Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use American English Template:Use shortened footnotes Template:Infobox former country Template:Central America series

The Federal Republic of Central America (Template:Langx), initially known as the United Provinces of Central America ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), was a sovereign state in Central America that existed between 1823 and 1839/1841. The republic was composed of five states (Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua), and a Federal District from 1835 to 1839. Guatemala City was its capital city until 1834, when the seat of government was relocated to San Salvador. The Federal Republic of Central America was bordered on the north by Mexico, on the south by Gran Colombia and on its eastern coastline by the Mosquito Coast and British Honduras, both claimed by the federal republic.

After Central America (then the Captaincy General of Guatemala) declared its independence from the Spanish Empire in September 1821, it was annexed by the First Mexican Empire in January 1822 before regaining its independence and forming a federal republic in 1823. The Federal Republic of Central America adopted its constitution, based on that of the federal government of the United States, in November 1824. It held its first presidential election in April 1825, during which liberal politician Manuel José Arce was elected as the country's first president. Arce subsequently aligned himself with the country's conservatives due to liberal opposition to the concessions he granted conservatives to secure his election as president. The republic was politically unstable, experiencing civil wars, rebellions, and insurrections by liberals and conservatives. From 1827 to 1829, it fell into a civil war between conservatives who supported Arce and liberals who opposed him. Liberal politician Francisco Morazán led the liberals to victory, and was elected president in 1830. The republic descended into a second civil war from 1838 to 1840, by the end of which the states of Central America declared independence and the federal republic ceased to exist.

Historians have attributed the country's political instability to its federal system of government and its economic struggles. Agricultural exports were insufficient and the federal government was unable to repay its foreign loans, despite favorable terms. Central America's economic troubles were caused in part by the federal government's inability to collect taxes and inadequate interstate infrastructure.

Central American politicians, writers, and intellectuals have called for the reunification of Central America since the dissolution of the Federal Republic of Central America. There have been several attempts by the republic's successor states during the 19th and 20th centuries to reunify Central America through diplomatic and military means, but none succeeded in uniting all five former members for more than one year. All five former members of the Federal Republic of Central America are members of the Central American Integration System (SICA), an economic and political organization that promotes regional development.

Template:TOC limit

NamesEdit

The country's initial name, adopted at independence from the First Mexican Empire on 1 July 1823, was the United Provinces of Central America (Template:Langx).Template:EfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Upon the adoption of the country's constitution on 22 November 1824, the United Provinces of Central America changed its name to the Federal Republic of Central America ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).Template:Sfn In the years shortly after independence, some official government documents referred to the country as the Federated States of Central America ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The federal republic has also been referred to as the Federation of Central America ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

BackgroundEdit

Colonial Central AmericaEdit

The Spanish conquered Central America in the 16th century. The region was divided into several {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (jurisdictions) until, in 1542, it was organized into a single {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} extending north to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and south to the Isthmus of Panama.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Spain transferred control of the Yucatán Peninsula to New Spain (modern-day Mexico) in 1560, and transferred control of Panama to Peru seven years later.Template:Sfn In 1568, the Central American {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was reorganized as the Captaincy General of Guatemala.Template:Sfn The captaincy was subdivided into {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, greater mayorships, and intendancies.Template:Sfn

Central America had a caste system, with Spaniards at the top, mixed-race individuals in the middle, and Africans and indigenous Central Americans at the bottom. Spaniards owned most of the region's land and wealth, and indigenous people composed most of its labor force.Template:Sfn The Catholic Church dominated all aspects of Central American society during Spanish colonial rule. Although the region's indigenous inhabitants were gradually forced by colonial officials to convert to Catholicism, they retained many of their cultural traditions.Template:Sfn

Central American independenceEdit

The Spanish king Ferdinand VII was overthrown in 1808 by the French emperor Napoleon, who installed his brother Joseph as king of Spain. Spain's colonies in the Americas (including the Captaincy General of Guatemala) did not recognize Joseph as the legitimate king and established provisional governments, known as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, which continued to recognize Ferdinand as king.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Although the Central American colonial government remained loyal to Ferdinand, some {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} leaders in Central America wanted greater autonomy.Template:Sfn In November 1811, José Matías Delgado and Manuel José Arce launched a rebellion in San Salvador against Spanish rule which was defeated by loyalist forces. Additional independence rebellions occurred in Template:Ill; in 1813 in Guatemala; and in Template:Ill. All were defeated by loyalist forces, but pro-independence sentiment spread among Central American leaders.Template:Sfn

The Cortes of Cádiz (a Spanish constitutional congress in Cádiz) drafted the Spanish Constitution of 1812, which made Spain a constitutional monarchy.Template:Sfn Ferdinand repealed the liberal constitution after returning to power in 1814, since he wanted to rule as an absolute monarch.Template:Sfn His refusal to rule as a constitutional monarch and the desire of colonial leaders for greater local autonomy led to independence rebellions throughout Spain's American colonies.Template:Sfn The rebellions were primarily led by liberals who supported the 1812 constitution's Enlightenment ideals. Conservatives joined the independence movements in 1820, when Ferdinand was forced by Colonel Rafael del Riego to restore the 1812 constitution.Template:Sfn On 15 September 1821, Central American colonial leaders declared independence from Spain and signed the Act of Independence of Central America. They established the Consultive Junta to temporarily govern the region until a permanent government could be established. Most government administrators, including Brigadier General Gabino Gaínza (the final captain general of Guatemala), retained their positions.Template:Sfn

After independence, Central American leaders were ideologically divided about whether to remain independent or to join the First Mexican Empire; monarchists supported annexation, opposed by republicans and nationalists.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Mexican Regent (and later Mexican Emperor) Agustín de Iturbide asked the Consultive Junta to join the First Mexican Empire in November 1821,Template:Sfn and the junta voted for annexation on 5 January 1822.Template:Sfn The Mexicans sent Brigadier General Vicente Filísola to enforce the annexation.Template:Sfn Liberals in Costa Rica, El Salvador, and Nicaragua resisted Mexican attempts to annex the region. Liberals and conservatives fought in Costa Rica's Ochomogo War, which ended with the liberals gaining control of the country.Template:Sfn Liberal rebels in El Salvador, led by Delgado and Arce, resisted two invasions by Filísola in 1822 and 1823. The former ended with an armistice and Mexican withdrawal;Template:Sfn the latter resulted in Filísola overthrowing Delgado as the political leader of El Salvador (forcing Arce to flee to the United States) and capturing the city of San Salvador.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn General José Anacleto Ordóñez launched a rebellion against conservative Nicaraguan political leader Template:Ill, capturing several cities. Ordóñez's rebellion continued after Central America declared its independence from Mexico.Template:Sfn

