It’s 1776 and we have a broke Great Britain Kingdom after winning the Seven Years’ War imposing heavy taxes and policies on their Thirteen American Colonies. The Colonists don’t like this one bit and being fed up with the whole situation, start throwing out the I-word: Independence.
Thomas Jefferson, Samuel Adams, George Washington and many others among the most educated, well-positioned and respected men in the colonies then decided to reunite and put together what would be the Declaration of Independence. On July 4 it took effect and there was no looking back. It was war against the most powerful nation on Earth: Great Britain.
Most scholars agree on the American Revolutionary Wars taking place from 1775 until 1783, and while the Americans scored less victories than the British, it was the magnitude of their victories and the weight that the Americans were willing to stand for themselves and face death rather than to be surmised to keep living under the rule of the British Empire, what gave them the leverage to emerge victorious. After the decisive American victory in the Battle of York, the British lost interest in winning the war, and signed a peace treaty that would recognize the United States of America as an independent and sovereign nation.
When news of the American Independence reached Venezuela, their population began to wonder: “Hey, if the American Colonies could defeat the British, maybe we could defeat the Spaniards?” Hence, the American Revolutionary Wars and the Independence of the United States is largely recognized as the second direct cause of Venezuela’s Independence.
The third and final cause will be the final consequence of the Domino Effect that occurred in Europe and that had began with the Invention of the Printed Press. Tune in for my next entry to find out what it is…