race and Residence in American Cities (Ann Arbor MI: American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1979), 145. {{ISBN|9780877612377}}.
The Batlle era saw the introduction of various reforms{{Cite web|url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/opinion/el-inicio-del-uruguay-moderno/|title=El inicio del Uruguay moderno | La Mañana|date=23 July 2020|accessdate=31 July 2024}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/opinion/el-uruguay-social/|title=El Uruguay Social | La Mañana|date=15 January 2020|accessdate=31 July 2024}}{{Cite web|url=http://archive.org/details/sim_bulletin-of-the-pan-american-union_1939-10_73_10|title=Bulletin Of The Pan American Union 1939-10: Vol 73 Iss 10|date=31 October 1939|publisher=Superintendent of Government Documents|accessdate=31 July 2024|via=Internet Archive}}[https://anaforas.fic.edu.uy/jspui/bitstream/123456789/11243/1/AnalesdelaUniversidad_A42_Entrega136_1935.pdf ANALES DE LA UNIVERSIDAD ENTREGA No 136, EDUARDO ACEVEDO, ANALES HISTÓRICOS DEL URUGUAY TOMO VI, Abarca los gobiernos de Viera, Brum, Serrato y Campisteguy, desde 1915 hasta 1930][https://anaforas.fic.edu.uy/jspui/handle/123456789/656 Anales Issue 125 by Universidad de la República (Uruguay), 1929] such as new rights for working people,{{Cite web |url=https://anaforas.fic.edu.uy/jspui/handle/123456789/66355 |title=Batlle y el Batllismo by Roberto B. Giudici and Efraín González Conzi |access-date=20 November 2022 |archive-date=20 November 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221120122716/https://anaforas.fic.edu.uy/jspui/handle/123456789/66355 |url-status=dead }} the encouragement of colonization,{{Cite web|url=https://www.colonizacion.com.uy/visualizar-contenido/-/asset_publisher/RtdLVJCczp5a/content/antecedentes?inheritRedirect=false|title=Instituto Nacional de Colonización – Antecedentes – Visualizar contenido|website=colonizacion.com.uy|accessdate=31 July 2024}} universal male suffrage, the nationalization of foreign-owned companies, the creation of a modern social welfare system. Under Batlle, the electorate was increased from 46,000 to 188,000. Income tax for lower incomes was abolished in 1905, secondary schools were established in every city (1906), the right of divorce was given to women (1907), and the telephone network was nationalized (1915).
Severance pay for commercial employees was introduced in 1914, and an eight-hour working day in 1915. In 1918, with the passing of a new constitution, Uruguay proclaimed a secular republic, with the separation of church and state.Juan Rial, "The Social Imaginary: Utopian Political Myths in Uruguay (Change and Permanence during and after the Dictatorship)", in Saúl Sosnowski and Louise B. Popkin, eds., Repression, Exile, and Democracy: Uruguayan Culture (Durham NC: Duke University Press, 1993), 59-82. {{ISBN|9780822312680}}. Loans and seeds were provided to poor farmers, and agricultural colonies were established,[https://www.gub.uy/junta-departamental-montevideo/institucional/informacion-gestion/actas/acta-n-15442011 Acta N° 1544/2011 Sesión Ordinaria 19/05/2011] while Montevideo also underwent a great deal and social and economic development during these years.{{Cite web|url=https://opinar.com.uy/el-partido-colorado-y-montevideo-realidades-y-utopias.html|title=El Partido Colorado y Montevideo: Realidades y Utopías. – Semanario Opinar|date=27 February 2023|accessdate=31 July 2024}} Hospitals, maternity homes and research institutes, as well as secondary schools, were built in all the capitals of the departments.A Century of Social Welfare in Uruguay Growth to the Limit of the Batllista Social State Issue 5 By Fernando Filgueira, 1995, P.5 Secondary education was integrated into the Secondary and Preparatory Education Section of the University. In addition, a secondary night school was established in 1919 "so that adults who had not finished secondary school could continue their formal education".A Century of Social Welfare in Uruguay Growth to the Limit of the Batllista Social State Issue 5 By Fernando Filgueira, 1995, P.6
The economic policy of Batllism was based on the nationalization of companies, under the idea that certain services should be provided by the State, in search of the common good.{{Cite journal |last=Arias |first=Cecilia |date=2018-10-05 |title=Gobiernos reformistas en Uruguay 1947-1958: ¿profundización de la democracia en los inicios de la Guerra Fría? |url=https://journals.openedition.org/nuevomundo/72965?lang=es |journal=Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos. Nouveaux Mondes Mondes Nouveaux – Novo Mundo Mundos Novos – New World New Worlds |language=es |doi=10.4000/nuevomundo.72965 |issn=1626-0252|doi-access=free }} With a legal limit of the money destined to acquire the companies, among the nationalizations were the supply of electricity—the National Administration of Power Plants and Electrical Transmissions was created—the insurers and the mortgage loans—the State Insurance Bank and the Banco Hipotecario del Uruguay were established in 1911 and nationalized in 1912, respectively.{{Cite web |last=Arregui |first=Miguel |title=El Banco República y la era de José Batlle y Ordóñez |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/el-banco-republica-y-la-era-de-jose-batlle-y-ordonez-20171227500 |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=El Observador}} Furthermore, to compete with the English-administered railways, the construction of roads parallel to the train tracks began, and tram networks were installed in Montevideo, administered by the State.{{Cite web |date=2017-10-30 |title=El primer tren |url=https://www.carasycaretas.com.uy/el-primer-tren |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=carasycaretas.com.uy |language=es-ES}}
The Constitution of 1918, as a result of political negotiation, established an Executive Branch made up of the President of the Republic and the National Council of Administration, a collegiate body.{{Cite web |title=Uruguay – The Constitution |url=https://countrystudies.us/uruguay/62.htm |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=countrystudies.us}} The president—whose term lasted four years—appointed the holders of the ministerial portfolios of the Interior, Defense and Foreign Relations. The National Council of Administration, on the other hand, appointed those of Finance, Instruction, Labor, Health and Public Works. This collegiate body was elected directly, and was renewed every two years by 1/3 of its members.{{Cite web |title=Creación y evolución histórica |url=https://www.gub.uy/presidencia/institucional/creacion-evolucion-historica |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=Uruguay Presidencia |language=es}}File:Estadio Centenario 1930.jpg, the main stadium of the 1930 FIFA World Cup]]Around 1900, infant mortality rates (IMR) in Uruguay were among the world's lowest, indicating a very healthy population. By 1910, however, the IMR leveled off, while it continued to drop in other countries. The leading causes of death—diarrheal and respiratory diseases—did not decline, indicating a growing public health problem.{{cite journal |title=The infant mortality conundrum in Uruguay during the first half of the twentieth century: an analysis according to causes of death |first=Anne-Emanuelle |last=Birn |journal=Continuity & Change |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2010 |volume=25 |issue=3 |pages=435–461|doi=10.1017/S0268416010000263 |s2cid=145495121 }}
Further social and economic reforms were carried out in the years following Batlle's passing.{{Cite web|url=http://parlamento.gub.uy/documentosyleyes/leyes|title=Leyes|website=parlamento.gub.uy|accessdate=31 July 2024}}{{Cite web|url=https://archive.org/search?query=Bulletin+of+the+Pan+American+Union|title=Internet Archive: Digital Library of Free & Borrowable Books, Movies, Music & Wayback Machine|via=Internet Archive|accessdate=31 July 2024}} In 1930, Uruguay hosted and won the first FIFA World Cup.Eduardo Galeano, trans. Mark Fried, Soccer in Sun and Shadow (NY: Open Road Media, 2014). {{ISBN|9781497639041}}. By the end of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th century, the country managed to consolidate its democracy and welfare state, as well as reach high educational and cultural levels, which is why it began to be known as "The Switzerland of the Americas".{{Cite news |date=2012-10-23 |title=Uruguay country profile |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-20041847 |access-date=2024-01-30 |publisher=BBC News |language=en-GB}}
Gabriel Terra dictatorship, 1933–38
File:Oficial de Policía uruguayo 1930's.jpg in the 1930s]]
In the 1920s, Uruguayan society and economy were prosperous and modern. However, the Wall Street crash of 1929 greatly affected the country, which depended heavily on foreign trade. The United Kingdom decided at the British Empire Economic Conference to freeze import volumes from Uruguay, and international meat prices decreased drastically.{{Cite book |last=Arteaga |first=Juan José |title=Historia Contemporánea del Uruguay |year=2018 |isbn=978-9974-675-92-6 |location=Montevideo |pages=96 |language=es}} By 1930, the economic recession already affected the country, with an increase in unemployment, the devaluation of the Uruguayan peso and a reduction of more than 60% of meatpacking production. The welfare state was hit hard by the economic crisis, which also caused a growing political crisis.
