Between Tupac Amaru II and The Government Junta of Cusco: Aguilar and Ubalde Conspiracy in 1805

Authors

  • John Fisher University of Liverpool

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.tempus.326168

Keywords:

Cusco, Lima, royalism, Peruvian independence

Abstract

This article analyses the significance of the 1805 Conspiracy of Gabriel Aguilar and José Manuel de Ubalde, which aimed to crown a member of the indigenous elite of Cusco as Inca Emperor of an independent Peru. Although the conspiracy failed, it provided an important link between the widespread indigenous insurgency of the early-1780s, initiated by José Gabriel Tupac Amaru, and the broader -based independence movement of 1814-1815, which sought to unite the creole and indigenous inhabitants of southern Peru in a bid for an independent Peru, with Cusco as its capital.

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References

De La Puente, José Agustín. “La historiografía peruana sobre la Independencia en el siglo XX”. En: O’phelan Godoy, Scarlett. La independencia del Perú. De los Borbones a Bolívar. Lima: Instituto Riva-Agüero, 2001.

Fisher, John. El Perú borbónico, 1750-1824. Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, 2000

Fisher, John. Gobierno y sociedad en el Perú colonial. El régimen de las intendencias, 1784-1814. Lima: Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Fondo Editorial, 1981.

Lewin, Boleslao. La rebelión de Túpac Amaru. Buenos Aires: Librería Hachette, 1957.

Published

2016-11-19

Issue

Section

Artículos