Abstract
The circulation of civilians and members of the military between Uru-guay, Argentina, and Brazil in the context of conflicts has been an object of study for the period until the Paraguay War, but is less common in studies of the last two decades of the nineteenth century, interested primarily in transatlantic migration and political transformations within national spaces. This transnational phenomenon is considered here, beginning with the connection between the collective dimension of Uruguayan political exile to bordering countries (examining the volume and political practices of emigration, as well as repatriation initiatives) and the presentation of the paradigmatic itinerary of Colonel Diego Lamas.
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