In the general election of 1930, Colorado Gabriel Terra was elected president.{{Cite web |date=2019-06-21 |title=Gabriel Terra, el batllista que jugaba en su propia cancha |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/politica/gabriel-terra-el-batllista-que-jugaba-en-su-propia-cancha |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} He took office on 1 March 1931, and from the beginning he was critical of the 1918 Constitution that created the National Council of Administration, which he considered generated ungovernability.{{Cite web |date=2021-07-30 |title=¿Cómo se vivió la dictadura de Gabriel Terra en Colonia? |url=https://ladiaria.com.uy/colonia/articulo/2021/7/como-se-vivio-la-dictadura-de-gabriel-terra-en-colonia/ |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=la diaria |language=es-UY}} The council's measures to alleviate the economic crisis included adjustments for all sectors of society, which increased general discontent and led to the political isolation of the body. The Colorado Batllist majority and the Independent National Party minority of the Council reached an agreement to implement state intervention, for which the creation of the state-owned petroleum company, National Administration of Fuels, Alcohols and Portland (ANCAP), was ordered to prevent foreign currency evasion by foreign companies.{{Cite web |date=2006-10-15 |title=Hace 75 años nacía Ancap, el primer ente industrial del Estado uruguayo |url=https://www.lr21.com.uy/comunidad/226455-hace-75-anos-nacia-ancap-el-primer-ente-industrial-del-estado-uruguayo |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=LARED21 |language=es}}
In rejection of the agreement in the council, the leader of the opposition National Party, Luis Alberto de Herrera joined President Terra in the campaign to carry out a constitutional reform.{{Cite web |date=2020-11-06 |title=El día que Herrera pasó por la casa de Terra para ofrecerle su apoyo limpio y desinteresado {{!}} La Mañana |url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/opinion/el-dia-que-herrera-paso-por-la-casa-de-terra-para-ofrecerle-su-apoyo-limpio-y-desinteresado/ |access-date=2024-01-30 |language=es}} On 30 March, a manifesto by Colorado Batllista politicians opposed to the constitutional reform bill was published in the El Día newspaper, and in response, Terra decreed some extraordinary measures that were annulled by the General Assembly hours later.{{Cite book |last1=Porriní |first1=Rodolfo |title=Bases de la Historia Uruguaya, el golpe de Estado de Terra y la transición al neobatllismo |last2=Schol |first2=Alexis |publisher=La bases |location=Montevideo}} On 31 March 1933, with the support of the National Police —led by his brother-in-law Alfredo Baldomir Ferrari— and the Fire Department, Gabriel Terra carried out a coup d'état, by dissolving Parliament and the National Council of Administration.{{cite book |last=Lewis |first=Paul H. |title=Authoritarian Regimes in Latin America: Dictators, Despots, and Tyrants |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |year=2005 |isbn=978-07425-37392 |location=London |pages=84–87}} The event was called the {{Language with name/for|es|Revolución Marzista|March Revolution}} and began the terrista dictatorship.{{Cite web |date=2020-04-02 |title=31 de marzo de 1933: la historia laudó {{!}} La Mañana |url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/opinion/a-87-anos-del-31-de-marzo-de-1933-la-historia-laudo/ |access-date=2024-01-30 |language=es}}{{Cite web |date=2011-03-06 |title=Gabriel Terra, el poder sin para qué |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/opinion/columnistas/gabriel-terra-el-poder-sin-para-que |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}}
Terra established a traditionalist, protectionist and cooperative regime.{{cite web|url=http://contenidoseducativosdigitales.edu.uy/files/golpe-y-dictadura-de-terra.pdf|title=Golpe y dictadura de Terra - 1933-1938 Uruguay|publisher=Biblioteca Plan Ceibal|website=contenidoseducativosdigitales.edu.uy|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240130074302/https://contenidoseducativosdigitales.edu.uy/files/golpe-y-dictadura-de-terra.pdf|archive-date=30 January 2024|url-status=live}} It was characterized by strong nationalism, with the exaltation of national symbols and military parades.{{Cite book |last=Rodríguez Ayçaguer |first=Ana María |title=La diplomacia del anticomunismo: la influencia del gobierno de Getúlio Vargas en la interrupción de las relaciones diplomáticas de Uruguay con la URSS en diciembre de 1935 |publisher=Departamento de Historia del Uruguay, Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación, Universidad de la República |year=2008 |pages=94 |trans-title=The diplomacy of anti-communism: the influence of the Getúlio Vargas government in the interruption of Uruguay's diplomatic relations with the USSR in December 1935}} In June 1933, elections were held to elect the members of the Constitutional Assembly in charge of drafting a new Constitution. In March 1934, this body appointed him president until 1938. In April a referendum was held in which a new constitution was approved. It abolished the National Council of Administration and transferred its powers to the President, reinstating the single-person executive.{{Cite web |last=Bottinelli |first=Oscar |title=La Constitución ¿über alles? |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/la-constitucion-uber-alles--2018617500 |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=El Observador}} In addition, homosexuality was decriminalized, a large number of rights were constitutionalized, and equality between both sexes and women's suffrage were established.{{cite book |author=Francesca Miller |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sXiTQpR3crwC&pg=PA98 |title=Latin American Women and the Search for Social Justice |publisher=UPNE |year=1991 |isbn=978-0-87451-558-9 |page=98}}
In foreign policy, Terra's regime broke diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union in 1935 and recognized the National Defense Junta of Spain led by Francisco Franco in 1936. It also had close ties with Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany.{{Cite web |last=administrador |title=Nazismo en el Río de la Plata (1933-1945) |url=http://centroshoa.org.uy/2019/04/02/nazismo-en-el-rio-de-la-plata-1933-1945/ |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=Centro Recordatorio del Holocausto de Uruguay |language=es}} During his administration, the construction of the Rincón del Bonete hydroelectric dam was ordered to a consortium of German companies, which transferred its own technicians to the country, who settled in a town in the rural area.{{Cite web |title=Inexplicable faro nazi en Rincón del Bonete |url=http://viajes.elpais.com.uy/2014/08/01/inexplicable-faro-nazi-en-rincon-del-bonete/ |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=viajes.elpais.com.uy |language=en-ES}}
Terra was succeeded by his close political follower and brother-in-law General Alfredo Baldomir Ferrari. During this time, state retained large control over nation's economy and commerce, while pursuing free-market policies.
