Before
the
year
1830
drew
to
a
close,
both
Marshal
Sucre
and
Simon
Bolivar
would
be
dead;
the
former,
murdered
[on
orders
from
a
jealous
General
Flores,
according
to
some
historians],
and
the
latter,
from
tuberculosis.
Heartbroken
at
the
dissolution
of
Gran
Colombia,
Bolivar
is
quoted
as
saying
shortly
before
his
death,
"America
is
ungovernable.
Those
who
have
served
the
revolution
have
plowed
the
sea."
These
words
would
seem
prophetic
during
the
chaotic
first
thirty
years
in
the
life
of
the
Republic
of
Ecuador.
Initial
Confusion,
1830-60
Independence
did
not
occasion
a
revolutionary
liberation
of
the
masses
of
Ecuadorian
peasants.
On
the
contrary,
as
bad
as
the
peasants'
situation
was,
it
probably
worsened
with
the
loss
of
the
Spanish
royal
officials
who
had
protected
the
indigenous
population
against
the
abuses
of
the
local
criollos.
This
criollo
elite,
which
had
spearheaded
the
struggle
for
independence,
was
to
be
its
principal
beneficiary.
The
early
battle
to
define
the
political
parameters
of
the
new
state
was
fought,
to
a
great
extent,
among
the
various
sectors--Ecuadorians
and
foreigners,
military
personnel
and
civilians--of
this
elite.
Flores
was
of
the
foreign
military
variety.
Born
in
Venezuela,
he
had
fought
in
the
wars
for
independence
with
Bolivar,
who
had
appointed
him
governor
of
Ecuador
during
its
association
with
Gran
Colombia.
Although
of
humble
origins
with
little
formal
education,
Flores
married
into
the
Quiteno
elite,
gaining
acceptance,
initially
at
least,
within
the
local
criollo
upper
class.
As
a
leader,
however,
he
appeared
primarily
interested
in
maintaining
his
power.
Military
expenditures,
from
the
independence
wars
and
from
an
unsuccessful
campaign
to
wrest
Cauca
Province
from
Colombia
in
1832,
kept
the
state
treasury
empty
while
other
matters
were
left
unattended.
In
1833
four
intellectuals
who
had
begun
publishing
El
Quiteno
Libre
to
denounce
the
"pillaging
of
the
national
treasury
by
foreigners"
were
killed
by
the
authorities
at
a
time
when
Flores
was
absent
from
Quito.
Although
not
directly
responsible
for
the
killings,
Flores
inevitably
became
associated
with
them,
and
criticism
of
his
regime
grew.
In
1834
opponents
staged
a
rebellion
in
an
effort
to
place
Jose
Vicente
Rocafuerte
y
Rodriguez
de
Bejarano,
a
member
of
the
Guayaquil
aristocracy
who
had
recently
returned
from
fourteen
years
abroad,
into
the
presidency.
The
rebels
effort
failed;
Flores
then
coopted
his
opponent
and
sponsored
Rocafuerte
as
a
presidential
candidate.
For
four
years
following
this
Machiavellian
political
move--in
effect
the
nation's
first
coup
d'etat--Flores
continued
to
wield
considerable
power
from
behind
the
scenes
as
commander
of
the
military.
President
Rocafuerte's
most
lasting
contribution
was
to
begin
development
of
a
public
school
system.
Although
he
had
previously
condemned
Flores's
violations
of
civil
liberties,
Rocafuerte
argued
that
"the
backwardness
of
Ecuador
makes
enlightened
despotism
necessary."
At
the
end
of
his
term
in
1839,
Rocafuerte
returned
to
his
native
Guayaquil
as
provincial
governor,
while
in
Quito
Flores
was
again
inaugurated
into
the
presidency.
After
four
years
in
office,
Flores
summoned
a
constitutional
convention
that
wrote
a
new
constitution,
dubbed
"the
Charter
of
Slavery"
by
his
opponents,
and
elected
him
to
a
new
eight-year
term
of
office.
After
1843
the
opposition
to
Flores
often
manifested
itself
in
unpleasant
ways:
in
reference
to
the
dark
skin
of
Flores
and
his
fellow
Venezuelan
and
Colombian
soldiers,
Rocafuerte
[by
now
exiled
in
Lima]
wrote
that
"the
white
oppressors
of
the
peninsula
were
less
oppressive
than
the
Negro
vandals
who
have
replaced
them."
A
young
student
named
Gabriel
Garcia
Moreno--later
to
become
the
most
infamous
of
all
of
Ecuador's
nineteenth
century
dictators--tried
unsuccessfully
to
assassinate
Flores.
Discontent
had
become
nationwide
by
1845,
when
an
insurrection
in
Guayaquil
forced
Flores
from
the
country.
Because
their
movement
triumphed
in
March
[marzo],
the
anti-Flores
coalition
members
became
known
as
marcistas
.
They
were
an
extremely
heterogeneous
lot
that
included
liberal
intellectuals,
conservative
clergymen,
and
representatives
from
Guayaquil's
successful
business
community.
The
next
fifteen
years
constituted
one
of
the
most
turbulent
periods
in
Ecuador's
century
and
a
half
as
a
nation.
The
marcistas
fought
among
themselves
almost
ceaselessly
and
also
had
to
struggle
against
Flores's
repeated
attempts
from
exile
to
overthrow
the
government.
The
first
marcista
president
was
a
businessman,
Vicente
Ramon
Roca,
who
served
a
full
four-year
term
of
office.
The
most
significant
figure
of
the
era,
however,
was
General
Jose
Maria
Urbina,
who
first
came
to
power
in
1851
through
a
coup
d'etat,
remained
in
the
presidency
until
1856,
and
then
continued
to
dominate
the
political
scene
until
1860.
During
this
decade
and
the
one
that
followed,
Urbina
and
his
archrival,
Garcia
Moreno,
would
define
the
dichotomy--between
Liberals
from
Guayaquil
and
Conservatives
from
Quito--that
remained
the
major
sphere
of
political
struggle
in
Ecuador
in
the
1980s.
Liberalism
under
Urbina
took
on
anticlerical,
ethnic,
and
regional
dimensions.
In
1852
he
accused
a
group
of
Jesuit
priests--
admitted
by
his
predecessor,
Diego
Noboa,
only
a
year
earlier--of
political
meddling
and
expelled
them.
Urbina
freed
the
nation's
slaves
exactly
one
week
after
his
coup
of
1851,
and
six
years