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Peter Campbell (naval officer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Peter Campbell (naval officer)

Peter Campbell (also known in Spanish as Pedro Campbell), born in Tipperary, founded the Uruguayan Navy.
Campbell, Peter (1780-c1832), naval officer and founder of the Uruguayan
navy, was born in Ireland in 1780. Little is known about Campbell's early years in
Ireland, except that he was probably apprenticed as a tanner. He enlisted in the
71st Highland Regiment, one of the divisions that in July 1805 sailed for the
Cape of Good Hope. In 1806 these troops invaded Buenos Aires under William
Carr Beresford. After the British campaigns failed in their attempt and the
regiment withdrew, Campbell was one of the soldiers who managed to remain in the River Plate. He joined the patriot ranks as a guerrilla leader, harassing
Spanish forces both on land and on the Paraná river. He was notorious for his
dexterity in gaucho-style duel, wielding a long knife in one hand and using a
poncho wrapped around the other arm as a protective measure. He carried two
riding pistols, a sabre, and a large knife in a leather sheath for his personal
protection, and was assisted by a Tipperary-born gaucho known as 'Don Eduardo'.
Campbell rose to prominence as a superb guerrilla fighter, serving under José
Artigas, the caudillo of a region which encompassed the present-day Argentine
provinces of Entre Ríos and Corrientes, and much of Uruguay, a man regarded as
one of Uruguay's founding fathers. Peter Campbell played a prominent role in the
affairs of Corrientes province, and for a period after 1819 acted as its deputy
governor. He had a notable influence on the tactics employed by the local military
forces, first against the Spaniards during the War of Independence, and later
against Buenos Aires in the civil wars that followed Argentine sovereignty.
Peter Campbell was responsible for establishing a regiment of mounted Tapé
indigenous people, who were feared both as a cavalry and infantry force because
their tactics were so difficult to counteract. Armed with rifles with long bayonets
attached to them, his indigenous force was trained to charge the enemy on
horseback at great speed before dismounting and opening fire with their rifles.
Campbell's military prowess and organisational ability were not confined to terra
firma. In 1814 he began putting together a squadron of river vessels to support
Artigas on the Paraná. In 1818 Peter Campbell took charge of the second
squadron of the Uruguayan naval forces, based in Goya and Esquina. He became
naval commander-in-chief of the region and the scourge of the Paraguayan
dictator Francia's river fleet. On 21 August 1818 Artigas appointed Campbell as
the first naval commander of the patriot fleet. It is on the basis of this
appointment that the Irishman is acknowledged as the founder of the Uruguayan navy.
In September 1818 Peter Campbell managed to seize two vessels carrying arms
for the Paraguayan army. Between January and March 1819, together with the
land forces of governor López, Campbell besieged the town of Capilla del
Rosario. On 10 March 1819 the Uruguayan army won the Battle of Barrancas against the army of Buenos Aires.
Advancing on the Argentine city, the combined federalist forces defeated the porteños
at Cepeda (1 February 1820) and San Nicolás (13 February 1820).
However, in the final naval battle against Monteverde on 30 July 1820, Artigas
was defeated by Ramírez, a rival warlord from Entre Ríos province. Campbell,
who initially succeeded in escaping, was captured and banished in shackles to
Paraguay. The dictator Francia, instead of putting his former foe to death, spared
Campbell's life, possibly out of respect for his adversary's courage and military
prowess. Peter Campbell was allowed to settle in the Paraguayan town of
Neembucú, where he returned to his former trade of tanner. There is disagreement over the location
and date of his death, which occurred around 1832. After his burial place in Villa del Pilar
was discovered in 1961, his remains were handed over to Uruguay for reinterment
in Montevideo on 18 May 1961, as befitted the founder of that country's navy.
Edmundo Murray

Adapted from: Jim Byrne, Philip Coleman and Jason King (eds.), Ireland and the
Americas: Culture, Politics and History
(Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, forthcoming 2006).
References
- Pyne, Peter, The Invasions of Buenos Aires, 1806-1807: the Irish Dimension
(Liverpool: University of Liverpool, Institute of Latin American Studies, 1996).
Research Paper 20.
- The Southern Cross. Número del Centenario (Buenos Aires, 1975).

== References ==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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