Chilean Constitution of 1833 in the context of Mariano Egaña


Chilean Constitution of 1833 in the context of Mariano Egaña

⭐ Core Definition: Chilean Constitution of 1833

The Constitution of 1833 was the constitution used in Chile from 1833 to 1925 when it was replaced by the Constitution of 1925. One of the most long-lived constitutions of Latin America, it was used to endorse both an authoritarian, presidential system and from 1891 onwards an oligarchic, parliamentary system.

The constitution emerged after the Chilean Civil War of 1829 in which the conservative Pelucones (Whigs) defeated the Pipiolos (liberals). Its main ideologues where Mariano Egaña, Manuel José Gandarillas and Diego Portales all of whom saw from a conservative point of view the necessity of a unitarian state under a strong leadership. The constitution made Catholicism the state religion and forbade the practise of other religions, both in public and private life. The first president to be elected under the constitution was General José Joaquín Prieto. The constitution allowed for five-year terms with the possibility of one reelection, which resulted in three consecutive conservative presidents ruling Chile, each for ten years. Mariano Egaña had initially aimed at not putting any restriction on reelection.

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Chilean Constitution of 1833 in the context of 1851 Chilean revolution

The Revolution of 1851 was an attempt by Chilean liberals to overthrow the conservative government of president Manuel Montt and repeal the Chilean Constitution of 1833. After various battles and sieges, by late December 1851 government forces had subdued the revolutionaries.

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Chilean Constitution of 1833 in the context of Chilean Constitution of 1925

The Constitution of 1925 was the constitution in force in Chile between 1925 and 1973 when the Government Junta suspended it. In the 1920s Chile had a severe social and economic crisis that led to the loss of prestige for old ruling class, labeled oligarchy in Chilean historiography, and the rise of a more sensibilized populist government led by Arturo Alessandri. In 1924 Alessandri was outed in a coup, but was called back in 1925 to complete his mandate. Alessandri then used his presidency to draft a new constitution to replace the Constitution of 1833.

The constitution was approved by plebiscite by 134,421 voters on August 30 of 1925. Prominent features of the constitution were:

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