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Congress of Tucumán declares Argentina’s independence from Spain

On July 9, 1816 C.E., 33 deputies assembled in the city of Tucumán and voted to sever ties with the Spanish Crown — producing one of the most consequential political acts in South American history. The declaration they signed did not yet use the name “Argentina.” It named a new nation: the United Provinces of South America. But the moment was unmistakable. A people were claiming their own future.

What the evidence shows

  • Argentina independence declaration: The Congress of Tucumán formally declared independence on July 9, 1816 C.E., after sessions that had begun on March 24 of that year.
  • United Provinces of South America: The new nation’s official name at independence — “Argentina” came later — and its territory included provinces that would eventually become part of present-day Bolivia.
  • Quechua and Aymara translations: The declaration was rendered into two Indigenous languages alongside Spanish, a rare multilingual act for a founding document of this era.

Why it happened when it did

The road to July 9, 1816 C.E. began with a crisis in Europe. When Napoleon deposed Spain’s King Ferdinand VII in 1808 C.E., Spanish authority across the Americas entered a legal gray zone. The United Provinces seized on this: if the king no longer governed, sovereignty had reverted to the people. Venezuela had made the same argument in 1811 C.E. Mexico had invoked it in 1810 C.E. These were not isolated rebellions — they were coordinated responses to the same rupture in the colonial order.

The May Revolution of 1810 C.E. had already dismantled the Viceroyalty in Buenos Aires and replaced it with a governing junta. But revolution is not independence. For six years, the United Provinces fought royalist forces pressing down from Peru, navigated internal divisions, and debated what kind of nation they wanted to be. By 1816 C.E., with Ferdinand VII restored to power and Spain openly intent on reclaiming its colonies, delay was no longer an option.

The Congress convened in Tucumán partly for strategic reasons — it sat closer to the royalist threat from the north and away from the political turbulence of Buenos Aires. Francisco Narciso de Laprida, a delegate from San Juan Province, presided over the final vote. The result was unanimous.

The document and its languages

The Declaration of Independence made a careful legal argument. It did not simply assert that the United Provinces wanted to be free. It argued that Spanish sovereignty had already dissolved in 1808 C.E. when Ferdinand VII was removed — and that any continuing bond between the colonies and Spain had therefore been broken by Spain’s own political collapse, not by rebellion alone.

What makes the document unusual — and still striking — is what happened after it was drafted in Spanish. The Congress commissioned translations into Quechua and Aymara, two of the most widely spoken Indigenous languages in the Andes. The Aymara version is attributed to Vicente Pazos Kanki, a journalist, diplomat, and Indigenous intellectual born in 1779 C.E. in Upper Peru. This act acknowledged — however imperfectly — that the new nation included peoples whose languages and histories predated the Spanish colonial project by centuries.

Lasting impact

Argentina’s independence declaration set in motion the formation of a constitutional republic that today spans nearly 2.8 million square kilometers and is home to more than 45 million people. The legal framework argued in Tucumán — that colonial sovereignty dissolves when the metropolitan power fails — influenced independence movements across South America for the next decade.

The Congress itself also shaped the career of José de San Martín, whose Army of the Andes crossed into Chile in 1817 C.E. and eventually carried the independence cause to Peru. The declaration gave his campaigns a legitimate political foundation. Without July 9, 1816 C.E., the military liberation of the southern cone looks very different.

The House of Tucumán, where the vote took place, has been preserved, rebuilt after earthquake damage, and now operates as a national museum and monument. Every July 9 C.E., Argentina marks the date as its national Independence Day.

The multilingual declaration also left a small but meaningful precedent. The choice to render a founding document in Quechua and Aymara — even if motivated partly by the practical need to communicate with Indigenous populations in the north — was a gesture that more recent scholars and Indigenous rights advocates have pointed to when arguing for the recognition of Indigenous languages and legal traditions in Latin American governance.

Blindspots and limits

The Congress of Tucumán represented only part of the territory it claimed. The Federal League provinces — Santa Fé, Entre Ríos, Corrientes, Misiones, and the Eastern Province (present-day Uruguay) — refused to send delegates and were at war with the United Provinces at the time of the declaration. Indigenous nations across the territory had no delegates, no vote, and no standing in the new legal order, even as the document was translated into their languages. The question of what form of government the new nation would adopt — federal or centralized — remained so bitterly contested that the Congress dissolved in 1820 C.E. after the Battle of Cepeda, and Argentina spent decades in civil conflict before achieving constitutional stability.

Independence, in other words, was a beginning — not a resolution.

A document still speaking

What the deputies signed in Tucumán on July 9, 1816 C.E. was imperfect, incomplete, and contested almost immediately. It also changed the trajectory of an entire continent. The United Provinces of South America that declared freedom that day would eventually become Argentina — a nation shaped, from its very founding document, by at least three languages and the insistence that a people could govern themselves.

That insistence, argued carefully in a colonial city in the Andean foothills, still carries weight. The text of the declaration remains one of the clearest examples in the Americas of how legal argument, not only armed force, drove the collapse of empire.

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For more on this story, see: Argentine Declaration of Independence — Wikipedia

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