Ragamuffin War

Ragamuffin War

Charge of the Cavalry by Guilherme Litran depicting the Riograndense army.
Date20 September 1835 – 1 March 1845
(9 years, 5 months, 1 week and 2 days)
Location
Result Imperial victory
Territorial
changes
The Juliana Republic and the Riograndense Republic are dissolved and reintegrated into the Empire.
Belligerents
Empire of Brazil
Commanders and leaders
Strength
10,000 soldiers 20,000 soldiers
Casualties and losses
3,000 killed

The Ragamuffin War (Portuguese: Guerra dos Farrapos), also known as the Ragamuffin Revolution or Heroic Decade, was a republican uprising that began in southern Brazil during the regency period, centered in the province of Rio Grande do Sul and, for a time, extending into neighboring Santa Catarina. It began on 20 September 1835, when rebel forces seized Porto Alegre, and soon turned into a wider confrontation between Brazil's imperial government and an opposition coalition led by influential regional leaders, such as Bento Gonçalves and Antônio de Sousa Neto, who proclaimed the secession of the province and the creation of the Riograndense Republic following the rebel victory at the battle of Seival in 1836.

The war is often situated within the broader political and institutional instability of Brazil's regency era, when numerous armed conflicts exposed the fragility of imperial authority and intensified disputes over the degree of autonomy between the Court and Brazil's provinces. In Rio Grande do Sul, the tensions unfolded over the region's economy, reliant on livestock and the production of jerked beef. Producers in Rio Grande do Sul complained that local jerked beef was burdened by high export and customs taxation and by import duties on salt, while Uruguay and Argentina benefited from more favorable tax treatment in Brazilian markets, making the local product less competitive within the country, which led to economic grievances with the Imperial government, but also due to a broader desire for greater autonomy and opposition to centralized control over the province. The revolution also influenced other rebel movements throughout the country, such as the Sabinada, in Bahia, in 1837, and the Liberal Rebellions in Minas Gerais and São Paulo, in 1842.

The new republic operated from shifting inland capitals such as Piratini and later other towns. From the late 1830s, the war also became entangled with the politics of the wider Río de la Plata region, as the rebel republic pursued agreements and alliances with neighboring Uruguayan and Argentine caudillos. In 1839, with the participation of the Italian revolutionary Giuseppe Garibaldi, the rebels carried the war to the Brazilian coast and proclaimed the short-lived Juliana Republic in Santa Catarina. The conflict ended on 1 March 1845 with the Treaty of Ponche Verde, which granted amnesty and reintegration terms for the rebel leaders and included economic concessions such as a tariff on imported jerked beef.

Some rebel leaders promised freedom to those enslaved men who enlisted into the Republican army and as a result many slaves organized troops during the conflict, including the Black Lancers, who were annihilated in a surprise attack in 1844 known as the Porongos Massacre. Due to this fact, the historian Clóvis Moura interpreted the Ragamuffin movement as abolitionist, but other historians argue he was mistaken. The rebels as a whole never demanded the general abolition of slavery, and the 1843 republican constitution preserved slavery; while most rebel commanders, including Bento Gonçalves, were themselves slaveholders.