Early years
Morales was born inCareer
Following many years combatting Belzu, Morales came to power with President José Maria Linares (1857–1861). Opposed to the government of General José Maria de Achá, who had overthrown Linares, Morales supported the 1864 coup that brought to power the notorious General Mariano Melgarejo, who rewarded him with the generalship and (importantly) command of the Bolivian Army. Melgarejo's six-year regime had been controversial and brutal, and opposition to it became widespread. Eventually, General Morales changed sides and, after uniting all the factions fighting against the President, deposed Melgarejo via coup d'état in January, 1871. Defeating the troops of José María Calderón on January 15, the barracks of La Paz were stormed, culminating on Melgarejo's overthrow. Author Moisés Alcázar describes the jubilant sentiment of the Bolivian people after Melgarejo's overthrow:Melgarejo's star had definitively died out. Bolivia jubilantly celebrated its liberation, taking in happily the awakening from a terrible nightmare, determined to return to normality, and to reverse the values invested in the dark and mournful times f Melgarejo's regimebecause the world has to regain its balance. In the history of humanity, power is nothing more than frequent alternative. Life is stronger than despotism and errors, and sometimes, gently or painfully, order and progress are restored, without which the existence of peoples would be impossible. Because good is imperative for superior souls, dignifying the human species. The malignant ends by being irretrievably defeated and devastated, although the brutality is supported by force, which is also transitory and variable. And there will be jubilant mornings like that of January 15, 1871, as there will be Melgarejos and crime and barbarism blocks, although only for a short time, the sun of Liberty.Soon after ousting Melgarejo, Morales reverted the reforms and decrees of the previous regime. However, he was as much a despot as his predecessor, shutting the national congress down in 1872.
Controversy and death
Morales’ presidency would have a turbulent start, like most Bolivian presidents of that time, facing a naval invasion launched fromReferences
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* {{DEFAULTSORT:Morales, Agustin 1808 births 1872 deaths 19th-century Bolivian politicians Assassinated Bolivian politicians Bolivian generals Bolivian people of Spanish descent Deaths by firearm in Bolivia Leaders who took power by coup People murdered in 1872 People from La Paz People murdered in Bolivia Presidents of Bolivia Assassinated presidents of Bolivia Politicians assassinated in the 1870s National presidents assassinated in the 19th century