Federal citizens of Buenos Aires


The Federales Porteños was a political and social group of Buenos Aires arisen in 1824 as opposed to the unitarians and allied to the federal ones of the interior of the country with which they agreed only in part.

Ideology Federal Flag. It had a red strip and a white one, since the color that represented the feds was red. The Federales Porteños defended the ideal of the Feds of the Interior, based on the fact that each province would be a separate territory with its own government and laws, which would self-govern independently of a central government in Buenos Aires (ideal of the unitarians). Nevertheless, they accepted to be represented by a government only by protocolary and commercial matters (to trade freely with England they had, by exigency of that country, to have a government in representation of all the provinces to have opportunity of dialogue and agreement before different situations). Their ideals differed with those of the Interior in which the governments of each province were not to be maintained with capital provided by the Customs of Buenos Aires, ideal of the Feds of the Interior, who lived in a condition of poverty. Trade was a fundamental activity in Buenos Aires, it was strongly encouraged by England, which exported hides, wines and other products characteristic of the area and imported from there fine products such as textiles and other manufactured goods. This activity raised a lot of money for Customs, and Buenos Aires enjoyed an economic condition of wealth. Referents

A great representative of the Federales Porteños was Juan Manuel de Rosas, a landowner who was the head of the federal Buenos Aires. They were part of this group with capital as Braulio Costa, and landowners and landowners such as Victorio García de Zúñiga and Warnes, Tomás de Anchorena, Juan Nepomuceno Terrero, José María Rojas.

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