182:. Monteverde was ordered by the governor of Coro, with a small force of 1550 men with soldiers and officers, to aid the small town of Siquisique, which had sent Fr. Andrés Torellas with news that it intended to defect from the Republic. As a nineteenth-century historian described, "with Spaniards and residents of Coro, a priest named Torellas, a surgeon, ten thousand cartridges, a howitzer, and ten hundredweights of food." Monteverde's military force was not prepared to begin a successful military campaign. The scarcity of resources is understandable, considering how Spain found itself fighting the
341:. The positioning of Monteverde's military forces were comparable to those of Miranda in 1812. Nevertheless, Monteverde lost a large part of the popular support that he had managed to build the previous year: the people who had taken him from Coro to the capital abandoned him in the face of Mariño in MaturĂn and BolĂvar in Valencia because Monteverde did not meet, or allow the completion of, popular goals and expectations in 1813.
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199:.) After a seven-day march, he occupied the town on 17 March, and Monteverde found it easy to recruit new soldiers from the local population. With a growing force, he decided to continue marching into republican territory, despite having no authorization to do so. His successful advance was helped by the social support offered it by the lower classes, which viewed the
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against the
Napoleonic forces in order to regain control over its own territory, and had spent the previous decade fighting mostly as an ally of France. There were no resources to send to the New World, in fact, Spain had been asking for donations and increased revenues from America.
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However, there was one crucial factor which aided
Monteverde and the royalist cause: the social dissatisfaction of the people with the new rulers. (This lack of support for the republican leadership would later instigate BolĂvar to begin a
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was forced to retreat after he got the news of the capture of Puerto
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on 2 April after the city defected to the royalist side on 31 March. Eventually he had an army large enough to march on
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on 3 October 1813, and near the end of the same year, he was deposed by his own officers in Puerto
Cabello.
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on 2 April 1773. With well won prestige and the rank of
Frigate Captain, he was sent to Venezuela from
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merge. His right flank was fortressed in the castle of Puerto
Cabello and his rear was supported in
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205:(aristocratic) republican rulers as their enemies. He created an integrated military force of
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from 1812 to 1813. Monteverde led the military campaign that culminated in the fall of the
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in 1812. One year later in 1813, Monteverde was defeated by SimĂłn BolĂvar during the
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from June 1812 to 8 August 1813. Monteverde was the leader of
Spanish forces in the
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of Casa Leon) became his collaborators. This movement was reinforced by the
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After the fall of the first republic, Miranda was imprisoned and sent to
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Many city leaders opened their cities to his informal army, and several
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agreed between
Miranda and Monteverde on 25 July 1812 after the
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and was repulsed in the 1812 Battle of San Mateo, Generalissimo
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Dictionary of
Venezuelan History: Domingo de Monteverde
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Dictionary of
Venezuelan History: Domingo de Monteverde
250:. Monteverde's vanguard under Francisco MarmĂłl entered
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Juan Vicente González: BiografĂa de JosĂ© FĂ©lix Ribas
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363:and in 1816 returned to Spain. Monteverde died in
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53:Portrait of Domingo de Monteverde
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375:Major battles in Venezuela
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361:Puerto Rico
339:La Victoria
287:Puerto Rico
264:La Victoria
172:Puerto Rico
547:Categories
418:References
289:and later
236:earthquake
193:Social War
98:Allegiance
73:1773-04-02
59:Birth name
28:Monteverde
369:Brigadier
331:Maracaibo
299:Venezuela
268:San Mateo
227:mantuanos
140:Venezuela
406:See also
323:Valencia
256:Valencia
202:mantuano
166:town of
164:Canarian
18:In this
459:Battles
335:Maracay
327:Barinas
307:MaturĂn
260:Caracas
232:Marqués
101:Spanish
24:surname
319:Llanos
303:GĂĽiria
214:zambos
208:pardos
126:(born
315:Andes
291:Cádiz
32:Rivas
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