Lautaro (Anglicized as ‘Levtaru’) (Mapudungun: Lef-Traru “swift hawk”) (Spanish pronunciation: [lawˈtaɾo]; c. 1534 – April 29, 1557) was a young Mapuche toqui known for leading the indigenous resistance against Spanish conquest in Chile and developing the tactics that would continue to be employed by the Mapuche during the long-running Arauco War.

In 1546 Lautaro, son of the local chieftain named Curiñancu, was captured by Pedro de Valdivia’s army in the vicinity of Concepción. He remained a prisoner of the Spaniards for six years, during which time he became Valdivia’s personal companion.

Among his regular tasks was to take care of Valdivia’s horses and he always had to accompany him to battles and military exercises. Thus he learned not to fear the horse, he learned to ride until he became a good horseman. In addition, he observed the battle dispositions of the Spaniards, learning from Valdivia his military tactics.

During this period, he made a certain degree of friendship with one of Valdivia’s captains, Marcos Veas, who taught him the use of some weapons and cavalry tactics. This practice was common, as Lautaro had to serve as an auxiliary Indian in battles.

In 1550, during the battle of Andalién (February 22) and the battle of Penco (March 12), Lautaro witnessed the chastisements to which Valdivia made the defeated Mapuches submit, mutilating the prisoners and freeing them afterwards, as an example to avoid future rebellions; this had a deep impact on him. It is probable that as a result of these violent acts against his people, a terrible disillusionment and rebellion was engendered within him with respect to Valdivia and the Spaniards.

He escaped sometime in 1552 on horseback and also with the bugle of Pero Godinez, Valdivia’s field master, returning to his people. The escape of Valdivia’s page did not pass beyond the Spaniards as an almost habitual fact and they did not pursue him.

Lautaro resolutely demonstrated his natural gifts as an innate leader, he taught his people to lose their fear of horses, they learned to ride and to appreciate the horse as a combat weapon. He called meetings in the open field and taught them the military arts and the use of new weapons. He also designed a series of military tactics: the use of squads, the choice of terrain, ambush and guerrilla tactics. In this way, having the authority of the caciques, he led a great military uprising against the Spaniards, who up to that moment were victorious throughout the area between the Mapocho River and the Biobío.

Lautaro knew that his recently trained forces under his command were now in a line called “Interior Line”, that is to say, between two forces, those of the Purén fort to the south and those of Concepción to the north. He chooses to neutralize one of them. He deceives Gómez de Almagro in the Purén fort and makes sure that his troops do not join Valdivia’s in the Tucapel fort. Lautaro captures an emissary and learns that Valdivia is marching south and must necessarily pass through Tucapel. In effect, Valdivia in mid-December 1553 leaves Concepción and goes to Quilacoya, where he takes some soldiers on his march to Arauco, the Mapuche spies follow the column from the heights of the hills and do not present him with a battle, leaving him to make his way. Valdivia is surprised that he does not receive any news from the fort of Tucapel and that he is not harassed on the way; but he continues, his company is devastated, taken prisoner, tortured and executed.

Then he systematically razed the Spanish cities. Twice he sacked and burned Concepción, center of the Spanish settlements in the south of Chile.

For two years there was no more news of Spaniards in the region, while the situation of the Mapuche people as a result of the war and the drought had caused a great famine that ravaged the Mapuches, the crops had failed due to a season of severe drought and acts of cannibalism appeared, In addition, typhus settled among them, diminishing Lautaro’s warrior strength.

Lautaro, in spite of the famine and typhus managed to lead more than 2,000 warriors and with these he crossed the Biobío for the first time and continued northward and began to recruit people among the Picunches, much more peaceful than the Mapuches.

In Santiago, Diego Cano and only 14 men were urgently sent to Santiago to find out the real situation of the Maule. In Santiago, panic spread and defenses began to be built in the city while there was still a dispute over the royal succession of Valdivia.

There is an episode within this period that narrates an interview arranged at a distance, between two hills, that occurred between Lautaro and one of Villagra’s captains, Marcos Veas, an old friend of Lautaro in Valdivia’s times, in which this Spanish soldier urges Lautaro to lay down his arms since he could not oppose the Spanish power forever. Lautaro responded rudely to Veas by setting the Maule as a border for the Spaniards and also asking them for a tribute in horses, women and weapons in exchange for not attacking the colony. Lautaro’s offer was rejected outright by Veas and the interview and friendship ended.

Lautaro advanced towards the Maule River and once crossed, he learned that Francisco de Villagra, successor of Pedro de Valdivia, had left Santiago with a punitive battalion of 50 horsemen and 30 arquebusiers plus a thousand yanaconas. Lautaro, judging that the capital was unguarded, advanced to the north, letting Francisco de Villagra pass to the south.

In 1555, the Real Audiencia of Lima ordered Villagra to reconstruct Concepción, which was done under the command of Captain Alvarado. Upon learning of this, Lautaro successfully besieged Concepción with 4,000 warriors. Only 38 Spaniards managed to escape by sea the second destruction of the city.

