Rafael Urdaneta

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Urdaneta and the second or maternal family name is Faría.
Rafael Urdaneta
5th Minister of National Defense (Venezuela)
In office
1828–1829
President Simón Bolívar
Preceded by Carlos Soublette
Succeeded by Carlos Soublette
4th President of Gran Colombia
In office
September 5, 1830  April 30, 1831
Preceded by Joaquín Mosquera
Succeeded by Domingo Caycedo
9th Minister of National Defense (Venezuela)
In office
1839–1845
President José Antonio Páez (1839–43), Carlos Soublette (1843-1847)
Preceded by Guillermo Smith
Succeeded by Francisco Mejía
Personal details
Born Rafael José Urdaneta y Faría
(1788-10-24)24 October 1788
Maracaibo, Captaincy General of Venezuela
(present-day Venezuela)
Died 23 August 1845(1845-08-23) (aged 56)
Paris, France
Nationality Venezuelan
Spouse(s) Dolores Vargas Paris (1822—1845)
Children Rafael Guillermo Urdaneta Vargas
Luciano Urdaneta Vargas
Octaviano Urdaneta Vargas
Adolfo Urdaneta Vargas
Eleázar Urdaneta Vargas
Nephtalí Urdaneta Vargas
Amenodoro Urdaneta Vargas
Susana Urdaneta Vargas
Rosa Margarita Urdaneta Vargas
María Dolores Urdaneta Vargas
Rodolfo Urdaneta Vargas

Rafael José Urdaneta y Faría (24 October 1788 23 August 1845) was a Venezuelan General and hero of the Spanish American wars of independence.[1] He was an ardent supporter of Simon Bolivar's ideals, as well as one of Bolivar's most loyal allies.[2]

Personal life

Dolores Vargas Paris, wife of Urdaneta

Rafael Urdaneta was born in Maracaibo, Captaincy General of Venezuela to a prominent family of Spanish descent on October 24, 1788. He was a son of the marriage between Miguel Geronimo de Urdaneta y Troconis and Maria Alejandrina Faria. He began his elementary education in Maracaibo, and his secondary education in Caracas. Prior to the independence war he was a student of Latin and philosophy.

He married Dolores Vargas Paris, a young and renown heroine of the city of Santa Fe, in Santa Fe, Gran Colombia, on August 31, 1822. Before Gran Colombia was dissolved in 1831, the marriage had enjoyed much popularity. However, following the dissolution and the establishment of a dictatorship in the Republic of New Granada, they were forced to flee the country. Upon reaching Maracaibo, Venezuela (Urdaneta's native city), they suffered persecution from General Paez, who had become one of Bolivar's ideological adversaries after the end of the Venezuelan War of Independence. Urdaneta and Dolores were supporters of Bolivar's cause so they were forced to flee again, this time to Curazao.

In 1832, they were able to return to Caracas through a license granted to the family by the government of Venezuela, but it conditioned Urdaneta to not intervene in the politics of the country. The family moved to Santa Ana de Coro, where a revolt erupted against the government. This opened the doors for Urdaneta to venture into Venezuelan politics once again. He was eventually able to retain a position as a senator until 1845.

In 1845 he was appointed Envoy of Venezuela to Spain, but he died in Paris, France, on the 23rd of August of that year due to complications from kidney stones, and before ever reaching Spain.

Urdaneta is buried in the National Pantheon of Venezuela since May 16, 1876.

In 2015, the 24th of October was decreed as a national holiday in Venezuela to commemorate him.[3]

Military career

Encouraged by his uncle, Martin de Urdaneta y Troconis, who had been employed in Santa Fe, Viceroyalty of New Granada as the chief accountant of the Court of Accounts of the Real Audiencia of Santa Fe, Urdaneta traveled to that city in 1804 with the intention of developing his studies. He lived several years in Santa Fe, acquiring experience in the administration of military affairs.

On July 20, 1810, a junta was formed in Santa Fe: one of the many independence movements that were beginning to take shape across the entire continent following the establishment of the Caracas Junta in April of that year; Urdaneta joined the movement. He was incorporated into the first battalion of the patriot army of New Granada on November 1, 1810, as a lieutenant, and the following year fought in the Campaña del Sur of New Granada. Following the Battle of Santa Fe in 1813, he was captured by the royalists and imprisoned for a few months before being liberated.

Admirable Campaign

Simon Bolivar had been exiled from Venezuelan territory after the collapse of the first republic he had established in 1811, but by 1813 he was fighting the royalists in the New Granada region. It was during this time that Urdaneta was able to join Bolivar's revolutionary army. Bolivar's Admirable Campaign to reclaim Venezuela proved to be a stage for Urdaneta. He distinguished himself under the command of colonel Jose Felix Ribas on July 2, 1813, in the Battle of Niquitao, and was decisive for the patriot victory at the Battle of Taguanes against the royalist forces of Colonel Julian Izquierdo.