On 19 March 1823, Iturbide abdicated the Mexican throne.Template:Sfn When news of Iturbide's abdication reached Filísola on 29 March, he called for Central American political leaders to establish a congress to determine the region's future. The Template:Ill ordered Mexican forces in Central America to cease hostilities on 1 April,Template:Sfn and the Central American congress convened on 24 June.Template:Sfn Except for the state of Chiapas, it declared Central American independence from Mexico on 1 July.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

HistoryEdit

National Constituent AssemblyEdit

Drafting the constitutionEdit

At Central America's independence from Mexico, the Central American congress established the United Provinces of Central America.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The following day, the congress reorganized as the National Constituent Assembly and tasked itself with drafting a constitution for newly-independent Central America.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn José Matías Delgado was Central America's provisional president until 10 July 1823, when the National Constituent Assembly appointed a Template:Ill consisting of Arce, Juan Vicente Villacorta and Pedro Molina Mazariegos. Since Arce was in the United States when the triumvirate was established, Antonio Rivera Cabezas was appointed as his substitute.Template:Sfn The three rotated executive power on a monthly basis.Template:Sfn

Initially, the National Constituent Assembly was composed of delegates from El Salvador and Guatemala;Template:Sfn Costa Rica, Honduras, and Nicaragua did not send their delegates until October 1823,Template:Sfn refusing to send them until Mexican soldiers withdrew from Central America.Template:Sfn The National Constituent Assembly consisted of 64 delegates, distributed across Central America.Template:Efn The National Constituent Assembly was the de facto government of Central America until the constitution was adopted.Template:Sfn Its two political factions were the liberals and the conservatives; the liberals supported federalism, and the conservatives supported centralism.Template:Sfn

The National Constituent Assembly drafted the constitution on 12 June 1824, and published it on 4 July.Template:Sfn The constitution was inspired by the federal government of the United States, the United States Declaration of Independence, and the Spanish Constitution of 1812.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn On 22 November, the constitution was formally adopted after all 64 members of the assembly signed it. The National Constituent Assembly dissolved itself on 23 January 1825, and was succeeded by the Federal Congress on 6 February.Template:Sfn

Guatemalan mutinyEdit

On 14 September 1823, Captain Rafael Ariza y Torres began an insurrection in Guatemala City (the capital city) because the Central American government was unable to pay its debts to the military.Template:Sfn Although Ariza pledged his loyalty to the National Constituent Assembly, many assembly members fled the city and called on soldiers from Chiquimula, Quetzaltenango, and San Salvador to suppress the insurrection.Template:Sfn Neither Ariza's rebels nor Colonel José Rivas and his 750 soldiers from San Salvador wanted a battle.Template:Sfn Conservatives took advantage of the situation, and forced the triumvirate to resign on 6 October.Template:Sfn They installed a Template:Ill consisting of Arce, José Cecilio del Valle, and Tomás O'Horan. Since Arce and Valle were outside the country when the second triumvirate was formed, José Santiago Milla and Villacorta were substitutes.Template:Sfn Valle and Arce did not sit on the triumvirate until February and March 1824, respectively.Template:Sfn

The second triumvirate ordered Rivas to march 150 soldiers into Guatemala City and, soon afterwards, Ariza fled into exile in Mexico. The National Constituent Assembly then returned to Guatemala City.Template:Sfn The Salvadoran government ordered Rivas to remain near Guatemala City and verify that the assembly was functioning. On 12 October 1823, Rivas determined that the National Constituent Assembly was suppressing civil liberties and marched back into the city. On 17 October, believing that Rivas was acting on behalf of El Salvador, 200 soldiers from Quetzaltenango arrived in Guatemala City and skirmished with his forces.Template:Sfn After a few days, the assembly drafted an agreement to appease both sides. Rivas' forces withdrew to El Salvador, and the soldiers from Quetzaltenango returned home.Template:Sfn

Internal conflict in NicaraguaEdit

Liberals and conservatives had been fighting for control of Nicaragua since Ordóñez launched his rebellion against the pro-Mexico Nicaraguan government in 1823.Template:Sfn The liberals had control of León (the liberal capital) and Granada, and the conservatives controlled Managua (the conservative capital), Rivas and Chinandega. Clashes resulted in hundreds of deaths. In October 1824, the second triumvirate sent Colonel Manuel Arzú to attempt to mediate peace between the liberals and conservatives. The mediation failed,Template:Sfn and Arce led a federal invasion of Nicaragua on 22 January 1825 to end the civil conflict.Template:Sfn His invading force got the liberals and conservatives to sign an armistice without engaging in combat. Arce dissolved both rival governments, and their leaders were exiled from Nicaragua.Template:Sfn

Presidency of Manuel José ArceEdit

1825 electionEdit

The federal republic's first presidential election was held on 21 April 1825.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Arce was the liberals' candidate, and Valle the conservatives' choice.Template:Sfn During the election, 41 of the 82 electors voted for Valle; 34 voted for Arce, four voted for other candidates,Template:Efn and three did not vote due to complications in receiving votes from their electoral districts. No candidate received a majority; the constitution required a majority, and the Federal Congress was tasked with electing the president instead.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The congress voted 22–5 to elect Arce president.Template:Sfn Valle was entitled to become vice president since he was the runner-up in the election, but refused to accept the position; so did liberal José Francisco Barrundia. Ultimately, the conservative Mariano Beltranena became Arce's vice president.Template:Sfn Arce and Beltranena took office on 29 April.Template:Sfn

Arce's electoral victory angered conservatives who backed Valle, and alienated liberals (particularly Guatemalan liberals) because he had won the votes of conservative senators by promising to allow the Federal Congress to decide if a Catholic archdiocese would be created in El Salvador; the conservatives opposed the archdiocese because Delgado, a liberal symbol of Salvadoran independence, would have become archbishop. The liberals considered Arce's compromise with the conservatives as betraying his liberal positions.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Liberals Molina Mazariegos and Mariano Gálvez refused to accept cabinet appointments as secretary of relations and secretary of finance, respectively, due to this perceived betrayal.Template:Sfn Arce appointed conservatives to his cabinet as a result, which led to liberals continuing to accuse him of betraying the liberal cause.Template:Sfn

Path to civil warEdit

Template:Ill, José Francisco Barrundia's brother, opposed the federal government and was one of Arce's foremost critics. He moved Guatemala's capital back to Guatemala City from Antigua Guatemala in mid-1825 (reversing the 1823 move) and seized private property to establish state government offices, since the federal government still occupied the state's government buildings.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After Juan Barrundia threatened to raise an army to "contain the despotism of a tyrant" (referring to Arce), the Federal Congress agreed to vacate the building used by the federal treasury and give it to the Guatemalan state government.Template:Sfn