After the second rout at Concepción, Lautaro desired to attack Santiago. He found scant support for this plan from his troops, who soon dwindled to only 600, but he carried on. In October 1556 his northward march reached the Mataquito River, where he established a fortified camp at Peteroa. In the Battle of Peteroa he repulsed attacking Spanish forces under the command of Diego Cano, and later held off the larger force commanded by Pedro de Villagra. Being advised that still more Spaniards were approaching, Lautaro decided to retreat towards the Maule River losing 200 warriors. With the Spaniards in hot pursuit he was forced to retire beyond the Itata River. From there he launched another campaign towards Santiago when Villagra’s army passed him by on the way to save the remaining Spanish settlements in Araucanía. Lautaro had chosen to give Villagra’s force the slip and head for the city to attack it.

Despite the Mapuches’ stealth, the city’s leaders learned of the advance and sent a small expedition to thwart it, buying time for word to be sent to Villagra to return to the city from the south. The Spanish forces met in the field, and from a member of the local ethnos, the Picunche, they learned the disposition of Lautaro’s camp. At dawn, on April 29, 1557, the conquistadors launched a surprise attack from the hills of Caune, obtaining a decisive victory in the Battle of Mataquito in which Lautaro was killed early in the fighting. After the defeat of his army, his head was cut off and displayed in the plaza of Santiago.

It was April 29, 1557 (some sources mention April 30, or May 1), every April 29 is commemorated the “Day of the Heroes and Martyrs of the Mapuche Nation”.

With the end of Lautaro, a remarkable figure of the Arauco war disappears, no one else came to match his conditions as a leader or his military genius, which was at the height of the great strategists of his time.

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  • hexaflexagonbear [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Maybe the self-immolating monk just had depression? All of those Samurai that committed seppuku? Also depression. It’s always mental health. There’s only two things that are real: agreeing with the status quo, especially when the status quo is supporting genocide, and mental health criseses.

  • UmbraVivi [he/him, she/her]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Apparently on several occasions, German antifascist groups protested against Norman Finkelstein speaking at events at German universities because of his “antisemitic views”, calling him an “Israel hater” and a “Hamas and Hezbollah supporter”. cringe

    We are the most pathetic country on this godforsaken planet germany-cool germany-cool germany-cool

  • rootsbreadandmakka [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    I was over at my “Marxist” friend’s house to discuss theory. I got up to take a shit and I noticed there was no bidet? Had to wipe my ass with paper. I think my friend might be a fed.

  • GeorgeZBush [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Listening to my friends talk about anything remotely political is unbearable.

    “Dude I’ve been reading on Facebook, we’re almost at World War 3 because Russia is getting ballsy, and North Korea and China keep threatening to nuke us” bro shut the fuck up. I’m not saying I’m some brilliant mind myself, but come on. I wish I wasn’t a weird politics guy so I could be blissfully ignorant.

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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      4 months ago

      Every time my friends start mouthing off about china bullshit i want to scream. My brother inchrist your government has done/is doing multiple real genocides this decade, drove groceries up 200%, refuses to provide healthcare, is sending all your money to ukronazis, just destabilized europe in a carbon-maxxing scheme that dooms the world, your cops are death squads if death squads were lazy af and distributed between bundles of steroids with guns and literal bipedal hams, and on and on. Why the fuck do care about china?! Why do you care if china invades some shitty little fake rump state like Taiwan? The GOP is invading Indiana, where are the fucking carrier battle groups showing the flag in the great lakes to deter fascist aggression?! Fuck your politics, why don’t you give a shit about the real actual immediate deadly dangers to your friends and family?!

      • GeorgeZBush [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        4 months ago

        This was an actual conversation between two of my friends recently when Russia randomly came up:

        Speaking of Russia, their economy is in the shitter

        well yeah, they’re communists, what do you expect?

        Like…lol? Maddening. I’ve tried to push back lightly from time to time but it usually just gets a shrug, so it’s pointless.

  • CDommunist [they/them, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    STOP DOING GREAT LEAP FORWARD deng-cowboy

    Chinese peasants were not supposed to be given quotas

    Years of backyard smithing but no real world use found for pig iron

    Wanted to make tractors anyway? We had a tool for that: it was called MPORTING FROM THE SOVIET UNION

    “Man Must Conquer Nature” “The land can yield as high as we dare to imagine.” “Having a kitchen is reactionary” STATEMENTS DREAMED UP BY THE UTTERLY DERANGED

    “Hello, I would like mao-wtf zero sparrows please”

    • whoops@hexbear.net
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      4 months ago

      It’s tough when you have a huge geographical area with zero infrastructure and no industry but hey, if you’re leading a peasant revolution turns out you can’t skip the industrialization part of capitalism. Stageism stays winning

      No amount of jumping on the superstructure button will increase agriculture or industrial outputs, you need to spin some jennies for that

        • whoops@hexbear.net
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          4 months ago

          I’m dumb as hell but it seems like there needs to be at least a NEP type scenario for a good while

  • Goadstool [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Got in a car accident yesterday, dude sped up from behind, hit the front of my car, swung into the car in the lane alongside me, swerved ahead of us before going over a curb, down a hill, and stopping right before going into a pond.

    Fuck driving. Fuck driving. Fuck driving. My girlfriend was in the car with me. FUCK DRIVING.

  • MF_COOM [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Hanging with a dude this morning who was expounding on his thoughts about a revolutionary leader getting the name, country and time frame all completely wrong. Shit rocked. There’s this expectation that you have to basically have a PhD in economics to be a socialist but we need to remember there is room for the himbos (and bimbos) to do some great praxis as well.

    Critical support for our dumb guy comrades sankara-salute