Uladislao Silva

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Preceded byHilarión Daza (provisional)
Serapio Reyes Ortiz (acting)
Succeeded byNarciso Campero (provisional)
Born(1840-01-02)January 2, 1840
Died(1898-10-03)October 3, 1898
La Paz, Bolivia
Uladislao Silva
President of Bolivia (de facto)
President of the Government Junta of La Paz
In office
28 December 1879  19 January 1880
Serving with Rudesindo Carvajal and Donato Vazquez
Preceded byHilarión Daza (provisional)
Serapio Reyes Ortiz (acting)
Succeeded byNarciso Campero (provisional)
Personal details
Born(1840-01-02)January 2, 1840
Died(1898-10-03)October 3, 1898
La Paz, Bolivia
SpouseMargarita Portillo
Military service
AllegianceBolivia
Branch/serviceBolivian Army
RankColonel
Battles/warsWar of the Pacific

Uladislao Silva (2 January 1840 – 3 October 1898) was a Bolivian military officer who was de facto President of Bolivia after becoming the head of the Government Junta installed in La Paz after the overthrow of Hilarión Daza. Silva was made Supreme Chief of the Junta on December 28, 1879.[1][2]

Silva was born in La Paz to Pedro Juan Silva and Luisa Arancibia. From humble beginnings, he joined the Military College of La Paz. He would reach the rank of colonel in 1876 after participating in the mutiny in Santa Cruz de la Sierra during the coup that ousted Tomás Frías. He was married to Margarita Portillo on May 26, 1862.[3][4][5]

Silva's rise in the military ranks was greatly due to his relationship with Agustín Morales, who served as President between 1871 and 1872. Silva served as aide-de-camp to Morales and was in the President's inner circle, always dining with him.[6]

Prelude to the War of the Pacific

The treaty with he Compañía de Salitres y Ferrocarril de Antofagasta

In 1873, the Bolivian government signed an agreement with the representative of the Compañía de Salitres y Ferrocarril de Antofagasta, an agreement that at the beginning of 1878 was not yet in force, because, according to the Bolivian constitution, contracts on natural resources had to be approved by congress. This was done by the Bolivian National Constituent Assembly through a law, on February 14, 1878, on the condition that a tax of 10 cents per quintal of saltpeter exported by the company be paid.[7]

For Chile, the collection of the tax of 10 cents per quintal exported explicitly violated article IV of the 1874 Treaty between Bolivia and Chile, which prohibited raising taxes for twenty-five years on "Chilean people, industries and capital working between parallels 23 º and 24º" and residents in that area.[8] Bolivia counterargued that the company was not a "Chilean citizen" nor a resident but a commercial entity, which constituted, according to the laws of Bolivia, as subject, therefore, to its ius imperium.[9]

The Chilean owners of the affected company flatly refused to pay said tax, considering it to be abusive, and requested help from the government of Chile. Santiago pledged their support for the company's cause, despite the fact that it was a dispute between a private company and the Bolivian State.

The Chilean government considered it a bilateral case and endorsed the sui generis of the conflict. Thus, began the diplomatic conflict between Bolivia and Chile that escalated rapidly in magnitude given the lack of diplomatic tact of Daza's government. Peru participated as a mediator in the resulting crisis, deciding to send a Special Ambassador and Plenipotentiary to Santiago to try to avoid a possible war through negotiation. The treaty indicated that the controversies that give rise to "the intelligence and execution of the Treaty" should be submitted to arbitration.[9]

The occupation of Antofagasta

On November 17, 1878, the government of La Paz ordered the prefect of the department of Cobija, Severino Zapata, to enforce the 10-cent tax established by the Law of February 14, 1878 in an attempt to counteract the serious economic crisis in Bolivia. Thus, originating the casus belli. Subsequently, on February 1, 1879, the government of Bolivia unilaterally rescinded the contract, suspending the effects of the law of February 14, 1878, and decided to claim the saltpeter fields occupied by the Compañía de Salitres y Ferrocarriles de Antofagasta.

They proceeded to auction the assets of the company in order to collect the unpaid taxes, using armed force in the process.[8] The auction was scheduled for February 14, 1879. Daza ignored the probability of Chilean retaliation. Chile occupied Antofagasta that same February 14, 1879, frustrating the auction. Daza, citing invasion as a casus belli, declared war on Chile. The secret treaty between Peru and Bolivia signed in 1873 in which former pledged to support the latter militarily in case of conflict with Chile.[7][9] Chile declared war on Bolivia on March 5, 1879, and proceeded to occupy the Bolivian coast, asserting old unresolved territorial claims regarding the coast between those parallels.

The War of the Pacific

The La Paz Junta and downfall

References

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