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Quito Revolutionary War of 1809

the city.

However, this massacre did not quell the revolutionary fervor of the residents of Quito. A series of conflicts lasting more than ten years followed. The independence movements began to gain momentum in 1814 after King Ferdinand VII returned to power in Spain. Many of Spain's colonies did not want to lose the autonomy that they had enjoyed after Ferdinand was deposed by Napoleon following Napoleon's invasion of Spain. Simmering friction between local Ecuadorians and criolles turned to outright war and rebellion.

According to an essay published on the Answers.com website, Spain controlled La Paz Bolivia with a firm grip. In 1781, a group of local Aymara Indians laid siege to La Paz. They destroyed churches and property belonging to the Spanish colonial administration. Thirty years later, Indians laid another siege on La Paz. In 1809, the struggle for independence in Bolivia from Spanish coloni

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Quito Revolutionary War of 1809. (1969, December 31). In LotsofEssays.com. Retrieved 10:25, May 19, 2024, from https://www.lotsofessays.com/viewpaper/2000854.html