In August 1825, in response to the arrival of 28 French warships in the Caribbean Sea, Arce called for the army to raise 10,000 soldiers to defend their country against a European invasion. The Congress of Deputies approved Arce's plan; the Senate vetoed it, however, citing a lack of funding. In mid-1826, Arce reduced his troop requirement to 4,000.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Guatemalan liberals in the Federal Congress contacted French military officer Template:Ill to help draft a military code to prevent Arce from controlling the military, and Arce expelled Raoul from the country.Template:Sfn Eventually, Arce and the Federal Congress compromised; the congress approved the raising of 4,000 soldiers, and Raoul oversaw recruitment.Template:Sfn Despite a minor rebellion in Costa Rica led by José Zamora, who called himself a "vassal of the king of Spain", the feared European invasion did not take place.Template:Sfn As the liberals tried to circumvent his role as commander-in-chief, Arce refused to implement laws passed by the Federal Congress; the liberals began impeachment proceedings against him on 2 June 1826. Salvadoran liberals, still loyal to Arce, did not attend the impeachment proceedings and prevented the congress from reaching the quorum necessary to begin them. Ten days later, the Guatemalan liberals abandoned their impeachment attempt.Template:Sfn

Arce sent federal soldiers to arrest Raoul in July 1826, accusing him of insubordination by sending letters to Arce calling for his resignation. Juan Barrundia sought to defend Raoul and sent 300 Guatemalan soldiers to arrest the federal soldiers' commander, arguing that the federal government needed a state governor's permission to move soldiers within a state.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn When Arce sought to formally condemn Juan Barrundia, liberal Guatemalan senators boycotted the meeting and the Senate failed to reach the quorum necessary to condemn Barrundia.Template:Sfn Despite Senate inaction, Arce had Barrundia arrested and removed from office on 6 September for attempting to conspire against the federal republic. In response to Barrundia's arrest, Lieutenant Governor Template:Ill moved the Guatemalan state government to Quetzaltenango and passed several anti-clerical laws.Template:Sfn An indigenous mob, spurred by conservatives and the church, attacked and killed Cirilo on 13 October for passing the laws.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Arce invaded Quetzaltenango and defeated those who continued to support the remnants of Cirilo's government on 28 October.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

First civil warEdit

In October 1826, Arce called for a special election to install a new Guatemalan government;Template:Sfn the conservatives won, and Mariano Aycinena became governor of Guatemala on 1 March 1827.Template:Sfn After the election, many liberals fled Guatemala for El Salvador in search of assistance from its liberals to regain power. They spread rumors that Arce was controlled by the Guatemalan conservatives and that would establish a centralized government.Template:Sfn Arce called for an extraordinary congress to convene in Cojutepeque on 10 October to reestablish constitutional order, since the Federal Congress consistently failed to reach a quorum after Juan Barrundia's arrest.Template:Sfn The call for an extraordinary congress was unconstitutional, because it exceeded Arce's presidential duties.Template:Sfn On 6 December, in response to Arce's call for an extraordinary congress, Mariano Prado (the liberal acting governor of El Salvador) called for delegates from all the states except Guatemala to convene their own extraordinary congress in Ahuachapán. Ultimately, neither congress convened.Template:Sfn

Prado ordered Salvadoran soldiers to the El Salvador–Guatemala border in late December 1826 to prepare to overthrow Arce.Template:Sfn Aycinena declared leading Guatemalan liberals, including Molina Mazariegos and Rivera Cabezas, as outlaws in Guatemala in early March 1827. Prado ordered his soldiers to invade Guatemala in response, beginning the First Central American Civil WarTemplate:Sfn without a formal declaration of war.Template:Sfn Honduras supported El Salvador's invasion, but Arce's federal soldiers defeated the invasion in a 23 March battle at Arrazola (near Guatemala City).Template:Sfn Arce launched a counter-invasion into El Salvador and was defeated on 18 May at Milingo, near San Salvador.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:Batalla de la Trinidad.JPG
A depiction of the 1827 Battle of La Trinidad on the Honduran 5 lempira bill

While Arce was campaigning in El Salvador, he sent a division of soldiers commanded by Colonel José Justo Milla into Honduras to arrest liberal Honduran Governor Dionisio de Herrera.Template:Sfn Milla's forces captured the Honduran capital of Comayagua on 10 May 1827 after a 36-day siege, and captured Herrera.Template:Sfn Francisco Morazán—secretary general of Honduras in 1824, a Honduran state senator, and a military officer—was captured shortly afterwards in Tegucigalpa; Morazán escaped and fled to Nicaragua, where he rallied an army of Honduran exiles to oppose Arce.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn his forces were supported by Nicaraguan rebels led by Ordóñez, who launched an anti-Arce rebellion in León.Template:Sfn Morazán's army defeated Milla's army at the Battle of La Trinidad on 10 November 1827, recapturing Comayagua and Tegucigalpa.Template:Sfn

Arce offered to hold a presidential election in early 1828 in an attempt to appease the liberals, who declined his offer. He resigned the presidency on 14 February and fled to Mexico; Beltranena succeeded Arce as interim president.Template:Sfn Morazán invaded El Salvador in June 1828 with an army of Honduran and Nicaraguan soldiers,Template:Sfn capturing San Salvador on 23 October.Template:Sfn In late 1828, Morazán raised 4,000 soldiers for an invasion of Guatemala.Template:Sfn Beltranena's government warned its citizens that Morazán's primary objective was to destroy the Catholic Church; Morazán refuted the Guatemalan government's warning, saying that his Christian "Protector Allied Army of the Law" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}")Template:Sfn did not seek to destroy the church and sought only to liberate Guatemala from "the wrongs [they had] suffered" ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}").Template:Sfn He invaded in January 1829, and began besieging Guatemala City on 5 February.Template:Sfn The city surrendered on 12 April and Morazán's soldiers entered it the following day, ending the civil war.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Presidency of Francisco MorazánEdit

Consolidating powerEdit

After capturing Guatemala City in April 1828, Beltranena was removed from the presidency; Morazán became the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} president of Central America, but did not officially assume office.Template:Sfn On 22 June 1829, Morazán appointed a new Federal Congress. It elected José Francisco Barrundia, the Senate's senior member, as Central America's interim president three days later.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn At Morazán's instruction, the Federal Congress declared all legislation passed after September 1826 null and void. Many leading conservatives were imprisoned or exiled under threat of death after the civil war, and many also had their property confiscated.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Morazán also cracked down on the church. He expelled many members of the clergy from the country for supporting the conservatives, confiscated Church properties, and forced the church to reduce the number of priests and nuns in the country.Template:Sfn

Morazán ran for president in the 1830 federal election.Template:Sfn Although he finished first, with 202 electoral votes, he did not win a majority.Template:Efn Similar to 1825, the Federal Congress was given the authority to elect the president; the liberal-dominated congress voted for Morazán,Template:Sfn and he took office on 16 September.Template:Sfn The Federal Congress elected Prado as Morazán's vice president.Template:Sfn

