46-404: Puente Nacional may refer to: Puente Nacional, Santander , municipality of Colombia Puente Nacional, Veracruz , municipality of Mexico [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
92-567: A false identity as Antonio Gutiérrez. However, he was eventually identified and legally charged and prosecuted for libel by the Conservative Party. As a result of La Violencia there were no liberal candidates for the presidency, congress, or any public corporations in the 1950 elections . The press accused the government of pogroms against the opposition. Censorship and reprisals were common against journalists, writers, and directors of news services; in consequence many media figures left
138-572: A living person's body; or bocachiquiar , where hundreds of small punctures were made until the victim slowly bled to death. Former Senior Director of International Economic Affairs for the United States National Security Council and current President of the Institute for Global Economic Growth , Norman A. Bailey describes the atrocities succinctly: "Ingenious forms of quartering and beheading were invented and given such names as
184-586: A new town was baptised Puente Real de Vélez , existing as a subsidiary to the town founded by Martin Galeano in 1539, before eventually acquiring its current name during the period following the Comunero Rebellions of 1781. These local uprisings set in motion the first wave of Spanish American victories against the Spanish Empire , although liberation only arrived after 1819 . Every year on 8 May week,
230-462: A plot to take control of the country and undo the country's moves toward progress, spurred the violence. This conspiracy theory supplied the rationale for Liberal Party radicals to engage in violence, notably the anti-clerical attacks and killings, particularly in the early years of La Violencia . Some propaganda leaflets circulating in Medellín blamed a favorite of anti-Catholic conspiracy theorists,
276-641: Is an agricultural town and municipality in the Suárez River Valley, part of the Santander Department of northeastern Colombia . Colloquially referred to as "Puente" by its inhabitants. The area was originally inhabited by four Muisca tribes, three of which were the Semisos, Irobaes, and Popobas. Their heritage now only survives in the names of three surrounding veredas . The area between Puente and neighbouring Santa Sofía (formerly called Guatoque)
322-579: Is impossible. Scholars, however, estimate that between 200,000 and 300,000 people died; 600,000 to 800,000 were injured; and almost one million people were displaced. La Violencia directly or indirectly affected 20 percent of the population. La Violencia did not acquire its name simply because of the number of people it affected; it was the manner in which many of the killings, maimings, and dismemberings were done. Certain death and torture techniques became so commonplace that they were given names—for example, picar para tamal , which involved slowly cutting up
368-537: Is rare and fragmented. The majority of the population at the time was Catholic . During the conflict there were press reports that Catholic Church authorities supported the Conservative Party. Several priests were accused of openly encouraging the murder of the political opposition during Catholic mass , including the Santa Rosa de Osos Bishop Miguel Ángel Builes , although this is unproven. No formal charges were ever presented and no official statements were made by
414-506: The Holy See or the Board of Bishops. These events were recounted in the 1950 book Lo que el cielo no perdona ("What heaven doesn't forgive"), written by the secretary to Builes, Father Fidel Blandon Berrio. Eduardo Caballero Calderón also recounted these events in his 1952 book El Cristo de Espaldas ("Backwards Christ "). After releasing his book, Blandon resigned from his position and assumed
460-583: The Liberals who were in their midst. In the two decades prior to La Violencia , Conservative politicians and churchmen adopted from Europe the Judeo-Masonic conspiracy theory to portray the Liberal Party as involved in an international anti-Christian plot, with many prominent Liberal politicians actually being Freemasons . Although most of the rhetoric of conspiracy was introduced and circulated by some of
506-841: The Military Forces of Colombia and the National Police of Colombia supported by Colombian Conservative Party paramilitary groups on one side, and paramilitary and guerrilla groups aligned with the Colombian Liberal Party and the Colombian Communist Party on the other side. The conflict caused millions of people to abandon their homes and property. Media and news services failed to cover events accurately for fear of revenge attacks. The lack of public order and civil authority prevented victims from laying charges against perpetrators. Documented evidence from these years
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#1732856202950552-458: The Society of Jesus (Jesuits), for the murder of Gaitán. Across the country, militants attacked churches, convents, and monasteries, killing priests and looking for arms, because they believed that the clergy had guns, a rumor which was proven to be false when no serviceable weapons were found during the raids. One priest, Pedro María Ramírez Ramos , was slaughtered with machetes and hauled through
