Article
La independencia del reino de Quito
Fecha
2010Autor
Rodríguez O., Jaime E.
Institución
Resumen
This article advances a new interpretation of the process of independence in Ecuador, which began in 1808 and concluded in 1822. It demonstrates that the Quito revolution of 1809 was not an anticolonial movement.
Like the Juntas in the Peninsula and the rest of America formed after Napoleon’s invasion of the Iberian Peninsula, Quito sought to safeguard the Spanish Monarchy from the “godless” French. The independence of
the Kingdom Quito and the formation of the republic of Ecuador occurred within the context of the revolution of the Hispanic world and the dissolution of the Spanish Monarchy. This study analyses the rise of representative
government and the popular elections established by the Hispanic Constitution of 1812. The people of the Audiencia or Reino de Quito favored establishing an autonomous kingdom within the constitutional Spanish Monarchy. Although Guayaquil declared independence in 1820 and attempted to obtain support from the sierra to establish the Estado de Quito, that effort ultimately failed because the armies of the centralist republic of Colombia (Gran Colombia) led by Simón Bolívar forced the region to join the new republic. When Gran Colombia fragmented in 1830, the former Kingdom of Quito formed a separate republic but lost some of
its northern provinces to Colombia. Rather than retaining its historic name, Quito, which Guayaquil and the Sierra preferred, the constituent congress decided to call the new nation Ecuador, the name given to the former kingdom when the region was forcibly incorporated into Gran Colombia.