Cuzco Rebellion of 1814

Cuzco Rebellion of 1814
Part of the Peruvian War of Independence
Date3 August 1814 – 25 March 1815
Location
Intendancies of Cuzco, Huamanga, Arequipa, Puno, and La Paz, Spanish Empire
Result Royalist victory
Belligerents
[a] Government Junta of Cuzco

 Spain

Commanders and leaders

Angulo brothers:
José  Executed
[b] Vicente  Executed
Mariano  Executed
Juan  (POW)

Other:
[b] Mateo Pumacahua  Executed
Manuel Hurtado  
José Gabriel Béjar  Executed
[b] Mariano Melgar  Executed
Juan Manuel Pinelo
José María Corbacho
José Pérez  Surrendered
Ildefonso de las Muñecas
Spain José Fernando de Abascal
Spain Juan Ramírez Orozco
Spain Francisco Picoaga
Spain José Gabriel Moscoso
Spain Manuel Pardo
Spain Gregorio de Hoyos
Strength

12,000–36,000 men
2,000 horses
600–800 rifles
40 cannons


Huamanga Expedition:[6]
5,000 men
5,000 horses
800 armed troops
18 cannons
2 culverins


La Paz Expedition:[7]
2,000 men with traditional arms
500 men with rifles
8 cannons
Ramírez's division:
1,200 soldiers
40 horses
6 pieces of artillery

The Cuzco Rebellion of 1814 was an episode of the Peruvian War of Independence led by the Angulo brothers and Mateo Pumacahua that took place in much of the province of Cuzco, including Huamanga, Arequipa and Puno, as well as part of the province of Charcas. The uprising involved the proclamation of the autonomy and self-government of Cuzco from the Viceroyalty of Peru, governed by Viceroy José Fernando de Abascal y Sousa. The junta was modelled and intended to follow the steps of the Junta of Buenos Aires.

The origin of the rebellion was the claim held by members of the city council of Cuzco to establish a provincial council, also autonomous from the viceregal government of Lima, according to what the Cortes of Cádiz of 1812 anticipated, but that the court of the Real Audiencia of Cuzco resolved to the contrary, ordering the arrest of the claimants. The Angulo brothers, members of the Cabildo of Cuzco, fled on August 3, 1814, and found support in chief Mateo Pumacahua to form a Cuzco Government Junta. Under the command of José Angulo, three expeditions were organized: the first took the city of La Paz; the second, directed to the north, assaulted the city of Huamanga; the third, under Pumacahua's command, occupied Arequipa.

The conflict began on August 3, 1814, with an uprising in Cuzco, with subsequent battles in the viceroyalty's southern areas, and finally ending with the liberation of the city on March 25, 1815, by the royalist forces of the Viceroyalty of Peru.

  1. ^ Cisneros Velarde, Leonor; Lumbreras, Luis Guillermo; López Mendoza, Víctor (2005). Historia general del ejército peruano (in Spanish). Lima: Comisión Permanente de la Historia del Ejército del Perú. p. 27.
  2. ^ Denegri Luna, Félix (1972). Antología de la Independencia del Perú (in Spanish). Lima: Publicaciones de la Comisión Nacional del Sesquicentenario de la Independencia del Perú. p. 190. hdl:20.500.12934/77.
  3. ^ Eguiguren, Luis Antonio (1914). La revolución de 1814. Tipografía "La Opinión Nacional".
  4. ^ Ulloa, José Casimiro (1880). La revolución de 1814. Vol. IV. Imprenta Liberal. pp. 91–110. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  5. ^ San Cristóval, Evaristo (1919). La revolución del Cuzco, 1814 (in Spanish). Lima: Imprenta "Gloria". p. 166.
  6. ^ Eguiguren, 1914: 64
  7. ^ Eguiguren, 1914: 50


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