598-464: The "cowboys". When López Pumarejo returned to Bogotá he issued declarations stating that the guerrillas were not criminals but were simply fighting for freedom, and in response the Conservative dictatorship shut down the newspapers and imposed strict censorship. 1952 passed with only small skirmishes and no organized guerrilla leader, but by June 1953, Guadalupe Salcedo had assumed command. In 1952
644-462: The 'corte de mica', 'corte de corbata' (aka Colombian necktie ), and so on. Crucifixions and hangings were commonplace, political 'prisoners' were thrown from airplanes in flight, infants were bayoneted, schoolgirls, some as young as eight years old, were raped en masse , unborn infants were removed by crude Caesarian section and replaced by roosters, ears were cut off, scalps removed, and so on." While scholars, historians, and analysts have all debated
690-535: The 1946 election, Mariano Ospina Pérez of the Conservative party won the presidency, largely because the Liberal votes were split between two Liberal candidates. Mariano Ospina Pérez and the Conservative party Government used the police and army to repress the Liberal party. Their response was to fight back with violent protests. This led to an increasing amount of pressure within political and civil society. Some consider La Violencia having started at this point because
736-478: The 1950 election. This began the Bogotazo as angry mobs beat Roa Sierra to death and headed to the presidential palace with the intent of killing President Ospina Pérez. The murder of Gaitán and subsequent rioting sparked other popular uprisings throughout the country. Because of the Liberal nature of these revolts, the police and military, who had been largely neutral before, either defected or became aligned with
782-460: The 1953 agreement. Some of the guerrilleros did not surrender to the government and organized into criminal bands or bandoleros, which caused intense military operations against them in 1954. One of them, the guerrillero leader Tirofijo , had changed his political and ideological inclinations from being a Liberal to supporting the Communists during this period, and eventually he became the founder of
828-508: The Congress, creating a Conservative dictatorship. The Liberal Party decided to stage a military coup, and it was planned for November 25, 1949. However, many of the party members decided it was not a good idea and called it off. One conspirator, Air Force Captain Alfredo Silva, in the city of Villavicencio , had not been notified of the abandonment of the plan and carried it out. After rallying
874-453: The Conservative Party's return to power following the election of 1946 to be the cause. Rural town police and political leaders encouraged Conservative-supporting peasants to seize the agricultural lands of Liberal-supporting peasants, which provoked peasant-to-peasant violence throughout Colombia. La Violencia is estimated to have killed at least 200,000 people, almost 1 in 50 Colombians. The La Violencia conflict took place between
920-457: The Conservative government began increasing the backlash against Liberal protests and small rebel groups. There were an estimated 14,000 deaths in 1947 due to this violence. On April 9, 1948, Liberal Party leader Jorge Eliécer Gaitán was assassinated by Juan Roa Sierra on the street in Bogotá, via three shots from a revolver. Gaitán was a popular candidate and would have been the likely winner of
966-691: The Conservative government. Initially, Liberal leaders in Colombia worked with the Conservative government to stop uprisings and root out Communists. In May 1949, Liberal leaders resigned from their positions within the Ospina Pérez administration, due to the widespread persecution of Liberals throughout the country. Attempting to end La Violencia , the Liberals, who had majority control of Congress , began impeachment proceedings against President Ospina Pérez on November 9, 1949. In response, Ospina Pérez dissolved
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#17328562029501012-540: The Eastern Plains to end the Liberal revolt, but they were still unsuccessful. In this time, the Liberal leadership in Bogotá realized the Conservatives were not giving up power any time soon, and they wanted to organize a national revolt. In December 1951 and January 1952, Alfonso López Pumarejo , the former Colombian president and leader of the Liberal Party, made visits to the Eastern Plains to renew his alliance with
1058-552: The Villavicencio garrison, he disarmed the police and took control of the city. Silva proceeded to urge others in the region to join the revolt, and Eliseo Velásquez , a peasant guerrilla leader, took Puerto López on December 1, 1949, as well as capturing other villages in the Meta River region. In this time, Silva was caught and arrested by troops from Bogotá coming to take back control of Villavicencio. In 1950, Laureano Gómez
1104-566: The area in 1537 in the search for El Dorado. Having followed the course of the Magdalena River , his expedition then travelled down the Saravita , which formed the main trajectory of the subsequent conquests . It was in this area that some sources report that Quesada's men made the first ever encounter with a "truffle" crop later identified as the potato . Following the Spanish conquests