''Dictablanda'' and new constitution, 1938–47
{{Main|Uruguay during World War II}}In the 1938 election, Colorado Alfredo Baldomir Ferrari was elected president. With the end of Terra's dictatorship, numerous social and political sectors were in favor of a new constitutional reform, to which President Baldomir joined.
File:Admiral Graf Spee Flames.jpg is the best known event of Uruguay during World War II.]]
With the outbreak of World War II, President Baldomir declared the country's neutrality.{{Cite web |last=Arregui |first=Miguel |title=La política exterior uruguaya en la edad de la razón |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/la-politica-exterior-uruguaya-en-la-edad-de-la-razon-201921022350 |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=El Observador}} However, as the months passed, the Uruguayan government began to take a position in favor of the Allies and US directives, which meant a radical change in foreign policy with respect to that of Gabriel Terra.{{Cite web |date=2018-05-12 |title=Una historia olvidada: cuando Uruguay ayudó a Finlandia |url=https://ladiaria.com.uy/politica/articulo/2018/5/una-historia-olvidada-cuando-uruguay-ayudo-a-finlandia/ |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=la diaria |language=es-UY}} On 13 December 1939, the Battle of the River Plate was fought a day's sailing northeast of Uruguay between three British cruisers and the German "pocket battleship" {{ship|German cruiser|Admiral Graf Spee||2}}. After a three-day layover in the port of Montevideo, the captain of Admiral Graf Spee, believing he was hopelessly outnumbered, ordered the ship scuttled on 17 December.
With the escalation of the war, a parliamentary commission was established to investigate German and Italian cultural and sports organizations, which were presumed to be used to cover up Nazi-fascist activities infiltrated in the country.{{Cite book |url=http://archive.org/details/DENUNCIADEACTIVIDADESNAZISENELURUGUAYJosePedroCardozo |title=DENUNCIA DE ACTIVIDADES NAZIS EN EL URUGUAY Jose Pedro Cardozo |language=Spanish}} In addition, a law was passed classifying as an illicit association any organization that disseminated "ideas contrary to the democratic-republican form of government" and the Armed Forces were organized, establishing mandatory military service due to fears of an invasion.{{Cite web |last=Redacción |title=Un, dos, tres... Marchen |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/un-dos-tres-marchen-20114111900 |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=El Observador}}File:Royal Air Force Fighter Command, 1939-1945. CH11386.jpg Spitfire fighter, funded by Uruguayan donations]]In June 1940, Germany threatened to break off diplomatic relations with Uruguay.{{cite news |first=John W. |last=White |title=Minister Ready to Ask for His Passports if Any Local Nazi Leaders Are Deported |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1940/06/20/archives/reich-threatens-uruguayan-break-minister-ready-to-ask-for-his.html |quote=Germany has now begun to exert tremendous political and economic pressure on the Uruguayan Government to halt what Berlin calls an unfriendly anti-German campaign here. The Reich has threatened to break off diplomatic relations if any Nazi leaders are deported. |work=The New York Times |date=20 June 1940 |access-date=22 May 2009}} In December, Germany protested that Uruguay gave safe harbor to {{HMS|Carnarvon Castle}} after she fought the German raider Thor.{{cite news |first=John W. |last=White |title=Nazis Protest Aid to Raider's Victim. Object in Uruguay to Giving Carnarvon Castle 72 Hours to Mend Battle Scars |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1940/12/10/archives/nazis-protest-aid-to-raiders-victim-object-in-uruguay-to-giving.html |quote=The German Government, through its Minister in Montevideo, Otto Langmann, made a formal diplomatic protest this afternoon against... |work=The New York Times |date=10 December 1940 |access-date=22 May 2009}} The ship was repaired with steel plate reportedly salvaged from Admiral Graf Spee.{{cite news |title=Search For Raider |url= http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F70C15F7355A167A93CBA91789D95F448485F9 |quote=The British auxiliary cruiser Carnarvon Castle, hit twenty-two times in a battle with a German sea raider, was being repaired tonight with steel plates reportedly taken from the scuttled German pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee. |work=The New York Times |date=9 December 1940 |access-date=22 May 2009}}
On 25 January 1942, Uruguay terminated its diplomatic relations with Nazi Germany, as did 21 other Latin American nations.{{cite news |last=Hulen |first=Bertram D. |date=22 January 1942 |title=Actual Rupture is left to Congress of each Signatory |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1942/01/22/archives/argentina-agrees-actual-rupture-is-left-to-congress-of-each.html |access-date=22 May 2009 |work=The New York Times |quote=Unanimous agreement by the twenty-one American republics on a resolution for severance of relations with the Axis powers was reached late today at a three-hour consultation in the office of Foreign Minister Oswaldo Aranha of Brazil, who is chairman of the Inter-American Conference.}} In February 1945, Uruguay signed the Declaration by United Nations and subsequently declared war on the Axis powers but did not participate in any actual fighting.{{Cite web|url=https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1945v09/ch95|title=Historical Documents – Office of the Historian|accessdate=31 July 2024}}
Simultaneously with the war in Europe, in Uruguay there was a lack of agreement between the factions of the different parties regarding the constitutional reform. The Herrerism sector led by Luis Alberto de Herrera, which had agreed to the 1934 Constitution, was opposed to the reform bill, and after not supporting the president's candidate for speaker of the Chamber of Representatives, Baldomir replaced three Herrerista ministers.
