The Granadine Confederation was formed in 1858 out of the
Republic of the New Granada; however, during the last few years of the previous Republic, there had been a call for more autonomy from various member states of Colombia, such as
Azuero,
Chiriquí Province,
Panamá and
Veraguas. In order to satisfy the member states and avoid a repeat of past mistakes that had led to
Venezuela and
Ecuador leaving the previous union during the formation of the Granadine Confederation, the central government created a number of sovereign states from the different regions of Colombia : •
Antioquía :The Province of Antioquía became the Sovereign State of Antioquía, •
Bolívar :The Sovereign State of Bolívar, which included the province of Cartagena, •
Boyacá :The Sovereign State of Boyacá, which included the provinces of
Tunja, Tundama,
Casanare, and the
cantons of
Chiquinquirá and
Vélez. •
Cauca :The Sovereign State of Cauca, which included the provinces of
Buenaventura,
Chocó,
Pasto and
Popayán and the region of Caquetá. •
Cundinamarca :The Sovereign State of Cundinamarca, which included the province of
Mariquita,
Bogotá,
Neiva, •
Magdalena :The Sovereign State of Magdalena, which included the provinces of
El Banco,
Padilla,
Santa Marta,
Tenerife and
Valledupar. •
Panamá :The Sovereign State of Panamá, which included the provinces of Azuero,
Chiriquí Province,
Panamá and
Veraguas. •
Santander :The Sovereign State of Santander, which included the provinces of
Socorro and
Pamplona, was created May 13, 1857. •
Tolima :The Sovereign State of Tolima, which included the provinces of Neiva and Mariquita. Thus, by the time of the formation of the Granadine Confederation, Colombia consisted of a number of sovereign states, governed by the
Congress of Colombia as the office of vice presidency was abolished. Despite the creation of these states, the government under Mariano Ospina Rodríguez became
centralist, contrary to the wishes of the States who wanted more power and autonomy, thus increasing the levels of friction between the two levels of government. On April 8, 1859, the congress of the Granadine Confederation awarded to the president the power to remove the governors of the member states, and on May 10, 1859, it created a second law that allowed the president direct control of the resources and governments of the member states through the creation of a number of administrative departments. Among many angered by these laws was respected and popular politician, leader of the Granada Liberal Party,
Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera, who denounced the laws as unconstitutional and rallied Liberal support. On May 8, 1860, the newly appointed Supreme Director of War Mosquera declared the Sovereign State of Cauca a separate nation from the Granadine Confederation and civil war broke out. ==Response of the Granadine Confederation==