Unlike many Spanish-American cities, Montevideo was not born of an early colonizing impulse, but of a geopolitical urgency. During the 17th and 18th centuries, the Banda Oriental (present-day Uruguay) was a frontier land disputed between the crowns of Spain and Portugal. The Portuguese had founded Colonia do Sacramento in 1680, right across from Buenos Aires, and from there they pressed on the estuary of the Río de la Plata, one of the keys of South Atlantic commerce. Spain needed to halt that advance.
The bay of Montevideo offered one of the best natural ports in the region, sheltered and deep. That's why, when in 1723 the Portuguese tried to establish themselves there, the governor of Buenos Aires, Bruno Mauricio de Zabala, reacted: he expelled them and began the founding of a Spanish stronghold on the spot. The founding process unfolded between 1724 and 1730. In 1726 began the distribution of plots and the arrival of the first settler families —residents brought from Buenos Aires and, above all, families from the Canary Islands, the 'canarios' who so marked the Montevideo identity— and in 1730 the first Cabildo was constituted, considered the act that completes the founding.
The city was born with the name San Felipe y Santiago de Montevideo and as a planned, military city: walled, with its citadel, its square, its mother church and a grid layout. Its reason for being was, above all, defensive: to be the Spanish bastion against the Portuguese threat and a port rival of Buenos Aires in the estuary.
Few city names have given rise to as many theories and legends as that of Montevideo. The exact origin of the place name is the object of debate among historians and linguists, and several explanations coexist, none definitively proven.
The most popular and widespread version —more legend than proven history— tells that a sailor of Magellan's expedition, on sighting the hill that dominates the bay, is said to have exclaimed in Portuguese '¡Monte vide eu!' ('I saw a hill!'). Another much-repeated explanation holds that the name comes from a note on the old maps and portolan charts: 'Monte VI de Este a Oeste' (that is, the sixth hill or feature counted in that direction along the coast), where the Roman numeral VI and the abbreviation are said to have ended up merging into 'Montevideo'. This 'Monte VI D[e] E[ste] [a] O[este]' hypothesis is one of the most cited, though also disputed.
A third line, defended by several scholars, considers that the name simply derives from a geographical description in Portuguese or old Spanish, something like 'monte que se ve' (a hill that can be seen —a 'Monte-vide-eu' or 'Monte vi') applied to the hill that served as a reference for the sailors who entered the Río de la Plata. What almost all the theories share is that the name is tied to the Cerro de Montevideo, that hill that crowns the bay and that was for centuries the natural lighthouse of the city. The mystery of the name is part of the charm and the identity of Montevideo.
During the 18th century, Montevideo grew in the shadow of its military and port function. It was a walled city, with its citadel and its defensive batteries, designed to resist. But its excellent natural port soon made it an active commercial center too, a rival of Buenos Aires on the other side of the estuary, a rivalry that would mark Río de la Plata history for centuries.
The strategic importance of Montevideo was consecrated in 1776, when it was designated the seat of the Real Apostadero de Marina, the Spanish naval base in the South Atlantic, charged with controlling and protecting navigation in the whole region. This reinforced its character as a stronghold and gave it notable military and administrative weight within the newly created Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata. The city filled with officials, sailors, merchants and an increasingly diverse colonial society, which included a numerous enslaved African population whose cultural stamp —above all in candombe— would be decisive.
In the early 19th century, Montevideo was a direct setting of the conflicts at the end of the colonial period. During the English Invasions, the British troops took and occupied the city in 1807, before being expelled from the Río de la Plata. A few years later, with the outbreak of the independence movements from 1810, the city became a royalist bastion (loyal to Spain) against the revolution that advanced from Buenos Aires and from the eastern countryside, anticipating the great struggles that would come.
The first half of the 19th century was, for Montevideo and for the whole Banda Oriental, an era of almost continuous wars. From this land emerged the foremost figure of Uruguayan nationality: José Gervasio Artigas, the caudillo who led the struggle of the Orientals and who is revered as a fundamental national hero, with his federal ideas and his defense of the humblest. The region passed through successive dominations —Spanish, the brief Artigas experience, the Portuguese occupation and then the annexation to the Empire of Brazil as the Cisplatine Province—, in a constant dispute between the great neighboring powers.
