A civil war had started in Venezuela,…
July 1812 CE
Two provinces, Maracaibo Province and Guayana Province, and one district, Coro, have never recognized the Caracas Junta and remain loyal to the governments in Spain.
Military expeditions to bring Coro and Guayana under the control of the Republic had failed.
In 1811 an uprising in Valencia against the Republic had been successfully suppressed.
By 1812 the situation has increasingly become aggravated for the young Republic.
It is short of funds, the Spanish Regency has set up a blockade (although it is easily bypassed by British and American merchant ships), and on March 26, 1812, a devastating earthquake had hit republican areas.
In these desperate moments, Miranda is given dictatorial powers, but is nevertheless unable to stem the royalist advance headed by Captain Domingo de Monteverde.
By midyear, after the Battle of San Mateo, the Republic collapses.
Miranda capitulates to Monteverde and signs an armistice on July 25, 1812.