It's impossible to stay for even a
short time in Argentina without
coming across the name of the
national hero,
José de San Martín
- he's as ubiquitous as Washington
in the United States or de Gaulle in
France, and has countless streets,
plazas, public buildings and even a
mountain named after him, as well as
innumerable statues in his honour.
He's often simply referred to as
The Liberator (
El Libertador
) and, appropriately given his
surname, is treated with saint-like
reverence. It's ironic, therefore,
that he didn't even take part in the
country's initial liberation from
the Spanish Crown, that he actually
helped to free Chile, Argentina's
traditional rival, and that he spent
the last 23 years of his life in
self-imposed exile in France. Even
this last fact is celebrated across
the country by naming streets and
whole barrios after Boulogne-sur-Mer,
the French town where he died in
1850. A slightly
larger-than-original replica of his
Parisian mansion, Grand Bourg, built
on the edge of leafy Palermo Chico,
is now the Instituto Sanmartiniano,
a library-cum-study-centre given
over to research into the great man.
San Martín was born into a humble
family - he was the son of a junior
officer - in 1778 in the former
Jesuit mission settlement of Yapeyú,
Corrientes Province, where you can
now visit his birthplace and a
commemorative museum. He was packed
off to the academy in Buenos Aires
and then to military school in
Spain, and later served in the royal
army, taking part in the Spanish
victories against the Napoleonic
invasions in 1808-11. When he heard
the news of Argentina's unilateral
declaration of independence, he
returned to his homeland, and
assisted in training the rag-bag
army that was trying to resist
Spain's attempt to cling onto its
South American empire. After having
replaced Manuel Belgrano as leader
of the independence forces in 1813,
he became increasingly active in
politics, as a pragmatic
conservative, and attended the
Tucumán Congress in 1816, at which a
new state was officially declared.
He then formed his own army, known
popularly as the Ejército de los
Andes , basing himself in
Mendoza, where he was governor for
several years, and in San Juan. From
there he crossed the Andes and
obliterated royalist troops at
Chacabuco, thereby freeing Chile
from the imperialistic yoke - though
his friend and comrade-at-arms
Bernardo O'Higgins got most of the
credit - finally mopping up the
remaining royalist resistence at
Maipú in 1818, before moving on to
Lima, Peru.
San Martín was not in the
slightest bit interested in personal
political power, but was in favour
of setting up a constitutional
monarchy in the newly emerging South
American states. In 1821 he signed
the so-called Punchanca agreement
with the Viceroy of Peru to put a
member of the Spanish royal family
on the Peruvian throne, but the
royalists did not respond and,
ultimately, he unilaterally declared
Peru's independence on July 12,
1821. Unable to hold the country
together in the face of royalist
resistance, he called upon Simón
Bolívar , the liberator of
Venezuela, to come to his
assistance. The only meeting between
the two giants of South American
independence occurred in Guayaquil,
Ecuador, in 1822. Bolívar's radical
republican ideals clashed with San
Martín's conservative mindset, so it
seemed predestined that no
compromise position would be found,
and, though no one knows what
exactly was said in this tantalizing
encounter, San Martín opted to
withdraw from Peru. Frustrated by an
emerging Argentina that was neither
the new-style kingdom he yearned for
nor the democratic modern
nation-state Bolívar had advocated
but, instead, a patchwork of
disunited provinces led by brutish
caudillos every bit as power-hungry
as the viceroys and governors they
had replaced, San Martín took off to
France . He was never to
return to Argentina during his
lifetime, and, in his self-imposed
exile, he slipped into obscurity;
all this changed after his death,
however, and the national hero's
bodily remains were repatriated
later that century. He now lies
buried in Buenos Aires' Metropolitan
Cathedral, where his tomb is a
national monument - a shrine to the
"Grandfather of the Nation".