Luis Florentino Carrera Verdugo

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Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carreras
Carreras
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Carrera brothers
Luis Carrera
Luis Carrera
Luis Carrera
Luis Carrera
Carrera campaigns
Carrera campaigns
Carreras
Carreras
Route to exile
Route to exile
 

Gender:Male

Ethnic origen: White

Events:

1791  -  Santiago de Chile  -  Not applicable  -  he was born at San Miguel hacienda in Santiago de Chile
1814  -  Buenos Aires  -  Unknown  -  He killed Brigadier Juan Mackenna in a duel in Buenos Aires on November 21.
1814  -  Rancagua  -  Unknown  -  He took part in the battle of 1814.
1814-1817  -  United States of America  -  Unknown  -  He went here (after 1814) as a refugee from Chile. Left in 1817.
1817  -  Buenos Aires  -  Unknown  -  He was imprisoned here in 1817.
1817  -  Buenos Aires  -  Unknown  -  He returned to Buenos Aires from exile in the United States
1819  -  Mendoza  -  Unknown  -  He was executed in Mendoza on 8 April 1819 or 1818
1828  -  Santiago de Chile  -  Unknown  -  He was awarded a Premio Postumo by Manuel Magellanes on 24 March 1828.

Connections:

Carrera Family
Chilean exiles (Mendoza)

Biography:
He was born in 1791, the youngest brother of Javiera Carrera, Juan José Carrera and José Miguel Carrera. He became a colonel in the Chilean independence army.

In 1814, after the battle of Rancagua, he fled Chile, crossing the Andes with men, women and children, many of whom travelled on foot: "the hardships and sufferings they had to undergo are not to be described". (Sutcliffe, 110.) He is listed among the exiles in Cuyo. (Guerro Lira, 297-299)

He went to the United States, returning in 1817 with some arms. But he found that his brothers were out of favour in Chile and the three were not allowed to join the Chilean independence army . Under suspicion, José Miguel was imprisoned in a brig at Buenos Aires. Luis and Juan José fled for Chile, but were captured and imprisoned in Mendoza in 1817 by Monteagudo, and were executed on 8 April 1819. (Sutcliffe, 317-319.)

Clissold describes him as "hot-tempered, high-spirited and impulsive, devoted to his sister and to José Miguel". He fought and killed Juan Mackenna in a duel in Buenos Aires (in 1814?) after going there to protest about his brothers´ detention in San Luis. After hearing that they would be executed, after expressing his "incredulity, horror and outrage", Luis accepted his sentence with "an almost mystic resignation". (Clissold, 93, 136, 168)

On 24 March 1828, Manuel Magellanes awarded a Premio Posturno to the three Carrera brothers. (National Museum, Santiago)

References:

Clissold, Stephen (1968) Bernardo O'Higgins and the Independence of Chile
Davies, Catherine, Brewster, Claire and Owen, Hilary (2006) South American Independence. Gender, Politics, Text
Grez, Vicente (1966) Las mujeres de la independencia
Guerrero Lira, Cristian (2002) La contrarevolución de la independencia en Chile
Sutcliffe, Thomas (1841) Sixteen Years in Chile and Peru, From 1822 to 1839