Tarija War

Tarija War
Part of the War of the Confederation

Map of Tarija territory, whose dispute between Bolivia and Argentina was known as the Tarija Question
DateMay 19, 1837April 26, 1839
Location
Result

Inconcluse

Territorial
changes
Peru-Bolivia keeps most of Tarija and drops its claims over Salta and Jujuy.
Belligerents
Argentine Confederation Argentine Confederation Peru–Bolivian Confederation Peru–Bolivian Confederation
Commanders and leaders
Juan Manuel Rosas
Alejandro Heredia
Felipe Heredia [es]
Lucio N. Mansilla
Pablo Alemán [es]
Manuel Virto [es]
Gregorio Paz
Otto Philipp Braun
Francis B. O'Connor
Sebastián Ágreda
Timoteo Raña
Strength

Army of the North: [es]

  • 400 (1837)[1]
  • 3,500 (1838;[2] ~1,000 in offensive in enemy territory)[1]
  • 5,000 gauchos from Jujuy[3]

Confederate Army:

  • 2,000–2,400 (1837)[1]
  • 2,000–4,000 (1838)[2]

The Tarija War (Spanish: Guerra por Tarija), also known as the War between Argentina and the Peru–Bolivian Confederation (Spanish: Guerra entre Argentina y la Confederación Perú-Boliviana), was an armed conflict that occurred between 1837 and 1839. Because it happened while the Peru–Bolivian Confederation was engaged in a parallel war against the Republic of Chile during the so-called War of the Confederation, both conflicts are often confused. The Tarija War began on May 19, 1837, when Juan Manuel de Rosas, who was in charge of managing foreign relations for the Argentine Confederation and was governor of the Province of Buenos Aires, declared war directly on President Andres de Santa Cruz because of the Tarija Question and Confederation's support for the Unitarian Party.

The operations began in August 1837, when Bolivian Confederate troops invaded most of the Province of Jujuy, the Puna de Jujuy, and the north of the Province of Salta. The war continued with a series of combats and skirmishes between both forces, all of them without conclusive results.[4] In May and June 1838, the Confederate army defeated Rosas's troops in a series of encounters, the most important of which was the Combate de Montenegro, or Combate de la Cuesta de Coyambuyo, which in practice led to Argentina's withdrawal from the war, which from then on had a defensive posture being maintained, but the state of war continued until the victory of the Chilean-Peruvian restorative army at the Battle of Yungay, which put an end to the Peru-Bolivian Confederation.

  1. ^ a b c von Rauch, George (1999). Conflict in the Southern Cone: the Argentine military and the boundary dispute with Chile, 1870-1902. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 11–12. ISBN 0-275-96347-0.
  2. ^ a b Miranda, Sebastián. "La Guerra Contra la Confederación Peruano – Boliviana (1837-1839)". Defensa y Seguridad. Archived from the original on August 30, 2011.
  3. ^ Avila Echazú, Edgar (1992). Historia de Tarija (in Spanish). Fundación Cultural del Banco Central de Bolivia. pp. es.
  4. ^ Robert L. Scheina "Latin America's Wars: The age of the caudillo, 1791–1899 – The Peru Bolivian Confederation" pág. 136