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Antonio González de Balcarce

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Role
  
Military officer

Name
  
Antonio de


Religion
  
Catholic

Profession
  
Soldier

Antonio González de Balcarce Antonio Gonzlez de Balcarce Wikipedia


Born
  
June 24, 1774 Buenos Aires, Viceroyalty of Peru (
1774-06-24
)

Died
  
August 5, 1819, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Similar People
  
Jose Manuel de Goyenec, Juan Jose Castelli, Juan Jose Viamonte, Jose Fernando de Abasc

Preceded by
  
Ignacio Alvarez Thomas

Succeeded by
  
Juan Martin de Pueyrredon

Antonio González de Balcarce (June 24, 1774 – August 15, 1819) was an Argentine military commander in the early 19th century.

Antonio González de Balcarce wwwbuscabiografiascomimgpeopleAntonioGonzale

González de Balcarce was born in Buenos Aires. He joined the armed forces as a cadet in 1788. In the battle for Montevideo in 1807, he was captured by the British forces and taken to England. After his release, he fought in the service of Spain during the Peninsular War against the Emperor Napoleon. Returning to Buenos Aires, he participated in the May Revolution in 1810. Subsequently, he was named second commander for the military campaign of the independentist forces in the Viceroyalty of Perú, where he won the Battle of Suipacha on November 7, 1810, the first victory over the Spanish royal forces.

Eventually, he was called back and became the Governor of Buenos Aires Province in 1813. In 1816, he served as the Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata ad interim, and became the Major General of the armed forces the following year under the government of Juan Martín de Pueyrredón. According to historian William Denslow, Antonio Balcarce was a member of the well-known masonic lodge Lautaro. He took part of the crossing of the Andes to Chile and was San Martin's second-in-command during the battles of Cancha Rayada and Maipu.

He fell ill in Chile and had to return to Buenos Aires, where he died in 1819.

References

Antonio González de Balcarce Wikipedia