The turning point came after the war between the United Provinces (Argentina) and the Empire of Brazil over control of the Banda Oriental. The 'Liberating Crusade' of the Thirty-Three Orientals, led by Juan Antonio Lavalleja in 1825, reignited the struggle for independence. The conflict was resolved, with British mediation, in the Preliminary Peace Convention of 1828, which recognized the creation of an independent State as a buffer zone between the two powers. In 1830 the first Constitution of the Oriental State of Uruguay was sworn, and Montevideo was consecrated as its capital.
The young republic was born, however, amid deep internal divisions between two factions that would mark its history: the Blancos and the Colorados. Those tensions led to the Guerra Grande (1839-1851), during which Montevideo endured the so-called Sitio Grande (Great Siege): a siege that lasted almost nine years (1843-1851), in which the city, defended by the Colorados and supported by foreigners, resisted the blockade of the forces of the Blanco caudillo Manuel Oribe, an ally of the Argentine Juan Manuel de Rosas. For its heroic resistance, Montevideo was compared to a 'new Troy'.
After the turbulent decades of the 19th century, Montevideo lived its great transformation between the end of that century and the first decades of the 20th. The city tore down its old colonial walls, expanded beyond the Ciudad Vieja and modernized at a dizzying pace, fed by an enormous wave of European immigration —Spanish and Italian above all— that changed its face, its accent and its culture, giving it that deeply Rioplatense air it shares with Buenos Aires.
The period is inextricably linked to the figure of José Batlle y Ordóñez, president on two occasions in the early 20th century and architect of the so-called 'Batlle-era Uruguay'. Under his impulse, the country and its capital became pioneers of an advanced welfare State for the era: social legislation, separation of Church and State, public education, an eight-hour workday and a democratic vocation that earned Uruguay the nickname of 'the Switzerland of America'. Montevideo was the showcase of that modernity.
The city filled with public works, parks, ramblas, theaters and monumental buildings of eclectic, art nouveau and, later, art deco style. The coastal rambla, the great parks like the Prado and the Parque Rodó, the Legislative Palace, the Estadio Centenario (built in 1930 for the first football World Cup, which Uruguay organized and won) and the Palacio Salvo are children of that era of prosperity and optimism. Montevideo thus consolidated as a cultured, Europeanized and proud capital, whose identity —that of mate and the rambla, football and candombe, tango and murga— remains alive to this day.
If political history explains how Montevideo was built, its culture explains how it feels. And at the heart of that identity beats candombe, the Afro-Uruguayan rhythm born from the legacy of the enslaved Africans who arrived at the port during the colonial era. Candombe is played with three drums —chico, repique and piano—, and its lines of drummers travel the streets of neighborhoods like Sur and Palermo in the 'llamadas', making the city vibrate. In 2009, UNESCO inscribed 'candombe and its socio-cultural space' on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
That candombe is one of the pillars of the Montevideo Carnival, considered the longest in the world: it extends over some forty days, between January and March. Its great celebration is the Desfile de Llamadas, where dozens of candombe comparsas parade through the streets of the Sur neighborhood with their drums, their dancers, their traditional characters (the mama vieja, the gramillero, the escobero) and a display of contagious color and energy. The other great face of Carnival is the murgas, choral and satirical ensembles that, from the tablados (neighborhood stages), make social and political criticism with humor, in a genre very typical of Uruguay.
To this richness are added other expressions that make up the Montevideo identity: tango and milonga, which it shares with Buenos Aires (Montevideo even claims to be the cradle of 'La Cumparsita', the most famous tango in the world); the culture of mate, omnipresent on the rambla and in every corner; football as a national passion; and an intense literary and artistic life. All that mix —Spanish, Italian, African, criollo— makes Montevideo a capital of human scale but of deep soul, where history is lived in its squares, its music plays in its streets and its people inhabit it with a quiet and proud warmth.