When revolution broke out in Buenos Aires on May 25, 1810, Abascal reoccupied the provinces of
Córdoba,
Potosí,
La Paz and
Charcas (in Upper Peru, now
Bolivia) and reincorporated them into the Viceroyalty of Peru. (These provinces had been separated from Peru when the Viceroyalty of Río de la Plata was created in 1776.) A royalist army defeated rebels in the
Battle of Huaqui, Upper Peru. He also reincorporated
Chile and
Quito (Ecuador) into the Viceroyalty of Peru. (Quito had been in the
Viceroyalty of New Granada since the separation of that colony from Peru in 1739.) Abascal was a dedicated and tireless supporter of absolute monarchy; nevertheless he supported the
Cortes of Cádiz in the fight with
Napoleon, sending money and
materiel. During his administration, the
Inquisition of Lima was temporarily abolished as a result of the reforms taken by the Cortes. Because of the distance between Peru and Spain and due to the wars in Spain and in the Americas, he governed nearly independently of mother country. He fought hard to suppress the independence movements in Spanish America, converting Peru into a center of royalist reaction. After the proclamation of the liberal
Spanish Constitution of 1812 in Spain, Abascal fought to keep its provisions from being applied in Peru. This led to revolts in
Cusco,
Tacna and
Arequipa, all of which were repressed. In 1812 Abascal gave his support to a plan for a company organised by
Francisco Uville to import steam engines made by the Cornish engineer
Richard Trevithick so the silver mines at
Cerro de Pasco could be pumped out and worked at much greater depths. On April 24, 1814, a Spanish force under
Rafael Maroto disembarked at Callao to fight the rebels in the colony. The viceroy sent 2,400 troops under Brigadier
Antonio Pareja to fight in Chile. When they arrived on the island of
Chiloé, they were joined by a large number of other men, and they also gained reinforcements in the cities of
Valdivia and
Talcahuano. This southern part of the country was not sympathetic to the independence movement. Parejas then entered
Concepción. He granted amnesty to the Spanish garrison there, and they joined his forces. Now leading about 4,000 troops he went to
Chillán, which surrendered without a fight. There 2,000 more men joined the royalist forces. In 1812 Abascal was created marqués de la Concordia. In 1816 he was recalled at his request, and returned to Spain. He was replaced by General
Joaquín de la Pezuela. Abascal died at the age of 79 in 1821. ==See also==