1831–1832 conservative invasionEdit

In May 1829, Morazán sent a letter to the Mexican minister of external relations falsely claiming that Central American refugees fleeing to Mexico were actually enemy forces who sought to "chain and submit their towns to the Spanish yoke" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}"). He asked the Mexican government to extradite the refugees back to Central America.Template:Sfn Receiving no reply, José Francisco Barrundia sent a letter to Mexican president Vicente Guerrero in November 1829 with the same request; Guerrero did not respond either.Template:Sfn After Central American Minister of Relations Manuel Julián Ibarra sent a third request to the Mexican government to extradite the refugees in December 1829, Mexico said that it could grant the Central American request.Template:Sfn

Arce threatened to invade the Federal Republic of Central America in late 1831 from Soconusco (a territory along the Pacific coast claimed by Central America and Mexico over which neither had full control)Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn to reclaim the presidency.Template:Sfn General Ramón Guzmán, mayor of the Honduran city of Omoa, declared a state of rebellion in November 1831, raised a Spanish flag in the city, and sent ships to Cuba to ask for support from conservative archbishop Template:Ill (exiled by Morazán in 1829).Template:Sfn This was followed by a second conservative invasion force, led by Colonel Template:Ill, that entered Central America from British Honduras and supported Guzmán's rebellion and invaded inland Honduras. The Honduran cities of Opoteca and Trujillo also declared themselves in a state of rebellion.Template:Sfn José María Cornejo, the conservative governor of El Salvador, supported Arce's invasionTemplate:Sfn and declared El Salvador's secession from the federal republic on 7 January 1832.Template:Sfn

On 24 February 1832, Raoul led federal soldiers into Soconusco and fought Arce's rebel army in the town of Escuintla. He defeated Arce's outnumbered army, and the victorious soldiers looted the town.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After this defeat, Arce fled back to Mexico.Template:Sfn Morazán invaded El Salvador in mid-March and captured San Salvador on 28 March, proclaiming himself the provisional governor of El Salvador on 3 April.Template:Sfn Cornejo and 38 other Salvadoran political leaders were arrested and imprisoned in Guatemala for their involvement in the rebellion.Template:Sfn Honduran soldiers under Colonel Francisco Ferrera began a siege of Omoa in March,Template:Sfn recaptured Trujillo in April,Template:Sfn and recaptured Opoteca in May.Template:Sfn Reaching the Central American coast, Guzmán's Spanish reinforcements were arrested by Honduran soldiers.Template:Sfn He continued to resist federal forces in Omoa until 12 September, when his soldiers mutinied and turned him over to federal custody. This ended the rebellion; Guzmán was executed the following day,Template:Sfn and Domínguez (captured by federal forces during the fall of Opoteca) was executed on 14 September.Template:Sfn

RebellionsEdit

On 1 April 1829, Costa Rica seceded from the Federal Republic of Central America "without separating itself" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}") from the federal republic.Template:Sfn The Costa Rican government justified its secession by saying that the federal government had ceased to exist.Template:Sfn It rejoined the federal republic in February 1831 after recognizing Morazán as Central America's president and renouncing its declaration of secession.Template:Sfn Morazán defeated July 1829 rebellions in Honduras and Nicaragua,Template:Sfn and a rebellion in Honduras in January 1830.Template:Sfn

In May 1832, Prado resigned as vice president of Central America to become the governor of El Salvador; however, he was not popular among El Salvador's residents for helping Morazán overthrow Arce in the civil war and Cornejo earlier in 1832. Prado imposed a tax to help raise funds for the state government.Template:Sfn The tax was unpopular with SalvadoransTemplate:Sndparticularly indigenous Salvadorans, who saw it as a restoration of tribute to the white population that was abolished in 1811.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn San Salvador rebelled against Prado on 24 October, forcing his government to temporarily move to Cojutepeque. Similar rebellions against Prado broke out in Ahuachapán, Chalatenango, Izalco, San Miguel, Tejutla and Zacatecoluca,Template:Sfn but were quickly suppressed by Salvadoran soldiers.Template:Sfn

On 14 February 1833, indigenous laborer Anastasio Aquino launched a rebellion in San Juan Nonualco and Santiago Nonualco in response to indigenous killings by Ladinos (mixed-race people) the month before. Aquino and 2,000 supporters (known as the Liberation Army) marched on San Vicente, capturing it the following day. The Liberation Army proclaimed him as San Vicente's political chief.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Indigenous Salvadorans in Cojutepeque, Ilopango, San Martín, San Pedro Perulapán, and Soyapango supported Aquino's rebellion.Template:Sfn Initial efforts by Salvadoran soldiers to suppress the rebellion were defeated by the Liberation Army in San Vicente and Zacatecoluca, but Aquino's army was defeated in battle by Morazán in San Vicente on 28 February. This ended the rebellion; Aquino was captured in AprilTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn and executed on 24 July, with his body publicly displayed in San Vicente.Template:Sfn

1830s constitutional reformsEdit

In 1831, Salvadoran conservatives called for political reforms in the federal government. Reforms included allowing the president to veto laws passed by the Federal Congress, abolishing the electoral college and implementing direct elections, and restricting eligibility to hold office to landowners.Template:Sfn The arrest of these conservatives after Morazán's military victory in El Salvador in 1832 led political leaders across the federal republic to call for political reforms.Template:Sfn Nicaragua declared independence on 3 December 1832, citing fears of federal authoritarianism after Morazán's invasion of El Salvador, and said that it would not rejoin the federal republic until the federal constitution was reformed.Template:Sfn That month, Costa Rica proposed establishing a National Constituent Assembly to pass a constitutional reform; th assembly began on 20 April 1833.Template:Sfn On 13 February 1835, the Federal Congress approved constitutional reforms drafted by the National Constituent Assembly. The reforms were minor, and only Nicaragua (which renounced its secession after the reforms were completed) and Costa Rica ratified them.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Federal capital move to San SalvadorEdit

Morazán and the Federal Congress wanted to move the national capital from Guatemala City beginning in 1830, since they wanted the capital in a better defensive position and the federal government felt that the city's residents hated it due to the civil war.Template:Sfn Morazán wanted to move the capital to San Salvador, but conservative Salvadoran political leaders resisted his proposal and seceded from the federal republic in January 1832.Template:Sfn The federal government moved the national capital from Guatemala City to the Salvadoran city of Sonsonate on 5 February 1834,Template:Sfn but Salvadoran politicians did not want it to move the capital to the city.Template:Sfn

