{"title":"Francisco de Miranda","authors":"A. Iserov","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780199366439.013.745","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Francisco de Miranda (March 28, 1750, Caracas, Venezuela—July 14, 1816, La Carraca, Spain) was a Spanish American revolutionary who after a career in the Spanish Army from 1783 devoted his life to the cause of Spanish American independence. The various designs of Miranda in the 1780s–1800s were founded upon the idea of a military liberation expedition to Spanish America led by him and organized with the support of a power (Great Britain, United States, France) in conflict with Spain that would then foment existing discontent and lead to a wide-scale revolt and independence. Though these plans failed, as did his attempt to organize an expedition from New York without the support of any power (1805–1807), in 1810 the revolution in Spanish America started without his participation as a consequence of the Napoleonic invasion of Spain. Miranda was called to Caracas and eventually led the short-lived First Venezuelan Republic in 1812. After its defeat he spent the last years of his life in Spanish jails. Miranda’s failure influenced the South American revolutionaries who adopted the tactics of unconditional warfare against the Spanish troops from 1813.\n A shrewd and sophisticated expert in world affairs and political intrigues and an acclaimed military commander, Miranda was persistently trying to use the conflicts between great powers to achieve his goal though he knew that these powers’ leaders were eager to use him as a trump card against the Spanish Empire in their geopolitical games. His contacts ranged from US Founding Fathers, British Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger and Viscount Melville to the Prussian king Friedrich II and the Russian empress Catherine II. He was a respected peer in the high society of the European “republic of letters” in the Age of Enlightenment. In the United States his friends belonged to the Federalist Party, which represents an interesting phenomenon since Federalists are usually viewed as being generally skeptical toward foreign revolutions. In Spanish America Miranda’s ideas received no support until 1810–1812, as his failed expedition clearly shows—this is an excellent example of the interplay between “evental history” (histoire évenémentielle) and the longue durée, demonstrating how fast and unpredictable radical historical change may be. In spite of this long political solitude, Miranda entered the Spanish American symbolic pantheon as the precursor of independence.","PeriodicalId":190332,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History","volume":"44 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-08-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199366439.013.745","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

Francisco de Miranda (March 28, 1750, Caracas, Venezuela—July 14, 1816, La Carraca, Spain) was a Spanish American revolutionary who after a career in the Spanish Army from 1783 devoted his life to the cause of Spanish American independence. The various designs of Miranda in the 1780s–1800s were founded upon the idea of a military liberation expedition to Spanish America led by him and organized with the support of a power (Great Britain, United States, France) in conflict with Spain that would then foment existing discontent and lead to a wide-scale revolt and independence. Though these plans failed, as did his attempt to organize an expedition from New York without the support of any power (1805–1807), in 1810 the revolution in Spanish America started without his participation as a consequence of the Napoleonic invasion of Spain. Miranda was called to Caracas and eventually led the short-lived First Venezuelan Republic in 1812. After its defeat he spent the last years of his life in Spanish jails. Miranda’s failure influenced the South American revolutionaries who adopted the tactics of unconditional warfare against the Spanish troops from 1813. A shrewd and sophisticated expert in world affairs and political intrigues and an acclaimed military commander, Miranda was persistently trying to use the conflicts between great powers to achieve his goal though he knew that these powers’ leaders were eager to use him as a trump card against the Spanish Empire in their geopolitical games. His contacts ranged from US Founding Fathers, British Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger and Viscount Melville to the Prussian king Friedrich II and the Russian empress Catherine II. He was a respected peer in the high society of the European “republic of letters” in the Age of Enlightenment. In the United States his friends belonged to the Federalist Party, which represents an interesting phenomenon since Federalists are usually viewed as being generally skeptical toward foreign revolutions. In Spanish America Miranda’s ideas received no support until 1810–1812, as his failed expedition clearly shows—this is an excellent example of the interplay between “evental history” (histoire évenémentielle) and the longue durée, demonstrating how fast and unpredictable radical historical change may be. In spite of this long political solitude, Miranda entered the Spanish American symbolic pantheon as the precursor of independence.
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弗朗西斯科·德·米兰达
弗朗西斯科·德·米兰达(Francisco de Miranda, 1750年3月28日,委内瑞拉加拉加斯- 1816年7月14日,西班牙卡拉卡)是一位西班牙裔美国革命家,他从1783年开始在西班牙军队服役,之后将一生献给了西班牙裔美国人的独立事业。米兰达在18世纪80年代至19世纪的各种设计都是基于他领导的西班牙美洲军事解放远征的想法,并在与西班牙发生冲突的大国(英国,美国,法国)的支持下组织起来,然后煽动现有的不满情绪,导致大规模的起义和独立。尽管这些计划失败了,就像他试图在没有任何力量支持的情况下从纽约组织远征一样(1805-1807),1810年,由于拿破仑入侵西班牙,西班牙美洲的革命在没有他参与的情况下开始了。米兰达被召唤到加拉加斯,最终在1812年领导了短暂的委内瑞拉第一共和国。战败后,他在西班牙监狱中度过了生命的最后几年。米兰达的失败影响了南美洲的革命者,他们从1813年开始对西班牙军队采取无条件战争的策略。米兰达是世界事务和政治阴谋方面精明老练的专家,也是一位广受赞誉的军事指挥官,他一直试图利用大国之间的冲突来实现自己的目标,尽管他知道这些大国的领导人渴望在地缘政治游戏中利用他作为对抗西班牙帝国的王牌。他的联系人包括美国开国元勋、英国首相小威廉·皮特和梅尔维尔子爵、普鲁士国王弗里德里希二世和俄罗斯皇后凯瑟琳二世。他是启蒙时代欧洲“文学共和国”上流社会中受人尊敬的贵族。在美国,他的朋友属于联邦党,这代表了一个有趣的现象,因为联邦党通常被视为对外国革命持怀疑态度。在西裔美洲,米兰达的观点直到1810-1812年才得到支持,正如他失败的远征所清楚表明的那样——这是“事件史”(histoire)和长期之间相互作用的一个极好的例子,证明了激进的历史变化可能是多么迅速和不可预测。尽管经历了长期的政治孤独,米兰达还是作为独立的先驱进入了西班牙裔美国人的象征性万神殿。
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