Cisplatina

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Província Cisplatina
Province of Cisplatina
Province of Brazil

1815 – 1828
Flag Coat of arms
Flag Coat of arms
Location of Cisplatina
Uruguay under Portuguese and Brazilian rule
Capital Montevideo
President
 - 1815-28 Carlos Frederico Lecor
History
 - Invaded by United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves 1811
 - Annexed to Brazil 1815
 - Independence 28 August1828
Today part of Flag of Uruguay Uruguay

The Cisplatina Province (literally, Province of this side of the Rio de la Plata from the Brazilian perspective) was a Brazilian province in existence from 1815 to 1828. The province was formed after the Portuguese captured and subsequently annexed the territory of the Banda Oriental, which today forms the independent nation of Uruguay.

The Banda Oriental had always been a sparsely populated contested border-area between the Spanish and Portuguese Colonial Empires. In the First Treaty of San Ildefonso in 1777 the control of the area was given to Spain.

In 1811, José Gervasio Artigas, who became Uruguay's national hero, launched a successful revolt against Spain, defeating them on May 18 in the Battle of Las Piedras. In 1814 he formed the Liga Federal (Federal League) of which he was declared Protector.

The constant growth of influence and prestige of the Federal League frightened Portugal (because of its republicanism), and in August, 1816 they invaded the Eastern Province, with the intention of destroying the protector and his revolution. The Portuguese forces, thanks to their numerical and material superiority, occupied Montevideo on January 20th, 1817, and finally after a struggle for three years in the countryside, defeated Artigas in the Battle of Tacuarembó. In 1821, the Provincia Oriental del Río de la Plata (present-day Uruguay), was annexed by Brazil under the name of Província Cisplatina. Brazil justified the incorporation of the province through the general aclamation of an Assembly of “Eastern notables” on July 18, 1821.

The borders of Cisplatina were : on the east the Atlantic Ocean, on the south the Rio de la Plata, on the west the Uruguay River and on the north the Cuareim river until la Cuchilla de Santa Ana. This means that territories traditionally belonging to the Banda Oriental had been annexed to the jurisdiction of Rio Grande do Sul.

The Latin area code cis , meaning of this side, suggests that the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves, had plans to also annex the present Argentinian territory as the Transplatina Province, basing themselves on the hereditary rights of Charlotte of Spain.

On September 15, 1823, the envoy of the Argentinian president Bernardino Rivadavia, Valentin Gómez, wrote in Rio de Janeiro a memorandum in which it was stated that at no moment the Eastern Province had stopped belonging to the territory of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, present-day Argentina. Gomez received this answer: "The incorporation of the Cisplatina Province into the Empire is an act of the free will of all its inhabitants, and Brazil, by the sacrifices it has done, is resolute to defend that territory, not allowing that the opinion with respect to the incorporation from that State to the United Provinces is raised again. (...) the Government of S.M.I. (...) cannot enter with the one of Buenos Aires in negotiations that have as fundamental base the cession of the Cisplatino State, whose inhabitants do not have to leave" (1)

As a reaction a group of Uruguayan nobles, the Thirty-Three Orientals led by Juan Antonio Lavalleja declared independence on August 25, 1825 supported by the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata .

This led to the 500-day Argentina-Brazil War. Despite the Argentinian victory in the battle of Ituzaingó , neither side gained the upper hand, and in 1828 the Treaty of Montevideo, fostered by the United Kingdom, gave birth to Uruguay as an independent state.

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