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A Bad Peace and a Good War Mark Santiago

A Bad Peace and a Good War By Mark Santiago

A Bad Peace and a Good War by Mark Santiago


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Summary

This book challenges long-accepted historical orthodoxy about relations between the Spanish and the Indians in the borderlands separating what are now Mexico and the US. While most scholars describe the decades after 1790 as a period of relative, Mark Santiago argues that this was a period of sustained, widespread, and bloody conflict.

A Bad Peace and a Good War Summary

A Bad Peace and a Good War: Spain and the Mescalero Apache Uprising of 1795-1799 by Mark Santiago

This book challenges long-accepted historical orthodoxy about relations between the Spanish and the Indians in the borderlands separating what are now Mexico and the United States. While most scholars describe the decades after 1790 as a period of relative peace between the occupying Spaniards and the Apaches, Mark Santiago sees in the Mescalero Apache attacks on the Spanish beginning in 1795 a sustained, widespread, and bloody conflict. He argues that Commandant General Pedro de Nava's coordinated campaigns against the Mescaleros were the culmination of the Spanish military's efforts to contain Apache aggression, constituting one of its largest and most sustained operations in northern New Spain. A Bad Peace and a Good War examines the antecedents, tactics, and consequences of the fighting.

This conflict occurred immediately after the Spanish military had succeeded in making an uneasy peace with portions of all Apache groups. The Mescaleros were the first to break the peace, annihilating two Spanish patrols in August 1795. Galvanized by the loss, Commandant General Nava struggled to determine the extent to which Mescaleros residing in 'peace establishments' outside Spanish settlements near El Paso, San Elizario, and Presidio del Norte were involved. Santiago looks at the impact of conflicting Spanish military strategies and increasing demands for fiscal efficiency as a result of Spain's imperial entanglements. He examines Nava's yearly invasions of Mescalero territory, his divide-and-rule policy using other Apaches to attack the Mescaleros, and his deportation of prisoners from the frontier, preventing the Mescaleros from redeeming their kin.

Santiago concludes that the consequences of this war were overwhelmingly negative for Mescaleros and ambiguous for Spaniards. The war's legacy of bitterness lasted far beyond the end of Spanish rule, and the continued independence of so many Mescaleros and other Apaches in their homeland proved the limits of Spanish military authority. In the words of Viceroy Bernardo de GAlvez, the Spaniards had technically won a 'good war' against the Mescaleros and went on to manage a 'bad peace.'

A Bad Peace and a Good War Reviews

Mark Santiago's engaging and valuable new study holds lessons for students and historians of the Spanish borderlands and small-unit military operations, but also for anyone interested in twenty-first-century irregular and guerrilla warfare. - Michigan War Studies Review

About Mark Santiago

Mark Santiago is Director of the New Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum in Las Cruces and the author of Massacre at the Yuma Crossing: Spanish Relations with the Quechans, 1779-1782.

Additional information

NLS9780806167442
9780806167442
0806167440
A Bad Peace and a Good War: Spain and the Mescalero Apache Uprising of 1795-1799 by Mark Santiago
New
Paperback
University of Oklahoma Press
2020-08-30
268
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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