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The War of 1863 [1] (Spanish: Guerra de 1863) was a conflict fought between El Salvador and Guatemala from 13 February 1863 to 26 October 1863.
Guatemalan President Rafael Carrera sought to overthrow Salvadoran President Gerardo Barrios, citing his attacks on the Catholic Church in El Salvador during his presidency as justification. Barrios was overthrown on 26 October 1863 and was replaced by a conservative politician, Francisco Dueñas, ending the war.
On 12 March 1859, General Gerardo Barrios overthrew Salvadoran President José María Peralta and declared himself President of El Salvador. [2] The coup and ascension of Barrios to power caused many conservative politicians to flee to Guatemala for safety. [1]
Guatemalan President Rafael Carrera was a conservative politician while Barrios was a liberal politician and both ruled as dictators of their respective countries. [1] Barrios passed anticlerical legislation in El Salvador to diminish the power and influence of the Catholic Church while Carrera made agreements with the Church to expand its influence and uphold its privileges. [1]
Carrera initially supported Barrios believing that a strong ruler in El Salvador would be in his best interests, even visiting San Salvador from December 1860 to January 1861 to improve relations. [1] However, in the following years, Barrios began attacking Carrera calling him a "savage" while Guatemalan newspapers attacked Barrios' "lameness and pomposity." [1] The Guatemalans later labeled the war as a war over religion when it was really a political and ideological war. [1] Salvadoran bishops did, however, support the Guatemalans in the conflict, as did Salvadoran conservatives. [1]
In 1862, Carrera began plans to topple Barrios from power and instal a conservative as president. [1] On 13 February 1863, Carrera invaded El Salvador. [3] [4] He took control of the settlements of Ahuachapán, Chalchuapa, and Santa Ana, later establishing a headquarters in Jesús de los Milagros de Coatepeque. [3] [4]
On 22 February, the Salvadorans, led by Barrios, entrenched themselves in the town of Coatepeque and prepared for battle. [4] After two days of battle, the Salvadorans won and forced the Guatemalans to retreat. [3]
After his initial defeat, Carrera invaded El Salvador a second time on 19 June 1863. [1] [3] [5] During the invasion, many Salvadorans deserted and either refused to take part in the war or joined the Guatemalans, most notably general Santiago González who served under Barrios during the Battle of Coatepeque. [5] Salvadoran conservative politicians, such as Francisco Dueñas, also supported the Guatemalans. [5]
On 30 September, he began a siege of the Salvadoran capital city, San Salvador. [5] [6] Carrera ordered a cease fire from San Salvador to submit, and after a month of being sieged, the capital fell on 26 October. [5] Barrios fled the city and went east to San Miguel, after which, Dueñas was declared President of El Salvador. [2] [5] [7] The fall of San Salvador marked the end of the war. [5]
Carrera died on 14 April 1865. [5] Barrios fled for exile in Nicaragua but he was arrested on 27 July 1865 and extradited to El Salvador. [5] He was court-martialed on 10 August and sentenced to death on 28 August. [5] Barrios was executed by a firing squad on 29 August 1865. [5]
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José Rafael Carrera y Turcios was the president of Guatemala from 1844 to 1848 and from 1851 until his death in 1865, after being appointed President for life in 1854. During his military career and presidency, new nations in Central America were facing numerous problems: William Walker's invasions, liberal attempts to overthrow the Catholic Church and aristocrats' power, the Civil War in the United States, Mayan uprising in the east, Belize boundary dispute with the United Kingdom, and the wars in Mexico under Benito Juárez. This led to a rise of caudillos, a term that refers to charismatic populist leaders among the indigenous people.
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Eugenio Aguilar González was a Salvadoran politician who served as president of El Salvador from 1846 to 1848. He also served as the mayor of San Salvador in 1839 and 1864, and the president of the Legislative Assembly in 1849.
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José Gerardo Barrios Espinoza was a Salvadoran military officer and politician who served as president of El Salvador on three occasions between June 1858 and his overthrow in October 1863.
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José Víctor Ramón Valentín de las Ánimas Zavala y Córdova was a Guatemalan Field Marshal who participated in the wars of Rafael Carrera and the National War of Nicaragua against the invasion of William Walker. After the death of President Carrera in April 1865, Zavala – who was a close friend of the late President – was proposed as the next president, but instead Field Marshal Vicente Cerna y Cerna was appointed. A military brigade headquarters in Guatemala City is named "Mariscal Zavala Brigade" in his honor.
The Battle of Coatepeque was fought between the forces of El Salvador and Guatemala from 22 to 24 February 1863.
The Battle of Chalchuapa was a battle between the military forces of El Salvador and Guatemala from 1–2 April 1885. Guatemalan President Justo Rufino Barrios was killed during the battle.
Barrios' War of Reunification, also known as Barrios' great attempt, was a war initiated by Guatemalan President Justo Rufino Barrios in 1885 with the goal of reunifying Central America. Of the five Central American countries, only Honduras supported Barrios' reunification effort; Costa Rica, El Salvador, and Nicaragua opposed it, as did Mexico.
The Nicaraguan-Salvadoran War was a military conflict between El Salvador supported by Honduras, against Nicaragua, sparked by the Nicaraguan alliance with Guatemala, country which was at the time at war with El Salvador.
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