Salvadoran Governor Joaquín de San Martín believed that Morazán's moving the federal capital to San Salvador was an attempt to remove him as governor, and saw the capital's temporary relocation to Sonsonate as a threat. After nearly all of the Salvadoran state assembly resigned on 15 May 1834 due to rising tensions between San Martín and Morazán, San Martín announced his intention to resign; however, he retained his gubernatorial powers.Template:Sfn In late May, Morazán invaded El Salvador to force San Martín out of office. Morazán captured San Salvador on 6 June, and San Martín resigned six days later. San Martín was succeeded as provisional governor by Carlos Salazar (José Gregorio Salazar's brother), and by José Gregorio Salazar on 13 July. As provisional governor, José Gregorio Salazar defeated a rebellion launched by San Martín which sought to restore him to power.Template:Sfn

San Salvador became the federal capital in June 1834 to symbolize the liberal victory over the conservatives in the 1827–1829 civil war.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The federal government established the Federal District around the city on 7 February 1835 in accordance with article 65 of the federal constitution, which called for a federal district in the country's capital when "circumstances permitted".Template:Sfn The district covered a Template:Convert radius around San Salvador and extended Template:Convert south to the Pacific Ocean.Template:Sfn All federal-government offices relocated to the Federal District.Template:Sfn El Salvador temporarily moved its state government from San Salvador to CojutepequeTemplate:Sfn before permanently relocating to San Vicente on 21 September.Template:Sfn

1833 and 1835 presidential electionsEdit

During the late 1833 presidential election, the electoral college chose Valle as Central America's next president. Valle defeated Morazán because many voters and politicians opposed Morazán's use of military force to settle disputes between liberals and conservatives, and saw Valle as a moderate who could offer peace.Template:Sfn Valle died of illness on 2 March 1834 while he was traveling to Guatemala to become president.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn As Morazán finished second in the election and retained the presidency;Template:Sfn on 2 June, the federal government called for a new presidential election the following year.Template:Sfn On 2 February 1835, the electoral college re-elected Morazán as Central America's president and José Gregorio Salazar as Morazán's vice president; they were sworn in on 14 February.Template:Sfn

Second civil war and dissolutionEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

On 30 May 1838, the Federal Congress convened and declared that each of the federal republic's five states was free to establish any form of republican government. Nicaragua seceded from the Federal Republic of Central America on 30 April 1838. Honduras did the same on 26 October, followed by Costa Rica on 15 November. On 2 February 1839, all of Central America's federally-elected government officials (including Morazán) left office. They had no successors, since no federal election was held.Template:Sfn On 17 April, Guatemalan President Rafael Carrera issued a decree dissolving the Federal Republic of Central America; the Federal Congress accepted his decree on 14 July.Template:Sfn On 30 January 1841, El Salvador declared independence from the Federal Republic of Central America.Template:Sfn At the fall of the federal republic, four of its five successor states were led by opponents of federal rule and proponents of their respective states' secession: Braulio Carrillo (Costa Rica), Francisco Malespín (El Salvador), Carrera (Guatemala), and Francisco Ferrera (Honduras).Template:Sfn

Government and politicsEdit

Federal governmentEdit

File:Federal government of the Federal Republic of Central America.svg
Political organization of the Central American federal government

According to the federal constitution, the government of the Federal Republic of Central America was "popular, representative, and federal".Template:Sfn All elected officials were appointed with indirect elections; voters chose electors who would vote on their behalf, rather than voting directly for candidates seeking public office. In presidential, vice-presidential and legislative elections, there were three rounds of voting; voters chose electors in the first round, electors voted for a further set of electors in the second round, and those electors voted for candidates seeking public office in the third round.Template:Sfn Voting was compulsory.Template:Sfn

The federal republic's government was divided into legislative, executive and judicial branches,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn with no term limits.Template:Sfn The Federal Congress was its bicameral legislative branch.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Chamber of Deputies (the lower house) consisted of 41 deputies allocated across the states,Template:Efn with one deputy per 30,000 people.Template:Sfn Each deputy was accompanied by a supplement deputy.Template:Sfn Half of the Chamber of Deputies' members were elected annually.Template:Sfn The Senate (the upper house) consisted of two senators from each state, for a total of ten senators.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Senate, which first met on 24 April 1825,Template:Sfn acted as a de facto executive council that approved legislation passed by the Council of Deputies.Template:Sfn An advisory body to the president, it could also review Supreme Court rulings.Template:Sfn One-third of the Senate's members were elected every year.Template:Sfn The Council of Deputies could override a Senate legislative veto with a two-thirds majority, or a three-fourths majority for tax legislation.Template:Sfn From 1824 to 1838, there were a total of 11 congressional terms.Template:Sfn

The president led the executive branch. Elected to a four-year term, he was the commander-in-chief of the Federal Army.Template:Sfn The president had a cabinet of three secretaries (ministers): the secretary of relations, the secretary of war, and the secretary of the treasury.Template:Sfn Article 111 of the federal constitution allowed the president to seek consecutive re-election once, after which he must leave office for at least one term before being eligible for re-election a second time.Template:Sfn The president was relatively weak in comparison with other contemporary Latin American presidents, particularly because he could not veto or pocket veto legislation, could not send legislation back to the Federal Congress for reconsideration, and was required to enact all laws passed by the Federal Congress within fifteen days.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The authors of the federal constitution sought to oppose a {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}-like president with dictatorial powers by implementing checks on presidential power to ensure legislative supremacy. Template:Ill, a 20th-century Costa Rican lawyer and rector of the University of Costa Rica, described the presidency of the Federal Republic of Central America as "merely decorative".Template:Sfn

The Supreme Court of Justice was established on 2 August 1824 as the federal republic's judicial branch.Template:Sfn It consisted of six justices, two of whom were elected every two years.Template:Sfn The first justices took office on 29 April 1825.Template:Sfn The Supreme Court could not enforce its rulings on unconstitutional laws passed by the Federal Congress, since its rulings were subject to Federal Congress review.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Armed forcesEdit

The Federal Republic of Central America found it difficult to maintain its federal army. Before Central American independence, few Central Americans pursued a military career. Guatemalan historian Manuel Montúfar y Coronado wrote that "military influence was unknown in Central America; before Independence, there was no military career" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}").Template:Sfn The Central American federal army originated as rebel groups who resisted annexation to Mexico in 1822 and 1823, and was not formally established as a political entity until 1829.Template:Sfn

Although the president was commander-in-chief of the federal army,Template:Sfn only the Federal Congress had the authority to raise and maintain armies and to declare war and peace.Template:Sfn In July 1823, the Central American federal army had 10,000 soldiers.Template:Sfn The legislature increased the size of the federal army to 11,800 soldiers in December of that year, organized into two light battalions, two squadrons, and one artillery brigade.Template:Sfn The federal army established defensive garrisons along the Caribbean coast in case Spain attempted to reassert control of the region. George Alexander Thompson, a British diplomat who visited Central America in 1825, said that the federal army would only have been able to resist a Spanish invasion with guerrilla warfare.Template:Sfn