Due to the lack of political agreement, in the early morning of 21 February 1942, President Baldomir carried out a self-coup by dissolving the General Assembly and the Electoral Court.{{Cite web |date=2020-02-26 |title=Golpe de carnaval {{!}} La Mañana |url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/opinion/golpe-de-carnaval/ |access-date=2024-01-31 |language=es}} In addition, he announced the call for elections for the last Sunday of November of that year. During the coup there were no arrests, no police repression, no censorship, and no violations of human rights, which is why these events are known as the {{Language with name/for|es|Golpe Bueno|Good Coup}} and the regime, as dictablanda.{{Cite web |date=2021-06-26 |title=La responsabilidad "bicolor" en la dictadura civil y militar |url=https://ladiaria.com.uy/politica/articulo/2021/6/la-responsabilidad-bicolor-en-la-dictadura-civil-y-militar/ |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=la diaria |language=es-UY}}
The General Assembly was replaced by a Council of State of 16 members—Colorado Batllistas and Independent Blancos—which was in charge of drafting a new constitutional reform bill. On 29 November 1942, a general election were held in which Colorado Juan José de Amézaga was elected president of the Republic.{{Cite web |date=2021-09-21 |title=Juan José de Amézaga: el presidente olvidado |url=https://ladiaria.com.uy/opinion/articulo/2021/9/juan-jose-de-amezaga-el-presidente-olvidado/ |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=la diaria |language=es-UY}} The Council of State would be dissolved shortly after and replaced by the newly elected parliament.{{Cite web |date=2019-07-04 |title=Juan José de Amézaga y el regreso a la normalidad democrática |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/politica/juan-jose-de-amezaga-y-el-regreso-a-la-normalidad-democratica |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} Along with the general election, a constitutional referendum was held, which won by around 77% of the vote, and gave effect to the Constitution of 1942.{{Cite web |last1=Alisky |first1=Marvin H. |last2=Weinstein |first2=Martin |last3=Vanger |first3=Milton I. |last4=James |first4=Preston E. |date=4 October 2019 |title=Uruguay |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Uruguay/The-struggle-for-national-identity#ref32674 |access-date=4 December 2019 |website=Encyclopædia Britannica}}
New Batllism era, 1947–58
File:Luis Batlle Berres dando un discurso.jpg, 1949]]
In the 1946 general election, Tomás Berreta succeeded Juan José de Amézaga as president.{{Cite web |date=2019-07-12 |title=Tomás Berreta presidente, en vísperas del momento de Luis Batlle Berres |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/politica/tomas-berreta-presidente-en-visperas-del-momento-de-luis-batlle-berres |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} However, in August 1947, he died suffering from prostate cancer and was succeeded by then vice president Luis Batlle Berres—nephew of José Batlle y Ordóñez—who became the third member of the Batlle family to occupy the presidency of the country.{{Cite web |title=Murió Berreta, asume Luis Batlle |url=https://historico.elpais.com.uy/especiales/aniversario/1940/1947/5.html |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=historico.elpais.com.uy}}
File:Urug1950.jpg that won the 1950 World Cup after the victory known as Maracanazo]]
Uruguay reached the peak of its economic prosperity thanks to the World War II and the Korean War. During these conflicts, the country supplied beef, wool, and leather to the Allied armies.{{Cite news |title=Cómo una pequeña ciudad de Uruguay revolucionó nuestra forma de comer |url=https://www.bbc.com/mundo/vert-tra-46917409 |access-date=2024-01-31 |publisher=BBC News Mundo |language=es}} In 1949, to cover the British debt for the beef deliveries during WWII, British-owned railroads and water companies were nationalized.{{Cite web |date=2002-09-16 |title=Hace 50 años AFE pasó de los ingleses a manos uruguayas |url=https://www.lr21.com.uy/comunidad/91853-hace-50-anos-afe-paso-de-los-ingleses-a-manos-uruguayas |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=LARED21 |language=es}} Luis Batlle Berres implemented an interventionist and protectionist policy, which in several aspects continued the import substitution policy developed in the 1930s, and the principles of the Batllism welfare state implemented by José Batlle y Ordóñez at the beginning of the century, for which it was called {{Language with name/for|es|Neobatllismo|New Batllism}}.{{Cite web |date=2016-10-30 |title=Neobatllismo y Estado de Bienestar {{!}} Uruguay Educa |url=http://uruguayeduca.anep.edu.uy/recursos-educativos/661 |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=uruguayeduca.anep.edu.uy |language=es}}
In the 1950 general election Colorado Andrés Martínez Trueba —who was part of List 15, Batlle Berres' faction— was elected president of the Republic.{{Cite book |last=Giménez Rodríguez |first=Alejandro |title=El libro de los presidentes uruguayos: de Fructuoso Rivera a Jorge Batlle (1830-2004) |publisher=LINARDI Y RISSO |year=2004 |isbn=9974-559-48-0 |pages=152–156 |trans-title=The book of Uruguayan presidents: from Fructuoso Rivera to Jorge Batlle (1830-2004)}} After taking office he proposed a constitutional reform to reinstate a collegiate executive, which was supported by the leader of the National Party, Luis Alberto de Herrera, who had previously opposed the collegiate system.{{Cite web |date=2019-07-19 |title=Martínez Trueba, presidente con una reforma en la manga |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/politica/martinez-trueba-presidente-con-una-reforma-en-la-manga |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} In 1951, a constitutional referendum was held that approved the 1952 Constitution, which established the National Council of Government. It was made up of six members from the winning party and three from the second party. Its first integration was a majority of the Colorado Party.{{Cite web |date=2019-07-26 |title=Nuevo triunfo de Luis Batlle Berres, esta vez con el colegiado |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/politica/nuevo-triunfo-de-luis-batlle-berres-esta-vez-con-el-colegiado |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} Martínez Trueba completed his presidential term until 1955 as president of the body.
In 1953, the Uruguayan Air Force was established as a separate branch of the National Army.{{Cite web |title=Ley N° 12070 |url=https://www.impo.com.uy/bases/leyes/12070-1953/1 |access-date=2022-06-16 |website=impo.com.uy}} In the 1954 election, the Colorado Party again obtained a majority in the National Council of Government.[https://legislativo.parlamento.gub.uy/OtrosDocumentos/EnciclopediaElectoral1900_2010.pdf Enciclopedia Electoral 1900–2010] Instituto Factum, p837 In the period 1955–1959, the effects of an economic crisis —caused by the decrease in demand in the world market for agricultural products— worsened and there was an increase in the number of retirees and pensioners, in addition to an increase in the number of public employees, which led to popular discontent with the New Batllism model.{{Cite web |last=Arregui |first=Miguel |title=El naufragio del neobatllismo |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/el-naufragio-del-neobatllismo-201844400 |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=El Observador}}
Blanco collegiate executives era, 1958–66
The National Party won the 1958 election and became the ruling political group in the National Council of Government. The period of government was characterized by constant instability and weakness due to internal conflicts in the National Party between the Herrerism, Ruralism and the White Democratic Union factions—which was aggravated by the death of the party's leader, Luis Alberto de Herrera.
File:Eisenhower en Uruguay (5096971783).jpg in Montevideo, 1960]]
During the first Blanco collegiate term, a liberal and anti-protectionist economic policy was implemented. In 1959 the country was hit by severe floods, which affected agricultural production and therefore the country's economy.{{Cite web |last=Otros |title=Las inundaciones de 1959: el otro gran desastre natural que debió enfrentar el Partido Nacional en el gobierno |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/las-inundaciones-de-1959-el-otro-gran-desastre-natural-que-debio-enfrentar-el-partido-nacional-en-el-gobierno-202041214150 |access-date=2024-02-08 |website=El Observador}} In 1960, a letter of intent was signed with the International Monetary Fund, which sought a loan of 300 million dollars to finance agriculture.{{Cite web |date=2023-03-23 |title=Uruguay y el FMI, una vez más {{!}} La Mañana |url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/opinion/uruguay-y-el-fmi-una-vez-mas/ |access-date=2024-02-08 |language=es}}
The economic crisis led to student militancy and labor unrest. The collective ruling council was unable to agree on harsh measures that were required to stabilize the economy. As the demand for Uruguay's export products plummeted, the collective leadership tried to avoid budget cuts by spending Uruguay's currency reserves and then began taking foreign loans. The Uruguayan peso was devalued, and inflation increased greatly.
