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== Capture ==
== Capture ==
He was arrested in Cuzco in 1735, when he was only 24 years old, having in his possession a letter from the Inca nobleman Juan Bustamante, in which he did not accept his plans and reproached him for not being loyal to the king. He later established his residence and base of operations in Oruro, probably because it had less royal surveillance than other towns.
He was arrested in Cuzco in 1735, when he was only 24 years old, having in his possession a letter from the Inca nobleman Juan Bustamante, in which he did not accept his plans and reproached him for not being loyal to the king. He later established his residence and base of operations in Oruro, probably because it had less royal surveillance than other towns.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Juan Vélez De Córdova: apresamiento y muerte 1739, Oruro - Periódico La Patria (Oruro - Bolivia) |url=https://impresa.lapatria.bo/noticia/1039146/juan-velez-de-cordova-apresamiento-y-muerte-1739-oruro |access-date=2024-10-11 |website=Periódico La Patria |language=es}}</ref>





Revision as of 13:24, 11 October 2024

Juan Vélez de Córdova (October 3, 1711 –July 7, 1739) was a Creole who, pretending to be a descendant of the Peruvian Incas, led the first important conspiracy of the town of Oruro against Spanish domination.[1]

Biography

Juan Vélez de Córdova was born on October 3, 1711, in Moquegua, Lower Peru.He was the legitimate son of the Spanish captain Juan Vélez de Córdova, political and military leader of the town of Moquegua, and the Spanish lady María Romero.[2]

He was the second son of three brothers, and due to the privileged position of his parents he was able to access a decent education. Therefore, he was Spanish American by birth.

He later married the Creole Juana Yáñez de Zeballos. He led the first important conspiracy in the town of Oruro, but it was revealed shortly before its completion, in 1739. Juan was arrested and later executed.[3]

In their conspiracy, creoles, mestizos and Indians were equally claimed, responsible, because not only did the Indians pay tributes, , lying painfully in Potosí and Huancavelica, but they also wanted to force creoles and mestizos to pay tributes, as had already occurred in Cochabamba in 1730, in the conspiracy led by Alejo Calatayud.[4]

Capture

He was arrested in Cuzco in 1735, when he was only 24 years old, having in his possession a letter from the Inca nobleman Juan Bustamante, in which he did not accept his plans and reproached him for not being loyal to the king. He later established his residence and base of operations in Oruro, probably because it had less royal surveillance than other towns.[5]





References

  1. ^ Guzmán Palomino, Luis (2019). "VELEZ DE CORDOVA, PRECURSOR MOQUEGUANO". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ "Viajeros, crónicas de indias y épica colonial".
  3. ^ "Gobernadora junto a autoridades develó busto de precursor moqueguano Juan Vélez de Córdova Salgado y Araujo". www.gob.pe (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-08-27.
  4. ^ "indigenous | Executed Today | Page 2". 2018-02-15. Retrieved 2024-09-18.
  5. ^ "Juan Vélez De Córdova: apresamiento y muerte 1739, Oruro - Periódico La Patria (Oruro - Bolivia)". Periódico La Patria (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-10-11.