Guerra a muerte

Guerra a muerte (lit. English: War to the death) is a term coined by Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna and used in Chilean historiography to describe the irregular, no-quarter warfare that broke out in 1819 during the Chilean War of Independence.

Guerra a muerte
Part of the Chilean War of Independence

El malón (1834) by Johann Moritz Rugendas
Date1819–c.1824/7/32
Location
La Frontera, the Araucanía, the southern of the Chilean Central Valley and the Neuquén Basin
Result Patriot victory
Territorial
changes
Definitive Chilean occupation of the towns and forts of La Frontera
Belligerents

Patriots:
Chile


Mapuche allies:

  • Abajinos
  • Pehuenches

Royalists:
Rebels from the province of Concepción


Mapuche allies:

Commanders and leaders
  • Ramón Freire
  • Joaquín Prieto
  • P. A. del Alcázar 
  • Juan de Dios Rivera
  • José M. Borgoño
  • Pedro Barnechea
  • Manuel Bulnes
  • Pedro N. Victoriano
  • Pedro R. Arriagada
  • Juan L. Colipí
  • Venancio Coñoepán
  • Luis Melipán
  • Vicente Benavides 
  • Juan M. Pico 
  • Juan A. Ferrebú 
  • José M. Zapata 
  • Vicente Bocardo 
  • Miguel Senosiaín 
Pincheira brothers
  • Juan A. Pincheira 
  • Santos Pincheira 
  • Pablo Pincheira 
  • José A. Pincheira 
  • Juan F. Mariluán 
  • J. Mangin Hueno
  • Curiqueo 
  • Martín Toriano
  • Juan Neculmán 
Strength
Chilean Army and militias
Mapuche warriors
Royalist semi-regular army and montoneras
Mapuche warriors

After the royalists had been expelled from all cities and ports north of the Bio-Bio River, Vicente Benavides organized royalist resistance in La Frontera with the aid of Mapuche chiefs. The aid of the Mapuches was vital to the royalists since they had lost control of all cities and ports north of Valdivia. Most Mapuches valued the treaties they had with the Spanish authorities, while many other Mapuches regarded the matter with indifference and played both sides against each other. The Pincheira brothers, a future outlaw group, served Benavides in the Guerra a muerte by defending the Cordillera.

As result of the Guerra a muerte the government of nascent republic begun to distrust the Franciscan missionaries of Chillán who were regarded as representatives of the old regime. This led to the recruitment of a new contingent of missionaries for Chillán in the 1830s.

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