In the 1962 election, the National Party once again had the most votes, thus obtaining again a majority in the National Council of Government.{{Cite web |date=2019-08-10 |title=Nuevo triunfo blanco, ahora con mayoría de la "Ubedoxia" |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/politica/nuevo-triunfo-blanco-ahora-con-mayoria-de-la-ubedoxia |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}}
Growing instability, 1966–73
In the early 1960s, social discontent due to the economic crisis that had worsened and union agitation increased, which led to the implementation of {{Language with name/for|es|Medidas Prontas de Seguridad|Prompt Security Measures}}, which are powers established by the Uruguayan Constitution that enable the Government to temporarily suspend certain constitutional guarantees in the event of serious and unforeseen cases of external attack or internal commotion.{{Cite web |last=Otros |title=Las inundaciones de 1959: el otro gran desastre natural que debió enfrentar el Partido Nacional en el gobierno |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/las-inundaciones-de-1959-el-otro-gran-desastre-natural-que-debio-enfrentar-el-partido-nacional-en-el-gobierno-202041214150 |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=El Observador}} Additionally, the far-left guerrilla group National Liberation Movement – Tupamaros (MLN-T), emerged and commenced operations involving weapons theft, bombings targeting government officials and military officers, and kidnappings.{{Cite web |last=Otros |title=Tupamaros (1): el origen |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/tupamaros-1-el-origen-2020101621310 |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=El Observador}}
In the 1966 election, Óscar Diego Gestido was elected president, which meant the return of the Colorado Party to the Estévez Palace. A constitutional referendum removed the National Council of Government and replaced it with a one-man executive under the new Constitution of 1967. In December 1967, President Gestido died without completing the first year of his term.{{Cite web |date=2019-08-17 |title=Óscar Gestido, el "presidente fuerte" cuyo mandato duró nueve meses |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/politica/oscar-gestido-el-presidente-fuerte-cuyo-mandato-duro-nueve-meses |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}} He was succeeded by then vice president Jorge Pacheco Areco, who ordered the suspension of the Socialist Party, the Oriental Revolutionary Movement, the Uruguayan Anarchist Federation and the Revolutionary Left Movement, and the closure of the newspapers El Sol and Época, arguing that these groups and media outlets were members of the Latin American Solidarity Organization, which defended the revolution to rise to power.{{Cite book |last1=Bonfanti |first1=Daniele |title=Historia del Uruguay en el siglo XX (1890-2005) |last2=Broquetas |first2=Magdalena |last3=Cuadro |first3=Inés |last4=Frega |first4=Ana |last5=Islas |first5=Ariadna |last6=Porrini |first6=Rodolfo |last7=Rodríguez Ayçaguer |first7=Ana María |last8=Ruiz |first8=Esther |date=3 March 2024 |publisher=Ediciones de la Banda Oriental |isbn=978-9974-1-0492-1 |edition=3rd |location=Montevideo |pages=171 |language=es}}
File:FokkerAnde1972.jpg plane that crashed on 13 October 1972, with 45 Uruguayans on board and gave rise to the so-called miracle of the Andes]]
During the presidency of Pacheco Areco, student mobilization became widespread, in August 1968 during a demonstration against raids on university centers, the student Líber Arce was killed by police forces.{{Cite web |date=2008-08-14 |title=Los estudiantes recuerdan a sus mártires y muerte de Líber Arce |url=https://www.lr21.com.uy/politica/326255-los-estudiantes-recuerdan-a-sus-martires-y-muerte-de-liber-arce |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=LARED21 |language=es}} In June President Pacheco Areco had implemented {{Language with name/for|es|Medidas Prontas de Seguridad|Prompt Security Measures}}. Additionally, the activity of the far-left guerrilla group Tupamaros (MLN-T) intensified, led by Raúl Sendic Antonaccio, who, years earlier, had organized the sugarcane workers' marches from Bella Unión to Montevideo. In the early 1970s, the group began carrying out more assassinations and kidnappings, including that of the British ambassador to Uruguay, Geoffrey Jackson,{{Cite web |date=2002-01-01 |title=Heath's secret deal to free ambassador |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1380038/Heaths-secret-deal-to-free-ambassador.html |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=The Telegraph |language=en}} and Dan Mitrione, a CIA agent who collaborated with the National Police.{{Cite web |date=2017-09-03 |title=Así mataron a Dan Mitrione |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/opinion/asi-mataron-a-dan-mitrione |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}}
In September 1971, two months before the general election, 106 prisoners belonging to Tupamaros (MLN-T) escaped from the penitentiary of the Punta Carretas neighborhood of Montevideo.{{Cite web |last=Cecchini |first=Por Eduardo AnguitayDaniel |date=2020-02-15 |title=La espectacular fuga de 'Pepe' Mujica y 100 tupamaros de la cárcel con el ingeniero que planificó el túnel |url=https://www.infobae.com/sociedad/2020/02/15/la-espectacular-fuga-de-pepe-mujica-y-100-tupamaros-de-la-carcel-con-el-ingeniero-que-planifico-el-tunel/ |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=infobae |language=es-ES}} The government entrusted the Armed Forces with the anti-subversive fight, which involved the intervention of commanders in political affairs. In November, a general election was held, in which Colorado Juan María Bordaberry was elected president.{{Cite web |date=2019-08-24 |title=1971, las elecciones más controvertidas de la historia uruguaya |url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/politica/1971-las-elecciones-mas-controvertidas-de-la-historia-uruguaya |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=EL PAIS |language=en}}
Military dictatorship, 1973–1985
{{Main|Civic-military dictatorship of Uruguay}}
File:Policía_investigando_la_red_cloacal_de_Montevideo.jpg
Amid the ongoing armed struggle and political violence of the MLN-T, on April 15, 1972, the General Assembly declared a 'state of internal war,' marking the beginning of the Uruguayan intrastate war.{{Cite web |date=2022-04-13 |title=50 años del estado de guerra interno: duras reacciones en el Frente Amplio {{!}} La Mañana |url=https://www.xn--lamaana-7za.uy/politica/50-anos-del-estado-de-guerra-interno-duras-reacciones-en-el-frente-amplio/ |access-date=2025-02-17 |language=es}} This led to a widespread crackdown by the armed forces against guerrilla groups.{{Cite web |title=Uruguay 1978 - Capitulo I |url=https://www.cidh.org/countryrep/Uruguay78sp/cap.1.htm |access-date=2025-02-17 |website=www.cidh.org}} At the same time, the economic situation deteriorated due to high inflation, which sparked a resurgence of labor mobilization. The MLN-T continued its attacks on military and police personnel, killing four young soldiers on guard duty in May.{{Cite web |title=Ejército homenajeó a los caídos en la “masacre de mayo” de 1972 y llamó a la “reconciliación” |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/ejercito-homenajeo-a-los-caidos-en-la-masacre-de-mayo-de-1972-y-llamo-a-la-reconciliacion--202251814330 |access-date=2025-02-17 |website=El Observador |language=es-UY}}