By the end of 1829, the Central American federal army (now called the Protector Allied Army of the Law) totaled 4,000 soldiers. That year, the Federal Congress reduced the maximum size of the federal army to 2,000 soldiers due to general distrust by the states of the power and influence of the federal army. Each state was instructed to provide soldiers to the federal army.Template:Efn The federal peacetime army, as established by the Federal Congress in 1829, consisted of three infantry brigades, one artillery brigade, and one cavalry regiment.Template:Sfn By 1831, only 800 federal soldiers remained; the state militias had more soldiers and were better funded and equipped. During the 1830s, the federal army's military supremacy over the state militias relied on the discipline of its soldiers and public perception that a {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}-like figure led the federal army. In 1836, Morazán said that the federal army had been reduced to "a handful of ancient veterans that have survived the greatest dangers" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}").Template:Sfn

Administrative divisionsEdit

File:1840 Berghaus' Physikalischer Atlas - Central America.jpg
An 1840 map of the federal republic by cartographer Heinrich Berghaus

The federal republic consisted of five states: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua.Template:Sfn Each state was subdivided into 45 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (districts).Template:Sfn From 7 February 1835 to 3 May 1839, the Federal District was centered around San Salvador as the national capital.Template:Sfn Briefly, from 1838 to 1839, the federal government considered separating Los Altos from Guatemala and elevating it to the status of a state.Template:Sfn Although Guatemala claimed Belize as part of its territory, coastal Belize was occupied by the British.Template:Sfn Guatemala and Mexico claimed sovereignty over Soconusco, but neither had full control of the region. Portions of Soconusco were effectively independent, but its leaders preferred union with Central America.Template:Sfn Central America bordered the Mosquito Coast on the Caribbean,Template:Sfn which it claimed as part of its territory.Template:Sfn The Federal Republic of Central America covered approximately Template:Convert and spanned about Template:Convert north to south between the 8th and 18th parallel north.Template:Sfn

On 5 May 1824, the National Constituent Assembly ordered each of the federal republic's five states to draft a constitution and install state-level legislative, executive, and judicial branches similar to those of the federal government.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Each state could elect legislators, a governor, and judicial officials in indirect elections. Like the Senate at the federal level, each state's Senate was an executive council which advised the state governor.Template:Sfn All the states drafted and ratified their constitutions by April 1826.Template:Sfn The federal constitution recognized each state government as "free and independent" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}"), and the state governments could administer internal affairs not mandated for the federal government by the federal constitution.Template:Sfn

States of the Federal Republic of Central America
State Location
(borders Template:Circa 1835–1838)
Capital city State constitution
adoptedTemplate:Sfn
Population
(1824)Template:Sfn
Population
(1836)Template:Sfn
Costa Rica Cartago 25 January 1825 70,000 150,000
El Salvador San Salvador (until 1834)
Cojutepeque (1834)
San Vicente (1834–1839)
San Salvador (from 1839)
12 June 1824 212,573 350,000
Federal District San Salvador (1835–1839) Not applicable 50,000
Guatemala Antigua Guatemala (until 1825)
Guatemala City (from 1825)
11 October 1825 660,580 700,000
Honduras Comayagua 11 December 1825 137,069 300,000
Nicaragua León 8 April 1826 207,269 350,000

Political factionsEdit

The two major political factions of the Federal Republic of Central America were the liberals (also known as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) and the conservativesTemplate:Efn (also known as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}). The factions were not organized political parties.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Liberals and conservatives saw each other as enemies, accusing each other of "demagoguery, disorganization, and anarchism" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}").Template:Sfn

Liberals supported a federal government and the devolution of power to the country's states,Template:Sfn considering the centralized colonial government inherently defective and radical change necessary.Template:Sfn They attempted to implement freedom of religion in 1823.Template:Sfn Resistance from the predominantly-Catholic population prevented implementation of the reform, however, and Catholicism was established as the country's official religion.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 1825, an executive decree required all Catholic clergymen in the country to swear an oath of allegiance to the federal republic. The clergy opposed the decree, seeing it as diminishing the power of the Catholic Church.Template:Sfn Liberals also supported {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} economic policies, free trade, and foreign immigration in an effort to improve the economy.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They were primarily supported by the upper middle class and intellectuals.Template:Sfn

Conservatives supported centralizing power around the national government,Template:Sfn believing that the colonial centralized government structure before independence was preferable to a new system of government (federalism) which might be a burden on society.Template:Sfn They supported protectionist economic policies and defended the role of the Catholic Church in Central American society as an arbiter of morality which preserved the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Sfn The conservatives viewed Protestantism as inferior to Catholicism,Template:Sfn and believed that the country's indigenous population should be subservient to the ruling white and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} population.Template:Sfn They primarily received support from wealthy landowners, established colonial-era families, and the clergy.Template:Sfn

Foreign relationsEdit

File:Colonel-john-williams-tn1.jpg
lang}} to Central America

The federal republic sent diplomats to Gran Colombia, France, the Holy See, Mexico, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States,Template:Sfn and received diplomats from Chile, France, Gran Colombia, Hanover, Mexico, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States.Template:Sfn Mexico recognized Central American independence in August 1823.Template:Sfn On 15 March 1825, federal diplomats signed a treaty with Gran Colombia ensuring the existence of a "perpetual confederation" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}") between the countries; the treaty was ratified on 12 September.Template:Sfn Although France, the Holy See, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom sent diplomats to the Federal Republic of Central America, they recognized Central America's independence only after the federal government had collapsed in the late 1830s.Template:Sfn

The United States recognized the independence of the Federal Republic of Central America from Spain on 4 August 1824 when U.S. President James Monroe received Cañas as Central America's envoy to the United States. The two countries signed the Treaty of Peace, Amity, Commerce, and Navigation on 5 December 1825. On 3 May 1826, Central America received U.S. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} John Williams in Guatemala City. William S. Murphy was the last U.S. diplomat assigned to Central America; he left his post in March 1842 after the federal republic had collapsed.Template:Sfn

On 16 June 1825, the Federal Congress passed a law approving construction of a canal in Nicaragua to connect the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea.Template:Sfn The congress approved a contract with the government of the Netherlands to develop the canal project in October 1830, but the Dutch government canceled the contract the following year due to the Belgian Revolution.Template:Sfn The Nicaraguan government asked the federal government in 1833 and 1838 to build a canal, but the federal government took no action on either request.Template:Sfn