1150-611: The atmosphere as "tense" and "suffocating", even hypothesizing that "a revolution may be brewing". In other parts of Colombia, different rebel groups had formed in throughout 1950; they formed in Antioquia , Tolima , Sumapaz , and the Middle Magdalena Valley . On January 1, 1953, these groups came together to launch an attack against the Palanquero Air Base , with the hope of using the jet planes to bomb Bogotá and force
1196-609: The clergy, as well as by Conservative politicians, by 1942, many clerics became critical of the Judeo-Masonic conspiracy theory. Jesuits outside Colombia had already questioned and published refutations of the authenticity of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion , disproving the concept of a global Judeo-Masonic conspiracy. Regarding this same matter, Colombian clergy also came under the increasing influence of U.S. clergy; and Pius XI asked U.S. Jesuit John LaFarge, Jr. to draft an encyclical against anti-Semitism and racism . The belief in
1242-456: The communist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia or FARC . Rojas was removed from power on 10 May 1957. Civilian rule was restored after moderate Conservatives and Liberals, with the support of dissident sectors of the military, agreed to unite under a bipartisan coalition known as the National Front and the government of Alberto Lleras Camargo and which included a system of alternating
1288-645: The country. Jorge Zalamea, director of Critica magazine, fled to Buenos Aires ; Luis Vidales to Chile ; Antonio Garcia to La Paz , and Gerardo Molina to Paris. Since the 1920s, Conservatives had held the majority of governmental power, a position it would continue to occupy until the 2002 election of Alvaro Uribe . Even when Liberals gained control of the government in the 1930s, there was tension and even violent outbursts between peasants and landowners, as well as workers and industry owners. The number of yearly deaths from conflict, however, were far less than those estimated to have occurred during La Violencia . In
1334-516: The decennial conflict culminated with a shooting involving local brigand Efrain Gonzalez which left 11 civilians dead and injured 19. 5°53′N 73°41′W / 5.883°N 73.683°W / 5.883; -73.683 La Violencia [REDACTED] Colombian Conservative Party [REDACTED] Colombian Liberal Party and allied militias La Violencia ( Spanish pronunciation: [la βjoˈlensja] , The Violence )
1380-686: The end of the mobs was not the end of all the violence in Colombia. One communist guerrilla movement, the Peasant Student Workers Movement , started its operations in 1959. Later, other organizations such as the FARC and the National Liberation Army emerged, marking the beginning of a guerrilla insurgency. As was common of 20th-century eliminationist political violence, the rationales for action immediately before La Violencia were founded on conspiracy theories, each of which blamed
1426-480: The existence of a Judeo-Masonic conspiracy played a prominent role in the politics of Laureano Gómez , who lead the Colombian Conservative Party from 1932 to 1953. More provincial politicians followed suit, and the fact that prominent national and local politicians voiced this conspiracy theory, rather than just a portion of the clergy, gave the idea greater credibility while it gathered momentum among
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1472-444: The existence of some sort of conspiracy, a belief which was adhered to by members of both camps, made the political environment toxic, increasing the animosity and the suspicion which existed between both parties. The Conservatives were also motivated by their belief in the existence of a supposed international Judeo-Masonic conspiracy. In their view, they would prevent the Judeo-Masonic conspiracy from coming to fruition by eliminating
1518-548: The first major offensive of the Conservative army, the Liberal forces took major losses and confidence in Velásquez was lost. New populist leaders took control of the different groups of rebels and eventually came together to impose a 10% tax on wealthy landowners in the region. This tax created divisions from the wealthy Liberals and the Conservative government used them to recruit counter guerrillas. The Conservative army then increased its offensive attacks; committing atrocities along
1564-457: The future revolutionary leader Ernesto "Che" Guevara , then an unknown young man traveling through South America, briefly visited Bogotá. In a letter he wrote to his mother on July 6, 1952, later published in " The Motorcycle Diaries ", Guevara noted that "There is more repression of individual freedom here than in any country we've been to, the police patrol the streets carrying rifles and demand your papers every few minutes". He went on to describe
1610-471: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Puente_Nacional&oldid=988485366 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Puente Nacional, Santander Puente Nacional ( Spanish pronunciation: [ˈpwente nasjoˈnal] )
