The mambises were the guerrilla independence soldiers who fought for Cuba's independence from Spain in the Ten Years' War and Cuban War of Independence. [1][2]

Cuban War of Independence guerrilla soldiers

Etymology edit

According to Cuban writer Carlos Márquez Sterling, "mambí" is of Afro-Antillean origin and was applied to revolutionaries from Cuba and Santo Domingo (now the Dominican Republic) in the 19th century.

The surviving Spanish soldiers, who had been fighting in Santo Domingo, were then sent to Cuba once the Ten Years' War broke out in 1868. These soldiers, noting the similar tactics and machetes use by the Cuban independence fighters as by the original “men of Mamby”, began calling the Cuban independence fighters mambises. Though this was meant as a derogatory slur towards the Cuban rebels, the Cubans accepted and started using the name with pride.[3][page needed][4][page needed]

Other sources cite the term to be of Congo origin or, as stated by Esteban Montejo in Biography of a Runaway Slave, mambí refers to the child of a monkey crossed with a buzzard.[5][6][page needed]

Background edit

The mambí soldiers made up most of the National Army of Liberation and were the key soldiers responsible for the success of the Cuban liberation wars. They consisted of Cubans from all social classes including white Cubans, free black people, slaves, and mulattos. During the Ten Years' War, slaves were promised their freedom if they assisted the Creoles in the fight against the Spanish. The freeing of slaves to help fight was started by Carlos Manuel de Céspedes. At the end of the war, even though independence from Spain was not achieved, Spain agreed to honor the freeing of the slaves who had fought against them.[7][page needed]

The mambí forces were made up of volunteers who mostly had no military training and banded together in loose groups who acted independently to attack the Spanish troops during the Ten Years' War. It is estimated that 8,000 poorly armed and underfed mambises inflicted close to 20,000 casualties on the well-trained Spanish soldiers during the Ten Years' War.[8][page needed]

Similarly, by the end of the War of Independence the National Army of Liberation numbered nearly 50,000 of which only about 25,000 were armed. The leaders, having learnt from previous mistakes, had organized the army into “6 corps with 14 divisions, 34 brigades, 50 regiments of infantry and 34 cavalry.” Even though, once again, they were limited on resources, they possibly inflicted 71,000 casualties[a] out of the 250,000 Spanish troops sent to the island.[9][page needed][10][page needed]

Women edit

Mambí independence fighters were not limited to men. During the War of Independence, Spanish general General Valeriano Weyler Nicolau initiated "Reconcentración" which forcefully moved rural inhabitants into the cities in makeshift concentration camps. Conditions in these camps resulted in mass starvation, disease, and large numbers of deaths of the Cuban population. The prospect of these conditions pushed many families, including the women and children, into joining the independence movement.[11][page needed][12]

The best known mambí woman is Mariana Grajales Cuello, who was Antonio Maceo Grajales’s mother. Mariana and all of her sons participated in all three of the wars of independence.

Weapons edit

Prior to the Ten Years' War, private ownership of weapons was allowed but, considering that at this time many of the black were still slaves, most of the men who became mambises did not have firearms. Following the war, Spain prohibited ownership of firearms in an effort to prevent another uprising. In both cases, the lack of firearms forced the mambises into using what they had: machetes and sometimes horses.[13][page needed]

At the start of the Ten Years' War, Máximo Gómez, who had been a cavalry officer in the Spanish Army, taught the men the "machete charge". This became the mambises' most useful and feared tactic in both wars. These methods resulted in Guerrilla type warfare that favored them due to the element of surprise and their knowledge of the terrain and environment.[14][page needed]

Knowing additional weapons were needed, numerous attempts were made to procure arms from outside the country. During both wars of independence, many expeditions were funded to bring equipment and volunteers for the Liberation Army. During the 1895 War, 96 armed expeditions landed in Cuba.[15] Despite this interference, and having only originally started with a small number of weapons, the mambises were able to build up a significant arsenal by conducting raids on the Spanish troops and strongholds.[16][page needed]

Media depictions edit

Elpidio Valdés is a notable cartoon character within Cuban culture in comics, television, and movies. Created in 1970, he is portrayed as a mambí colonel, fighting for the liberation of Cuba from the Spanish.

Several films have been made in Cuba, both before and after the Cuban Revolution, that portray the national significance of the mambises. These cinemas have been used to create a sense of Cuban national identity.[17][page needed] One such film, El Capitán Mambí y Libertadores o guerrilleros, which was made before the Revolution, was funded by the government and had all of the troops, horses, and weapons for the film supplied by the military.[18][page needed]

Notable Mambises edit

Notes edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ Total number of Spanish casualties lost during conflict. Number lost due to yellow fever and other diseases vs. combat is not known.
Citations
  1. ^ Triana, Mauro García, and Pedro Eng Herrera. The Chinese in Cuba, 1847-Now. Lexington Books, 2009. Print.
  2. ^ Pérez, Lisandro. Cuban Studies 34. University of Pittsburgh Pre, 2004. Print
  3. ^ Brogdon, K. D. The Guardian: The Story of a Texas Ranger-Rough Rider, American Hero. iUniverse, 2010
  4. ^ Spencer C. Tucker. The Encyclopedia of the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC–CLIO, 2009
  5. ^ “Cuba Journal: Ejército Mambí.” Cuba Journal 16 Mar. 2011. Web. 22 May 2012
  6. ^ Barnet, Miguel. Biography of a Runaway Slave. Curbstone Books, 1995
  7. ^ Spencer C. Tucker. The Encyclopedia of the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC-CLIO, 2009
  8. ^ Brogdon, K. d. The Guardian: The Story of a Texas Ranger-Rough Rider, American Hero. iUniverse, 2010
  9. ^ O’Kelly, James J. The Mambi-land, or, Adventures of a Herald Correspondent in Cuba. By James J. O’Kelly. 2005
  10. ^ Smith, Verity. Encyclopedia of Latin American Literature. Taylor & Francis, 1997
  11. ^ [Navarro, Jose Canton. History of Cuba: The Challenge of the Yoke and the Star. Union Nacional de Juristas, 2000.]
  12. ^ Ed Elizondo. “Interesting Facts About the Mambi Army.” Cuban Genealogy Center. Web. 22 May 2012
  13. ^ Keenan, Jerry. Encyclopedia of the Spanish-American & Philippine-American Wars. ABC-CLIO, 2001
  14. ^ Navarro, Jose Canton. History of Cuba: The Challenge of the Yoke and the Star. Union Nacional de Juristas, 2000
  15. ^ Díaz Martínez, Yolanda. Dos ejércitos en lucha: Tácticas y estructuras (in Spanish). Instituto de Historia de Cuba.
  16. ^ Navarro, Jose Canton. History of Cuba: The Challenge of the Yoke and the Star. Union Nacional de Juristas, 2000
  17. ^ Abel, Richard, ed. Encyclopedia of Early Cinema. 1st ed. Routledge, 2005
  18. ^ Chanan, Michael. Cuban Cinema. Univ of Minnesota Press, 2004

References edit