National symbolsEdit

While resisting the Mexican attempt to annex Central America in 1822, Arce's forces waved a horizontal blue, white, and blue triband inspired by the flag of Argentina.Template:Sfn The flag of the Federal Republic of Central America, adopted on 21 August 1823,Template:Sfn was based on Arce's 1822 design.Template:Sfn The adopted flag retained the blue, white, and blue horizontal triband design, with the country's coat of arms in the center.Template:Sfn The federal republic's coat of arms was an equilateral triangle; within the triangle were a rainbow at the top, a Phrygian cap with beams of light emanating from it in the center, and five rounded volcanoes surrounded by two oceans (the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans) at the bottom. Surrounding the triangle was an oval with the name of the country within it.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The federal republic's national anthem was "{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}", written by Rómulo E. Durón.Template:Sfn Its national mottoTemplate:Snd"God, Union, Liberty" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}")Template:Sndwas adopted on 4 August 1823, replacing the motto "God keep you many years" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}") in use before independence.Template:Sfn

DemographicsEdit

PopulationEdit

In 1824, Central America had a population of 1,287,491.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn By 1836, it had an estimated population of 1,900,000;Template:Sfn the estimate, by federal administrator Juan Galindo, "largely over-estimated" the number of whites and excluded Honduras' indigenous population.Template:Sfn Central America was the most densely-populated country in the Americas.Template:Sfn Its population was unevenly distributed across the states, with over half in Guatemala in 1824. The constitution granted political representation in the Federal Congress in proportion to population, so the population imbalance gave Guatemala greater representation in the legislature than the other states.Template:Sfn

Ethnic compositionEdit

File:Castas 01mestiza max.jpg
An 18th-century painting by Miguel Cabrera of a white man, an indigenous woman and a mixed-race child, the three major ethnic groups of the Federal Republic of Central America

Central America was not ethnically homogenous.Template:Sfn In 1824, 65 percent of the population was indigenous, 31 percent was mixed (Ladino or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), and four percent was white (Spanish or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).Template:Sfn There was a small population of Blacks, and Galindo described the black population in 1836 as "too inconsiderable to be taken into consideration".Template:Sfn Ethnic composition varied throughout the Central American states. In 1824, up to 70 percent of Guatemala's population was indigenous; El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua were almost entirely composed of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and Costa Rica self-reported that it was 80 percent white.Template:Sfn

Population of Central America (1836)Template:Sfn
State Ethnic group
Indigenous Mixed White Total
Costa Rica 25,000 125,000 150,000
El Salvador 70,000 210,000 70,000 350,000
Federal District 20,000 20,000 10,000 50,000
Guatemala 450,000 150,000 100,000 700,000
Honduras 240,000 60,000 300,000
Nicaragua 120,000 120,000 110,000 350,000
Total 685,000 740,000 475,000 1,900,000

Central America's white and mixed population primarily spoke Spanish, and the majority indigenous population spoke their indigenous languages.Template:Sfn Most Central Americans in the federal republic were illiterate, and the federal and state governments lacked the funding to invest in schools.Template:Sfn Morazán established universities in San Salvador and León in the early 1830s, although they lacked funding and professors.Template:Sfn

ReligionEdit

Catholicism was the largest and the official religion of the Federal Republic of Central America.Template:Sfn Initially, Catholicism was the only religion that could be practiced publicly. Public worship as part of any other religion was prohibited until May 1832, when the Federal Congress issued a decree permitting public practice of any religion (a right reinforced by an 1835 constitutional amendment).Template:Sfn The Catholic Church influenced Central American politics,Template:Sfn but the president and any Supreme Court justice were not allowed to be members of the clergy; only one of each state's two senators could be a clergyman. Papal bulls issued by the pope to Central America had to be approved by the Federal Congress before they became effective.Template:Sfn

CitiesEdit

In 1836, twenty-nine settlements were designated as cities in Central America.Template:Sfn

Template:Cities of the Federal Republic of Central America

EconomyEdit

CurrencyEdit

File:Federal Republic of Central America 1835 4 Escudos.jpg
A four-escudo coin struck in 1835 at the San José mint; 697 were minted.Template:Sfn

On 19 March 1824, the National Constituent Assembly passed a law that prohibited the minting of coins with "the bust, coat of arms, or whatever other emblems which are typical and distinctive of the Spanish monarchy" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}"). The law also ordered the creation of a new currency. The obverse would depict the country's coat of arms, and the reverse would depict a tree with the phrase "Grow Free and Fertile" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}").Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The Central American currency, known as the "national currency",Template:Sfn was divided into {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Sfn One {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} equaled two {{#invoke:Lang|lang}},Template:Sfn and one {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} equaled eight {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} were struck in gold in denominations of Template:Frac, 1, 2, 4, and 8; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} were struck in gold in denominations of 1 and 2; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} were struck in silver in denominations of Template:Frac, Template:Frac, 1, 2, and 8.Template:Sfn The coins were minted in Guatemala City, San José, and Tegucigalpa.Template:Sfn

ProblemsEdit

Template:Quote box

Thomas L. Karnes, a history professor at Arizona State University, described the Federal Republic of Central America's economy as "chaotic".Template:Sfn The federal republic constantly struggled to have enough money to finance its governmental obligations. In 1826, Williams wrote to United States Secretary of State Henry Clay that Central America's economic situation was "most unpromising". Robert S. Smith, an economics professor at Duke University, described the federal treasury as "chronically empty".Template:Sfn When Arce assumed the presidency in 1825, the treasury contained only 600 pesos.Template:Sfn

Under Spanish colonial rule, Central America's economy was reliant on agriculture because the region lacked abundant natural resources;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn the Federal Republic of Central America continued to rely on an agricultural economy. The federal republic's largest source of income was the export of lumber products, indigo, cochineal, bananas, coffee, cacao, and (especially) tobacco;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn tobacco exports generated 200,000 to 300,000 pesos of income annually.Template:Sfn Although agricultural exports provided the federal republic with much of its income, it was still reliant on foreign loans to finance everyday governance. Many of these foreign loans were granted at greatly-discounted rates, but still fell into default.Template:Sfn The federal government defaulted on its foreign debt, which totaled GB£163,300 (Template:Inflation), in 1828.Template:Sfn In October 1823, the National Constituent Assembly had pledged to pay off the country's internal debt (a total of 3,583,576 pesos); by February 1831, however, the debt had increased to 4,768,966 pesos.Template:Sfn

Infrastructure between and within the federal republic's states was poor due to Central America's large areas of dense forest and mountainous terrain.Template:Sfn Indigenous slaves had built and maintained Central America's road network, but construction and maintenance of the roads nearly ended when slavery was abolished on 17 April 1824 by federal decree.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Degradation of the country's infrastructure reduced interstate commerce and industry.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Outbreaks of leprosy, smallpox, and typhoid fever also hindered labor productivity.Template:Sfn

Guatemala's economy was the strongest of the five states, financing most of the federal government's civil and military expenses; some states contributed to the federal government only intermittently due to strained economic conditions.Template:Sfn Guatemala was responsible for paying almost half of the federal republic's foreign debt until the 1828 default.Template:Sfn

