Latin Americans Win Independence Chapter 8.1 Latin Americans Win Independence
Nationalist Revolution Sweeps the West Chapter 8
Colonial Society Divided Race and Class System Latin America has social classes that determine job and authority Peninsulares – Born in Spain, the head the colonial government , society
Creoles – American born Spaniards who can become army officers Mestizos have both European and Native ancestry
Mulattos – have both European and African ancestry Slaves, Indians at the bottom of security
Revolution in the Americas Haiti is first Latin American territory to gain freedom from colonial master Slave revolt in 1791 led by Toussaint L’Ouverture
Haiti Santo Domingue declares independence in 1803 and is renamed Haiti First black colony to win independence
Creoles Lead Independence Inspired by the enlightenment, Latin American revolutionaries fight for independence
Simon Bolivar – Wealthy Creole leads Venezuela in revolution Jose de San Martin – leader of Argentinean revolutionary forces
Latin America Bolivar – Venezuela declares independence in 1811, Bolivar wins war by 1821 San Martin – Argentina independence in 1816, San Martin helps free Chile
Latin America Bolivar’s and San Martin’s forces drive Spanish out of Peru in 1824
Mexican Independence Padre Miguel Hidalgo – Priest who launches Mexican revolt in 1810 leads 80,000 Indian and mestizo followers on Mexico City
Mexico Jose Maria Morelos – leads revolt after Hidalgo’s defeat, but loses Mexican creoles react, declare Mexico independent in 1821, Central America breaks away from Mexico in 1823
Brazil’s Royal Liberator Bloodless Revolution – Napoleon invades Portugal causing royal family to move to Brazil in 1807 Portuguese court returns to Portugal after Napoleons defeat in 1815
Portuguese Prince Dom Pedro stays behind in Brazil Accepts Brazillians’ request to rule their new country Official declaration of independence in September of 1822
Independence By 1830, nearly all Latin American regions win independence