Following the patriot victory and the establishment of the Second Republic of Venezuela, in the report before the New Granada Congress at Tunja, Bolivar described Urdaneta as: "worthy of recommendation and deserving of all esteem from the government for the valor and intelligence with which he distinguished himself in action."

From that moment on he led numerous military actions, among which stand out the Battle of Barbula, the Retreat to the East, the Siege of Santa Fe (after which he was ascended to Lieutenant general with only 26 years of age), the Capture of Maracaibo, and the March to San Carlos in 1821 that liberated the Province of Coro and set the stage for the Battle of Carabobo. He did not participate in the Battle of Carabobo since Bolivar considered that the exhaustion his troops had suffered during the march was too great. In view of Urdaneta's service, Bolivar requests at this moment that he be ascended to General Officer.[4]

Following the Battle of Carabobo in 1821, with Venezuela independent and after years of service to the patriotic cause, Urdaneta became one of Bolivar's closest friends and collaborators.

Conspiración Septembrina

In 1828 Urdaneta, then Minister of War and presiding over the Cabinet, was in charge of judging the alleged traitors behind the September Conspiracy by which an attempt was made to assassinate Bolivar, then president of Gran Colombia. Convinced without any doubt that Francisco de Paula Santander was the head conspirator, Urdaneta, along with the majority of the ministers in the Cabinet, sentenced him to death. Bolivar was afraid for the stability of the union between New Granada and Venezuela, so he forced Santander to lifelong exile instead. However, conflicts such as this one, in addition to the assassination of Antonio Jose de Sucre in 1830, ultimately led to the collapse of Gran Colombia and; therefore, the union for which Bolivar had sacrificed so much to maintain since independence was achieved.

Throughout his life, Urdaneta also served as Chief of Army Staff and as Minister of War and Navy.

Bolivar called him: "El Brillante" ("The Brilliant"), for his remarkable sense of strategy in battle; a name now used to refer to him in Venezuelan historiography.[5]

He is considered to have been "the most loyal of loyals to Bolivar".[3] His loyalty to the patriotic cause and the ideals of Bolivar was perpetuated in the words he once said to him:

"...if two men are sufficient to liberate our homeland, ready am I to follow you." ("General, si dos hombres bastan para libertar la patria, presto estoy yo para acompañarlo a usted").[6]

Presidency

Monument to Rafael Urdaneta in the National Pantheon of Venezuela

In 1830, the rising animosity between New Granadians and Venezuelans reached a boiling point. At the time, the Venezuelan battalion Callao, loyal to General Bolívar, was stationed in Bogotá. Another battalion, loyal to General Francisco de Paula Santander, and also stationed in the same city, persuaded the Government to relocate Callao to the city of Tunja. This action provoked an uproar in the civilian population from Venezuela that lived in Bogotá, and triggered a confrontation between both battalions.

The Callao battalion defeated the Neogranadine battalion and President Joaquín Mosquera y Arboleda and Vice President Domingo Caycedo y Sanz de Santamaría fled from the capital. On 5 September 1830, General Urdaneta took control of the presidency under the title of "Provisional Chief of the Government of the Republic of Colombia". It was the hope of General Urdaneta and his allies to persuade Bolívar, who had resigned in May of that year, to return to the capital and once again take over as president.

When it became clear that Bolívar would not return to the capital, and in an effort to restore peace and order, Urdaneta ordered Congress to convene on 15 June 1831, in the city of Villa de Leyva.

Nevertheless, before congress could convene, the Neogranadine generals expressed their displeasure against General Urdaneta, and military actions erupted throughout the country. Generals José María Obando and José Hilario López took control of the southern states of New Granada, and General José Salvador Córdova Muñoz of the northern states. On 14 April 1831, the advancing armies proclaimed Caycedo as the legitimate head of the executive, and requested General Urdaneta to enter into peace negotiations. Urdaneta accepted, and met with the Neogranadine generals in the town of Apulo. On 28 April both parties signed the Treaty of Apulo, by which peace was secured and Urdaneta relinquished power.

References

  1. Mis Mejores Amigos - 110 Biografías de Venezolanos Ilustres. Vinicio Romero Martínez. Editorial Larense. Caracas. 1987
  2. Monografias "Generales de Bolivar", 2013
  3. 1 2 http://www.noticias24.com/venezuela/noticia/300689/natalicio-de-rafael-urdaneta-sera-decretado-como-fecha-patria/
  4. http://www.vtv.gob.ve/articulos/2015/10/24/hace-227-anos-nacio-el-general-rafael-urdaneta-procer-de-la-independencia-de-venezuela-3198.html
  5. INCES "Erase una vez un hombre llamado Rafael Urdaneta", 2013
  6. Villamarín Pulido, Luis Alberto. Delirio del Libertador: Biografía del general Simón Bolívar. Luis Villamarin, 2014, p. 99. "Delirio del Libertador"

See also

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