After a series of military operations, a large number of MLN-T members were arrested. In early September, the last remaining Tupamaro leader at large, Raúl Sendic Atonaccio, was captured.{{Cite web |title=La historia necesaria: las negociaciones en el Batallón Florida y la rendición del MLN |url=https://www.montevideo.com.uy/Columnistas/La-historia-necesaria-las-negociaciones-en-el-Batallon-Florida-y-la-rendicion-del-MLN-uc361184 |access-date=2025-02-17 |website=Montevideo Portal |language=es}} However, the influence of the top military commanders in national politics continued to grow. On February 9, 1973, the commanders of the Army and the Air Force announced that they refused to follow the orders of the newly appointed Minister of Defense, Antonio Francese.{{Cite web |title=El decisivo (y muchas veces ignorado) golpe de febrero del 73 |url=https://mediospublicos.uy/el-decisivo-y-muchas-veces-ignorado-golpe-de-febrero-del-73/ |access-date=2025-02-17 |website=Portal Medios Públicos |language=es-UY}}
File:Museo de la Memoria - 2022 03.jpg]]
After defeating the Tupamaros, the military seized power in 1973. Torture was effectively used to gather information needed to break up the MLN{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} and also against trade union officers, members of the Communist Party and even regular citizens.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} Torture practices extended until the end of Uruguayan dictatorship in 1985.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} Uruguay soon had the highest per capita percentage of political prisoners in the world. The MLN heads were isolated in improvised prisons and subjected to repeated acts of torture.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} Emigration from Uruguay rose drastically as large numbers of Uruguayans looked for political asylum throughout the world.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}}
Bordaberry was finally removed from his "president charge" in 1976. He was first succeeded by Alberto Demicheli. Subsequently, a national council chosen by the military government elected Aparicio Méndez. In 1980, in order to legitimize their position, the armed forces proposed a change in the constitution, to be subjected to a popular vote by a referendum. The "No" votes against the constitutional changes totaled 57.2 percent of the turnout, showing the unpopularity of the de facto government that was later accelerated by an economic crisis.
In 1981, General Gregorio Álvarez assumed the presidency. In 1982 primary elections in the political parties were held and in 1983 there began to be greater dialogue between the military junta and the political authorities.{{Cite web |last=Arregui |first=Miguel |title=Las cruciales internas de 1982 y la apertura democrática |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/las-cruciales-internas-de-1982-y-la-apertura-democratica-201961910254 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231112191342/https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/las-cruciales-internas-de-1982-y-la-apertura-democratica-201961910254 |archive-date=2023-11-12 |access-date=2023-12-01 |website=El Observador}} In November, after the negotiations were canceled due to lack of agreement, a massive demonstration was held at the Obelisk of the Constituents in Montevideo, to demand a democratic transition.{{Cite web |last=Redacción |title=Leé un adelanto del libro "Un río de Libertad", a 40 años del acto del Obelisco |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/lee-un-adelanto-del-libro-un-rio-de-libertad-a-40-anos-del-acto-del-obelisco-2023112791549 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231127133538/https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nota/lee-un-adelanto-del-libro-un-rio-de-libertad-a-40-anos-del-acto-del-obelisco-2023112791549 |archive-date=2023-11-27 |access-date=2023-12-01 |website=El Observador}} From July to August 1984, talks were held that led to the Naval Club Pact, in which the path to the return to civil rule was outlined.{{Cite web |title=Reuniones Cívico-Militares |url=https://clubnaval.com.uy/home/sobre-el-club-naval/reuniones-civico-militares/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230616150019/https://clubnaval.com.uy/home/sobre-el-club-naval/reuniones-civico-militares/ |archive-date=16 June 2023 |access-date=2023-12-03 |language=es }}
A general election was held later in 1984. Colorado Party leader Julio María Sanguinetti won the presidency and, following the brief interim Presidency of Rafael Addiego Bruno, served from 1985 to 1990. The first Sanguinetti administration implemented economic reforms and consolidated democratization following the country's years under military rule. Nonetheless, Sanguinetti never supported the human rights violations accusations, and his government did not prosecute the military officials who engaged in repression and torture against either the Tupamaros or the MLN. Instead, he opted for signing an amnesty treaty called in Spanish "Ley de Amnistia".
Around 180 Uruguayans are known to have been killed during the 12-year military rule from 1973 to 1985.{{cite news |title=New find in Uruguay 'missing' dig |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/4494286.stm |publisher=BBC News |date=3 December 2005 |access-date=4 February 2011}} Most were killed in Argentina and other neighboring countries, with only 36 of them having been killed in Uruguay.{{cite news |title=Uruguay dig finds 'disappeared' |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4485288.stm |publisher=BBC News |date=30 November 2005 |access-date=4 February 2011}} A large number of those killed were never found, and the missing people have been referred to as the "disappeared", or "desaparecidos" in Spanish.
Recent history
File:Montevideo Décembre 2007 - Plaza de Armas 2.jpg]]
Sanguinetti's economic reforms, focusing on the attraction of foreign trade and capital, achieved some success and stabilized the economy. In order to promote national reconciliation and facilitate the return of democratic civilian rule, Sanguinetti secured public approval by plebiscite of a controversial general amnesty for military leaders accused of committing human rights violations under the military regime and sped the release of former guerrillas.
The National Party's Luis Alberto Lacalle won the 1989 presidential election and served from 1990 to 1995. President Lacalle executed major economic structural reforms and pursued further liberalization of trade regimes, including Uruguay's inclusion in the Southern Common Market (MERCOSUR) in 1991. Despite economic growth during Lacalle's term, adjustment and privatization efforts provoked political opposition, and some reforms were overturned by referendum.
In the 1994 elections, former President Sanguinetti won a new term, which ran from 1995 until March 2000. As no single party had a majority in the General Assembly, the National Party joined with Sanguinetti's Colorado Party in a coalition government. The Sanguinetti government continued Uruguay's economic reforms and integration into MERCOSUR. Other important reforms were aimed at improving the electoral system, social security, education, and public safety. The economy grew steadily for most of Sanguinetti's term until low commodity prices and economic difficulties in its main export markets caused a recession in 1999, which continued into 2002.
The 1999 national elections were held under a new electoral system established by a 1996 constitutional amendment. Primaries in April decided single presidential candidates for each party, and national elections on 31 October determined representation in the legislature. As no presidential candidate received a majority in the October election, a runoff was held in November. In the runoff, Colorado Party candidate Jorge Batlle, aided by the support of the National Party, defeated Broad Front candidate Tabaré Vázquez.{{Cite news|title=Battle wins Uruguay election|url=https://www.irishtimes.com/news/battle-wins-uruguay-election-1.255394|access-date=2022-02-09|newspaper=The Irish Times|language=en}}
The Colorado and National Parties continued their legislative coalition, as neither party by itself won as many seats as the 40 percent of each house won by the Broad Front coalition. The formal coalition ended in November 2002, when the Blancos withdrew their ministers from the cabinet, although the Blancos continued to support the Colorados on most issues.
