Vicente Benavides
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (January 2017) |
Vicente Benavides | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1777 Quirihue, Captaincy General of Chile (now Quirihue, Chile) |
Died | February 23, 1822 (aged 44–45) Santiago, Chile |
Vicente Benavides Llanos (Quirihue, 1777 – Santiago, Chile, February 23, 1822) was a Chilean soldier who fought in the Chilean War of Independence. He is best known for leading Royalists guerrillas in La Frontera during the last years of the war.
Life as soldier
[edit]He initially sided with the patriots but later changed sides to fight with the royalists. He then led the royalist bands during the so-called Guerra a muerte. This was a time of irregular warfare. Benavides obtained the aid of many Mapuche chiefs to combat the Chileans and pillage the countryside. He became known in this period for cruelty towards prisoners and breaking faith during truces. The Pincheira brothers, a future outlaw group, served Benavides in the Guerra a muerte by defending the Cordillera.
In March 1821 Perseverance was anchored at St Mary's (37°03′S 73°31′W / 37.050°S 73.517°W) when a boat belonging to Benavides captured her; she was later burnt in the Tubul River (37°13′59″S 73°26′35″W / 37.233°S 73.443°W). Benavides murdered her master, two mates, and part of her crew.[1]
On 14 May Benevides seized the American merchant vessel Hersilia, also at Santa Maria island, and later destroyed the vessel.
Execution
[edit]Benavides was captured near the end of the war. After a brief trial in Santiago, Benavides was hanged on 23 February 1822. His body was mutilated and dismembered, due to popular feeling against him.
In literature
[edit]The author Joseph Conrad modeled his character Gaspar Ruiz on Benavides.[citation needed] Conrad wrote "Gaspar Ruiz": in 1904–5, published it in The Strand Magazine (1906), and again in A Set of Six (1908 in the UK; 1915 in the US). This story was the only piece of Conrad's fiction ever adapted by the author for cinema, as Gaspar the Strong Man (1920). Conrad found Benavides in Chapter 4 of Captain Basil Hall's 1824 book.[2]
Citations
[edit]- ^ "The Marine List". Lloyd's List (5684). 26 March 1822.
- ^ Conrad (2011), pp. 197-8.
References
[edit]- Barros Arana, Diego (1850), Estudios históricos sobre Vicente Benavides i las campañas del Sur: 1818-1822 (in Spanish), Santiago, Chile: Imprenta de Julio Belin i Compañia
- Castedo, Leopoldo (1954), Resumen de la Historia de Chile de Francisco Antonio Encina (in Spanish), vol. 2, Santiago, Chile: Empresa Editora Zig-Zag
- Conrad, Joseph (2011) Joseph Conrad's Letters to R. B. Cunninghame Graham. (Cambridge University Press). ISBN 9780521129411
- Hall, Basil, (1824) Extracts from a Journal written on the Coasts of Chili, Peru, and Mexico, in the years 1820, 1821, 1822. (Edinburgh: Constable).
- Vicuña Mackenna, Benjamín (1868), La guerra a muerte: memoria sobre las últimas campañas de la Independencia de Chile (1819-1824) (in Spanish), Santiago, Chile: Imprenta Nacional, p. 562
- Archivo O'Higgins (in Spanish), vol. II, XVI & XXI, Santiago, Chile: varias imprentas, 1946–1966
- People of the Chilean War of Independence
- Executed Chilean people
- Spanish military personnel of the Chilean War of Independence
- Royalists in the Hispanic American Revolution
- Executed Spanish people
- People executed by Chile by hanging
- People from Itata Province
- Viceroyalty of Peru people
- 1770s births
- 1822 deaths
- Chilean outlaws
- Piracy in the Pacific Ocean
- 19th-century pirates