LegacyEdit

Historical assessmentEdit

Template:Quote box

Richard A. Haggerty, an editor for the Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress, described the Federal Republic of Central America as "unworkable" but the "only successful political union of the Central American states" after the end of Spanish colonial rule.Template:Sfn El Salvador's Ministry of Education described the federal republic as a "political laboratory" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}") for ideas such as republicanism and constitutionalism.Template:Sfn

Some experts criticized the federal constitution as "too idealistic", as a major component of the federal republic's collapse.Template:Sfn Liberal Guatemalan politician Lorenzo Montúfar said that in "adopting the federal system, [the federal republic] obtained for result, wars, and disasters".Template:Sfn Nicaraguan journalist Pedro Joaquín Chamorro wrote that attempting to emulate the United States' federalism created divisions between Central America's states where a centralized government would have succeeded.Template:Sfn According to El Salvador's Ministry of Education, the federal constitution was a "fatal conclusion that led to anarchy and disorganization" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}").Template:Sfn University of Massachusetts research scholar Lynn V. Foster described the federal republic during the 1820s as "more like a loose confederation of small independent nations than a single republic" due to the great amount of power and influence wielded by local officials in their states compared to the federal government.Template:Sfn Guillermo Vázquez Vicente, an economics professor at King Juan Carlos University, wrote that achieving the constitution's ideals for the federal republic was "impossible" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}") without a coherent political, economic, and social plan. He cited the failure to reach the constitution's republican ideals and separatist sentiment in the five states as an "insurmountable impediment" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}") to achieving national unity.Template:Sfn

Other experts disagree that the constitution, or federalism, were the primary cause of the Federal Republic of Central America's collapse. Franklin D. Parker, a history professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, said that the federal republic's political leaders' failure to abide by and enforce the constitution's provisions ultimately resulted in its collapse.Template:Sfn Liberal Central American historian Alejandro Marure attributed "all of the misfortunes which the nation suffered" to Arce's attempts to appease both liberals and conservatives during the 1820s.Template:Sfn Honduran lawyer and politician Ramón Rosa wrote in his biography of Valle that Morazán's 1835 re-election brought "the ruin of the Central American Republic" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}"), saying that Morazán's use of military force to settle disputes instead of compromising undermined the federal government.Template:Sfn Nicaraguan writer Template:Ill said that a primary cause of the federal republic's collapse was a lack of efficient communication infrastructure between and within the states.Template:Sfn Philip F. Flemion, a history professor at San Diego State University, attributed the collapse of the federal republic to "regional jealousies, social and cultural differences, inadequate communication and transportation systems, limited financial resources, and disparate political views".Template:Sfn Smith noted the federal republic's "financial maladministration" and "abortive economic development" as playing at least a small role in its collapse.Template:Sfn

Reunification attemptsEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:See

File:ECHO Central America Editable A3 Landscape.png
A map by the European Commission with Central America's modern borders

As early as 1842, some Central Americans sought to reunite the region. Several attempts have been made at reunification by diplomacy or force during the 19th and 20th centuries, but none lasted longer than a few months or involved all five former members of the Federal Republic of Central America.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to Guatemalan historian Julio César Pinto Soria, Central America has failed to achieve reunification primarily due to the power of oligarchs in the federal republic's former states who see reunification as an impediment to their goals.Template:Sfn

Delegations from El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua proclaimed Antonio José Cañas the president of a new federal government on 17 March 1842, but the governments of Costa Rica and Guatemala did not recognize the proclamation.Template:Sfn Cañas' government ended in 1844, when El Salvador and Honduras invaded Nicaragua for granting asylum to Salvadoran and Honduran political exiles.Template:Sfn Francisco Morazán also tried to reunite Central America by force in 1842 when he became the political leader of Costa Rica. After leading an invasion of Nicaragua, he was defeated, deposed, and executed by firing squad on 15 September of that year.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In 1848, delegates from El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua met in Tegucigalpa to draft a new constitution for Central America.Template:Sfn Further meetings were held the following year in León, during which the delegations signed a treaty to elect a Central American president, vice president, and national legislature. The Central American legislature declared the establishment of a Central American union on 9 October 1852, but resistance from the Nicaraguan Legitimist Party and the outbreak of civil war in Nicaragua led to the union's failure by 1854.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Neither El Salvador nor Nicaragua ratified the union's constitution.Template:Sfn

In 1876, Guatemalan president Justo Rufino Barrios called for all five former members of the Federal Republic of Central America to send delegations to Guatemala City to negotiate the restoration of a united Central American country, but Barrios' invasion of El Salvador later that year ended the planned negotiations.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On 28 February 1885, Barrios declared the establishment of the Central America Federation and proclaimed himself as its president. Honduras accepted Barrios' declaration, but Costa Rica, El Salvador, and Nicaragua rejected it. Barrios invaded El Salvador on 29 March 1885 to force it to join the Central American Union, and was killed during the Battle of Chalchuapa on 2 April. Guatemalan forces withdrew from El Salvador, ending Barrios' attempt to reunite Central America.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

On 20 June 1895, delegations from El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua signed the Treaty of Amapala and declared the formation of the Greater Republic of Central America.Template:Sfn The treaty allowed Costa Rica and Guatemala to join if their governments wished to do so.Template:Sfn The United States established diplomatic relations with the republic in December 1896.Template:Sfn The first session of the Executive Federal Council (the country's legislature) was held on 1 November 1898, when the country's constitution was adopted and its name was changed to the United States of Central America.Template:Sfn On 13 November, Salvadoran General Tomás Regalado Romero overthrew President Rafael Antonio Gutiérrez and declared El Salvador's withdrawal from the United States of Central America. On 29 November, the Executive Federal Council dissolved the union after failing to stop El Salvador's secession.Template:Sfn The most recent attempt to reunite Central America was the short-lived Federation of Central America of 1921 to 1922 that collapsed after Guatemalan president Carlos Herrera was overthrown.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Salvadoran president Nayib Bukele has expressed a desire to reunite Central America. In some speeches since assuming office in 2019, he said that Central America should be "one single nation".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bukele reaffirmed his belief in 2024 that Central America should reunite, saying that the region would be stronger if united but he needed "the will of the peoples" ("{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}") to achieve reunification.Template:Sfn

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

Template:Notelist

ReferencesEdit

CitationsEdit

Template:Reflist

BibliographyEdit

BooksEdit

Template:Refbegin

Template:Refend

JournalsEdit

Template:Refbegin

Template:Refend

Web sourcesEdit

Template:Refbegin

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }} Template:Refend

Further readingEdit

Template:Refbegin

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

Template:Refend

External linksEdit

Template:Sister project

Historical documentsEdit

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

VideosEdit

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

Template:Portal bar Template:Federal Republic of Central America navbox Template:Navboxes Template:Authority control Template:Coord