Batlle's five-year term was marked by economic recession and uncertainty, first with the 1999 devaluation of the Brazilian real, then with the outbreaks of foot-and-mouth disease (aftosa) in Uruguay's key beef sector in 2001, and finally with the political and economic collapse of Argentina. Unemployment rose to close to 20 percent, real wages fell, the peso was devalued, and the percentage of Uruguayans in poverty reached almost 40 percent.
These worsening economic conditions played a part in turning public opinion against the free market economic policies adopted by the Batlle administration and its predecessors, leading to popular rejection through plebiscites of proposals for privatization of the state petroleum company in 2003 and of the state water company in 2004.
In 1989, elections were held in Montevideo which saw the candidate of the Broad Front, Tabaré Vázquez, elected mayor of Montevideo. Vasquez would go on to hold the post of mayor from 1990 to 1994. The victory of the Broad Front was arguably the result of long-standing social problems, with one observer noting "The combination of economic crisis, military dictatorship and neoliberal policies had led to a drop in living standards and social equality as well as a decrease in social spending and urban services. The social safety net that had once made Uruguay a model welfare state was badly frayed, and government, from garbage collection to mass transport, no longer worked well. Added to these traumas was the trial of dealing with a municipal bureaucracy notorious for its arrogance and inefficiency. Paying one's taxes or filling out a forin could take hours; securing services from the centralized municipal government could take years." The Frente Amplio promised to tackle these problems, creating a municipal government that was efficient, efficacious and responsive, services that were modern and affordable, and a city whose financial burdens and economic benefits were more equitably distributed. The political subtext was clear. If the Frente Amplio could turn Montevideo around in so dramatic a fashion, it would be in a position to mount a serious challenge for national power, and Vázquez would become a credible presidential candidate. During the time the Broad Front governed Montevideo, a range of social initiatives were carried out. New street lights were installed, while housing construction was promoted by giving municipal lands to communities "for cooperative self-built residential housing, and by funding the rental of construction machinery and contributing materials at low prices which are repaid through long-term loans from the public Banco Hipotecario or foreign non-governmental organizations (NGOs)". More land titles were given to squatters than any previous administration, and a construction-materials "bank" was established to help people improve their housing. Public-vaccination plans were also expanded and an eye-care and clinic plan was initiated, though not fully implemented, while distribution of subsidized milk was tripled and free milk provided for institutional daytime snacks. In addition, the burden of subsidizing students and the elderly from other bus riders through higher fares was shifted to the municipality through direct subsidies to the bus companies.{{Cite web|url=https://nacla.org/article/frente-amplio-montevideo|title=The Frente Amplio in Montevideo|website=NACLA|accessdate=31 July 2024}}
In 2004, Uruguayans elected Tabaré Vázquez as president, while giving the Broad Front coalition a majority in both houses of parliament.{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/01/world/americas/uruguays-left-makes-history-by-winning-presidential-vote.html|title=Uruguay's Left Makes History by Winning Presidential Vote|newspaper=The New York Times|date=November 2004|last1=Rohter|first1=Larry}} The newly elected government, while pledging to continue payments on Uruguay's external debt, also promised to undertake a crash jobs programs to attack the widespread problems of poverty and unemployment.
File:Actividades conmemorativas de las Instrucciones Año XIII 22.jpg in Montevideo]]
In 2009, former Tupamaro and agriculture minister, José Mujica, was elected president, subsequently succeeding Vázquez on 1 March 2010.{{Cite news|last=Moffett|first=Matt|date=2009-11-30|title=In Uruguay, Ex-Militant Mujica Is Elected|language=en-US|work=The Wall Street Journal|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB125947900254668229|access-date=2021-04-02|issn=0099-9660}} Abortion was legalized in 2012,{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-19986107|title = Uruguay legalises abortion|publisher = BBC News|date = 17 October 2012}} followed by same-sex marriage{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-23571197|title = Same-sex marriage bill comes into force in Uruguay|publisher = BBC News|date = 5 August 2013}} and cannabis in the following year.{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47785648|title=Uruguay: The world's marijuana pioneer|publisher=BBC News|date=3 April 2019}} A number of other reforms were carried out during the Broad Front's time in office in areas like social security,[https://cuestaduarte.org.uy/sites/default/files/2022-04/Relaciones_Laborales_10_anos_de_cambios_2014.pdf Las Relaciones Laborales en Uruguay 10 anos de cambios, Instituto Cuesta Duarte, P.49-50]{{Cite web|url=https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/progdesc/ssptw/2018-2019/americas/uruguay.html|title=Social Security Programs Throughout the World: The Americas, 2019 – Uruguay|website=Social Security Administration Research, Statistics, and Policy Analysis|accessdate=31 July 2024}} taxation,{{Cite web|url=https://bti-project.org/fileadmin/api/content/en/downloads/reports/country_report_2010_URY.pdf|title=BTI 2010 | Uruguay Country Report, P.17|accessdate=31 July 2024}} education,{{Cite web|url=https://www.frenteamplio.uy/logros-del-gobierno-del-fa/item/298-educacion|title=Educación|accessdate=31 July 2024|archive-date=7 October 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231007125313/https://www.frenteamplio.uy/logros-del-gobierno-del-fa/item/298-educacion|url-status=dead}} housing,{{Cite web|url=https://mpp.org.uy/que-hizo-pepe-mujica-en-su-gobierno/|title=Qué hizo Pepe Mujica en su gobierno|first=Bunker|last=Web|date=15 October 2019|website=Movimiento de Participación Popular|accessdate=31 July 2024}} tobacco control,{{Cite web|url=https://fctc.who.int/newsroom/news/item/23-12-2020-tribute-to-dr-tabar%C3%A9-v%C3%A1zquez-global-health-hero-for-a-tobacco-free-world|title=Tribute to Dr Tabaré Vázquez: Global Health Hero for a tobacco-free world|website=fctc.who.int|accessdate=31 July 2024}} and worker's rights.{{Cite web|url=https://www.frenteamplio.uy/trabajo/item/498-conquista-derechos-laborales|title=La conquista de derechos laborales|accessdate=31 July 2024|archive-date=7 October 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231007145143/https://www.frenteamplio.uy/trabajo/item/498-conquista-derechos-laborales|url-status=dead}}[https://cuestaduarte.org.uy/sites/default/files/2022-04/Relaciones_Laborales_10_anos_de_cambios_2014.pdf Las Relaciones Laborales en Uruguay 10 anos de cambios, Instituto Cuesta Duarte, P.45-48][https://web.archive.org/web/20241203033103/https://www.hemisferioizquierdo.uy/single-post/2016/11/07/eran-paye-los-consejos-de-salarios-rurales-el-recorrido-de-una-larga-discusi%C3%B3n Eran paye. Los consejos de salarios rurales: el recorrido de una larga discussion Agustín Juncal 7 nov 2016]
The number of trade union activists has quadrupled since 2003, from 110,000 to over 400,000 in 2015 for a working population of 1.5 million people. According to the International Trade Union Confederation, Uruguay has become the most advanced country in the Americas in terms of respect for "fundamental labour rights, in particular freedom of association, the right to collective bargaining and the right to strike".
