Bernardo O'Higgins rules Chile as supreme director…
1816 CE to 1827 CE
He wins plaudits for defeating royalists and founding schools, but civil strife continues.
O'Higgins alienates Liberals and provincials with his authoritarianism, Conservatives and the church with his anticlericalism, and landowners with his proposed reforms of the land tenure system.
His attempt to devise a constitution in 1818 that would legitimize his government fails, as do his effort to generate stable funding for the new administration.
O'Higgins's dictatorial behavior arouses resistance in the provinces.
This growing discontent is reflected in the continuing opposition of partisans of Carrera, who is executed by the Argentine regime in Mendoza in 1821, as are his two brothers three years earlier.
O'Higgins, although opposed by many Liberals, angers the Roman Catholic Church with his liberal beliefs.
He maintains Catholicism's status as the official state religion but tries to curb the church's political powers and to encourage religious tolerance as a means of attracting Protestant immigrants and traders.
Like the church, the landed aristocracy feels threatened by O'Higgins, resenting his attempts to eliminate noble titles and, more important, to eliminate entailed estates.
O'Higgins's opponents also disapproved of his diversion of Chilean resources to aid San Martin's liberation of Peru.
O'Higgins insists on supporting this campaign because he realizes that Chilean independence will not be secure until the Spaniards are routed from the Andean core of the empire.
However, amid mounting discontent, troops from the northern and southern provinces force O'Higgins to resign.
Embittered, O'Higgins departs for Peru, where he will die in 1842.
After O'Higgins goes into exile in 1823, civil conflict continues, focusing mainly on the issues of anticlericalism and regionalism.
Presidents and constitutions rise and fall quickly in the 1820s.
Groups
Mapuche (Amerind tribe)
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Christians, Roman Catholic
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Spaniards (Latins)
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Protestantism
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Peru, Viceroyalty of
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Spain, Bourbon Kingdom of
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Río de la Plata, Viceroyalty of
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France, (first) Empire of
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Spain, Bonapartist Kingdom of
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Chile, Republic of
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