Juan José Carrera Verdugo

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Ana María Cotapos
Ana María Cotapos
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carreras
Carreras
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Juan José Carrera
Juan José Carrera
Juan José Carrera
Juan José Carrera
Carrera campaigns
Carrera campaigns
Carreras
Carreras
Route to exile
Route to exile

Gender:Male

Ethnic origen: White

Events:

1782  -  Santiago de Chile  -  Not applicable  -  He was from San Miguel hacienda, Santiago de Chile.
1814  -  Rancagua  -  Unknown  -  He took part in the Battle of Rancagua, 1814.
1817  -  Buenos Aires  -  Unknown  -  He was captured in Buenos Aires in 1817.
1819  -  Mendoza  -  Unknown  -  He was executed in Mendoza on 8 April 1819.
1828  -  Santiago de Chile  -  Unknown  -  He was awarded a Premio Postumo by Manuel Magellanes on 24 March 1828.

Connections:

Carrera Family
Chilean exiles (Mendoza)

Texts:
1819 - Carta a Ana Cotapos

Biography:
He was born in 1782, the oldest brother of Javiera, Juan Miguel and Luis Carrera. He was a brigadier in the Chilean independence army. He married Ana Cotapos.

In 1814, after the battle of Rancagua, he fled Chile, crossing the Andes with men, women and children, many of whom travelled on foot: "the hardships and sufferings they had to undergo are not to be described". (Sutcliffe, 110.)

He is listed among the exiles in Cuyo. (Guerrero Lira, 297-299)

When the Carreras became out of favour, he and his brother Luis were captured and imprisoned in Mendoza in 1817 by Monteagudo. They were executed on 8 April 1819. (Sutcliffe, 317-319.)

Clissold describes him as "conscious of his seniority [and] sometimes sullenly resentful of his more brilliant brother's pretensions, but his own manifest inferiority of gifts and personality always compelled his eventual submission. After the battle of Rancagua the Carreras were sent to San Luis, escorted by San Martín's troops. Cotapos was with them. Javeira Carrera desperately tried to free him and Luis after they were imprisoned in Mendoza. There was a plan to escape and to execute the governor of Mendoza, but he was a reluctant ally and wrote to Cotapos of his wish to return home (see below). Cotapos had been working in Chile to obtain his pardon and release and managed to secure a promise from O'Higgins. News of this stay of execution arrived in Mendoza after the brothers had been executed. (Clissold, 93, 133-135, 163-169)

References:

Clissold, Stephen (1968) Bernardo O'Higgins and the Independence of Chile
Davies, Catherine, Brewster, Claire and Owen, Hilary (2006) South American Independence. Gender, Politics, Text
Grez, Vicente (1966) Las mujeres de la independencia
Guerrero Lira, Cristian (2002) La contrarevolución de la independencia en Chile
Sutcliffe, Thomas (1841) Sixteen Years in Chile and Peru, From 1822 to 1839