- Battle of Masoller
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict= Battle of Masoller
partof= theUruguayan Civil War
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date=September 1 ,1904
place=Masoller ,Uruguay
result= Colorado victory
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casualties2=The Battle of Masoller, which occurred onSeptember 1 ,1904 , was the final battle of the intermittentUruguayan Civil War which marked much of 19th centuryUruguay , resulting in the victory of theColorado forces.Location and historical background
Masoller is a locality in northernUruguay , situated close to the border withBrazil . The proximity of theBrazil ian border proved significant for the outcome of the battle, because the defeatedBlanco General,Aparicio Saravia , retired injured from the battle and fled to Brazil. The victoriousColorado forces were reluctant to pursue the injured leader of theBlanco forces because they resolved to keep the conflict withinUruguay 's borders and avoid an incident with the Brazilian Government. Saravia died in Brazil on September 10, 1904.The Battle of Masoller also marked the political consolidation of the Presidency of the liberal
José Batlle y Ordóñez , and more broadly of theColorado Party.Feature in work by Jorge Luis Borges
This battle figures in "La otra muerte," a short story by
Jorge Luis Borges , in his collection "El aleph." The story concerns a certain Pedro Damián, whose personal history initially appears to have been one of a coward who fled the cannon fire at the Battle of Masoller, to survive as a virtual hermit until his death nearly forty years later. During the course of the story, however, the narrator finds that this same history has somehow spontaneously converted into the tale of a hero who died at the head of the charge in the same Battle of Masoller in 1904."La otra muerte" addresses the relationship between the present and history and the question of how a single event can change, or be perceived to change, an infinite number of destinies, Characteristically, Borges chose for this story a military event ubiquitously interpreted as determining the course of twentieth-century Uruguay. In standard historical interpretations, Uruguay's unique stature in Latin America as a middle-class welfare state owes largely to the initiatives of Battle y Ordoñez and his Colorado party.
ee also
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Masoller#Uruguayan-Brazilian_border_dispute External links
*John Charles Chasteen, 'Heroes on Horseback: A Life and Times of the Last Gaucho Caudillos', University of New Mexico Press, 1995 http://www.amazon.com/Heroes-Horseback-Gaucho-Caudillos-Dialogos/dp/0826315984
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