Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 29. Chapters: Mariano Moreno, Raul Alfonsin, Roberto Noble, Salvador Maria del Carril, Horacio Massaccesi, Bartolome Mitre, Jose Ignacio Garcia Hamilton, Dalmacio Velez Sarsfield, Jose Nestor Lencinas, Justo Daract, Jose C. Paz, Americo Ghioldi, Jorge Lanata, Francisco Manrique, Ovidio Lagos, Roberto Romero, Julio Ramos. Excerpt: Mariano Moreno (September 23, 1778 - March 4, 1811) was an Argentine lawyer, journalist, and politician. He played a decisive role in the Primera Junta, the first national government of Argentina, created after the May Revolution. Moreno was born in Buenos Aires in 1778. His father was Manuel Moreno y Argumosa, born in Santander, Spain, who arrived in the city in 1776 and married Maria del Valle. Mariano was the firstborn of the Moreno family, and had thirteen brothers. During his youth he studied Latin, logic, and philosophy at San Carlos Royal College, followed by college studies of law at Chuquisaca. During these studies, he learned the new ideas of the Spanish Enlightenment. He married Maria Guadalupe Cuenca and returned to Buenos Aires, becoming a prominent lawyer for the Cabildo. Unlike most other criollos, he rejected the Carlotist project and the administration of Santiago de Liniers, joining instead the ill-fated mutiny of Alzaga against him. He worked for the next viceroy, Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros. He wrote the economic paper The Representation of the Hacendados, which persuaded the viceroy to open trade with Britain. Although he was not prominently involved in the May Revolution that deposed Cisneros, he was appointed as secretary of war of the new government, the Primera Junta. Along with Juan Jose Castelli, he promoted harsh policies against the supporters of the former government and the strengthening of the new one. These policies were detailed at a secret document, the Operations plan...