1656-436: The other side as traitors beholden to international cabals . The left were painted as participants in a global Judeo-Masonic conspiracy against Christianity, and the right were painted as agents of a Nazi - Falangist plot against democracy and progress. After the death of Gaitán, a conspiracy theory which was circulated by the left , that leading conservatives , militant priests, Nazis and Falangists were involved in
1702-569: The party's members. The atrocities that were committed at the outset of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 were seen by both sides as a possible precedent for Colombia, causing both sides to fear that it could also happen in their country; this belief also spurred the credibility of the conspiracies and it also served as a rationale for violence. Anticlerical violence in the Republican zones in Spain in
1748-871: The president and power-sharing both in cabinets and public offices. In 1958, Lleras Camargo ordered the creation of the Commission for the Investigation of the Causes of "La Violencia". The commission was headed by the Bishop Germán Guzmán Campos . The last bandolero leaders were killed in combat against the army. Jacinto Cruz Usma, alias Sangrenegra (Blackblood), died in April 1964 and Efraín Gonzáles in June 1965. Due to incomplete or non-existent statistical records, exact measurement of La Violencia' s humanitarian consequences
1794-560: The resignation of the Conservative dictatorship. The attack relied entirely on surprise to be successful, but the rebels were spotted by the sentry posts and were quickly hit with machine gun fire. The attempt was a failure, however it did incite fear into Bogotá elites. Most of the armed groups (called guerrillas liberales, a pejorative term) were demobilized during the amnesty declared by General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla after he took power on 13 June 1953. The most prominent Guerrilla leaders, Guadalupe Salcedo and Juan de la Cruz Varela, signed
1840-405: The source of this era of unrest, they have yet to formulate a widely accepted explanation for why it escalated to the notable level it did. As a result of La Violencia , landowners were allowed to create private armies for their security, which was formally legalized in 1965. Holding private armies was made illegal in 1989, only to be made legal once more in 1994. The death of the bandoleros and
1886-409: The street behind a truck, despite the fact that the militants had previously searched the church grounds and found no weapons. Despite the circulation of the conspiracy theories and the propaganda after Gaitán was killed, most of the leftists who were involved in the rioting on 9 April learned from their errors, and as a result, they stopped believing that priests had harbored weapons. The belief in
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1932-470: The town transforms with homage to the C omuneros . Townsfolk dress in traditional late-18th century attire and parades are held through the town. In 1960 the town's Cantarrana Street was the setting of a now-regularly commemorated massacre. It happened two years after the end of La Violencia (The Violence); the name given to the ten year sectarian civil-political conflict which pitted conservatives against liberals. On September 29, tensions still present from
1978-425: The way, they burned entire villages, slaughtered animals, and massacred suspected rebels, as well as set up a blockade of the region. The rebels were able to combat the offensive with small, covert, attacks to capture outposts and supplies. By June 1951, the government agreed to a truce with the guerrilla forces and they temporarily lifted the blockade. A few months after the truce, larger army units were sent to
2024-647: Was a ten-year civil war in Colombia from 1948 to 1958, between the Colombian Conservative Party and the Colombian Liberal Party , fought mainly in the countryside. La Violencia is considered to have begun with the assassination on 9 April 1948 of Jorge Eliécer Gaitán , a Liberal Party presidential candidate and frontrunner for the 1949 November election . His murder provoked the Bogotazo rioting, which lasted ten hours and resulted in around 5,000 casualties. An alternative historiography proposes
2070-577: Was elected president of Colombia, but it was a largely manipulated election, leading Gómez to become the new Conservative dictator. After Alfredo Silva's disappearance, Velásquez assumed power of the forces in the Eastern Plains that, by April 1950, included seven rebel zones with hundreds of guerrillas known as the "cowboys". While in command of the forces, Velásquez suffered from a superiority complex , leading him to commit abuses including body mutilation of those killed. Without sufficient arms, during
2116-490: Was inhabited by a major tribe called the Sorocotá who governed a major commercial centre (possibly home to the region's largest agricultural market) which is why Puente's local radio station is called La Voz de Sorocotá (The Voice of Sorocotá) . The town still has a market every Monday which sees locally sourced produce brought to the town from its many surrounding farms. Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada travelled south through
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