In November 2014, former president Tabaré Vázquez defeated center-right opposition candidate Luis Lacalle Pou in the presidential election.{{Cite news|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-uruguay-election-idUSKCN0JE04C20141130|title = Uruguayan ruling party's Vazquez wins presidential election|agency = Reuters|date = 30 November 2014|last1 = Farat|first1 = Malena Castaldi}} On 1 March 2015, Tabaré Vázquez was sworn in as the new President of Uruguay to succeed president José Mujica.{{Cite web|title=Tabare Vazquez sworn in as Uruguay's new president|url=http://www.efe.com/efe/english/portada/tabare-vazquez-sworn-in-as-uruguay-s-new-president/50000260-2549869|access-date=2022-02-09|website=efe.com|language=en}}
In November 2019, conservative Luis Lacalle Pou won the election, bringing the end to 15 years of leftist rule of Broad Front. On 1 March 2020, Luis Lacalle Pou, the son of former president Luis Alberto Lacalle, was sworn in as the new President of Uruguay.{{Cite web|last=Werner|first=Fabian|date=1 March 2020|title=Uruguay Presidential Inauguration Sees Latin 'Pink Tide' Recede Further|url=https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2020-03-01/uruguay-presidential-inauguration-sees-latin-pink-tide-recede-further|website=U.S. News}}{{Cite web|date=2020-03-01|title=Uruguay's new center-right president sworn in|url=https://www.france24.com/en/20200301-uruguay-s-new-center-right-president-sworn-in|access-date=2022-02-09|website=France 24|language=en}}
On 1 March 2025, Yamandu Orsi took office as Uruguay's new president, meaning the left-wing coalition, the Broad Front, returned to power after a five-year interruption.{{cite news |title=Uruguay's new leftist president takes office |url=https://www.voanews.com/a/uruguay-s-new-leftist-president-takes-office/7994077.html |work=Voice of America |date=2 March 2025 |language=en}}
See also
{{Portal|Latin America|History}}
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
- History of Argentina
- History of Brazil
- List of presidents of Uruguay
- List of Uruguayan historians
- Politics of Uruguay
- Portuguese colonization of the Americas
- Spanish colonization of the Americas
{{div col end|2}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
- {{cite book |title=Uruguay. The Bradt Travel Guide |last=Burford |first=Tim |date=January 2014 |publisher=Bradt Travel Guides Ltd |location=Chalfont St Peter, Bucks |isbn=978-1-84162-477-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=o9eYBAAAQBAJ|edition=2nd }}
- Cameselle-Pesce, Pedro; Sharnak, Debbie, eds. (2024) Uruguay in Transnational Perspective (Routledge, 2024) [https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=60445 scholarly online book review]
- {{cite journal |last1=Duyne Barenstein |first1=Jennifer |last2=Pfister |first2=Michael |title=The Professionalization of a Social Movement: Housing Cooperatives in Uruguay |journal=Built Environment |date=2019 |volume=45 |issue=3 |pages=382–397 |doi=10.2148/benv.45.3.382|s2cid=202304777 }}
- {{cite book |title=A Political Economy of Uruguay since 1870 |last=Finch |first=M. H. J. |publisher=Macmillan |location=London |year=1981 |isbn=978-03126-22442}}
- {{cite journal |title=Gauchos, Gringos and Gallegos: The Assimilation of Italian and Spanish Immigrants in the Making of Modern Uruguay (1880–1930) |last=Goebel |first=Michael |journal=Past and Present |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=August 2010 |issue=208 |pages=191–229|doi=10.1093/pastj/gtp037 }}
- {{cite book |title=Cultures of the World – Uruguay |last=Jermyn |first=Leslie |publisher=Marshall Cavendish |location=Tarrytown, New York |year=1999 |isbn=0-7614-0873-8 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/uruguay00jerm }}
- {{cite book |url=https://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft567nb3f6&chunk.id=d0e9182&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d0e9182&brand=ucpress |title=Why Not Corporatism? Re-democratisation and Regime Formation in Uruguay |work=Latin America in the 1940s (Chapter 8) |last1=López-Alves |first1=Fernando |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley and Los Angeles |year=1994 |pages=187–206}}
- {{cite journal |title=State-Building and Political Systems in Nineteenth-Century Argentina and Uruguay |last1=López-Alves |first1=Fernando |last2=Rock |first2=David |journal=Past and Present |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=May 2000 |issue=167 |pages=176–202}}
- {{cite book |title=Latin America's Wars (Volume 1): The Age of the Caudillo, 1791–1899 |last=Scheina |first=Robert L. |publisher=Potomac Books, Inc. |location=Dulles, Virginia |year=2003 |isbn=978-1-57488-450-0}}
- {{cite book |title=Uruguay: The Politics of Failure |last=Weinstein |first=Martin |publisher=Praeger Publishing |location=Santa Barbara, California |year=1975 |isbn=978-08371-78455 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/uruguaypoliticso0000wein }}
External links
{{Commons category}}
- {{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Uruguay |title=Uruguay |first1=Preston E. |last1=James |first2=Milton I. |last2=Vanger |first3=Marvin H. |last3=Alisky |first4=Martin |last4=Weinstein |publisher=Encyclopaedia Britannica |year=2019}}
- {{cite web |url=http://eh.net/encyclopedia/article/Bertola.Uruguay.final |title=An Overview of the Economic History of Uruguay since the 1870s |work=EH.NET |publisher=Economic History Association |author=Luis Bértola}}
- {{cite web |url=https://data.mongabay.com/reference/country_studies/uruguay/HISTORY.html |title=History of Uruguay |year=2013 |publisher=Mongabay.com}}
- [https://anaforas.fic.edu.uy/jspui/handle/123456789/660Anales de la Universidad Año 41, entrega 134 (1934), Abarca los Gobiernos de Idiarte Borda, Cuestas, BatUe y Ordóñez, Williman y Battle y Ordóñez, desde 1894 hasta 1915]{{Dead link|date=December 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
- [https://anaforas.fic.edu.uy/jspui/handle/123456789/659 Anales de la Universidad Año 41, entrega 133 (1934), Abarca los Gobiernos de Latorre, Vidal, Santos, Tajes y Herrera y Obes desde 1876 hasta 1894.]
- [https://anaforas.fic.edu.uy/jspui/handle/123456789/11293 Anales de la Universidad, Año 41, Entrega 131 (1933), Abarca los Gobiernos de Rivera, Suárez, Giró, Flores y Pereyra. Desde 1838 hasta 1860.]
- [https://anaforas.fic.edu.uy/jspui/handle/123456789/11337 Anales de la Universidad Año 41, entrega N° 132 (1933)]
{{History of South America}}