Bartolina sisa biography template

          The road blockade campaign spanned the country, a strategy that recalled Túpac Katari and Bartolina Sisa's rebellion against the Spanish in...

          Bartolina Sisa

          Bolivian revolutionary

          In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Sisa and the second or maternal family name is Vargas.

          Bartolina Sisa

          Statue of Bartolina Sisa alongside Túpac Katari

          Bornc.

          This chapter discusses a description of the development, demands, and the current role of the peasant women's movement in Bolivia.

        1. This chapter discusses a description of the development, demands, and the current role of the peasant women's movement in Bolivia.
        2. She married Matheo Quespi on 23 September , in San Lorenzo, Eustaquio Méndez, Tarija, Bolivia.
        3. The road blockade campaign spanned the country, a strategy that recalled Túpac Katari and Bartolina Sisa's rebellion against the Spanish in
        4. The title of this exhibition references the Aymara fighter Bartolina Sisa, who led the successful indigenous uprising against the Spanish conquest in Bolivia.
        5. On September 5, we remembered the death of Bartolina Sisa.
        6. 1750

          Q'ara Qhatu, Viceroyalty of Peru, Spanish Empire

          Died5 September 1781(1781-09-05) (aged 31)

          La Paz, Viceroyalty of Peru, Spanish Empire
          (now in Bolivia)

          Known forIndigenous leader, freedom fighter

          Bartolina Sisa Vargas (c.

          1750 – 5 September 1782) was an Aymaran woman and indigenous heroine[1] who led numerous revolts against the Spanish rule in Charcas, then part of the Viceroyalty of Peru and present-day Bolivia. Alongside her husband, the indigenous leader Túpac Katari, she participated in the organisation of indigenous military camps that took part in the siege of La Paz.[2] She was betrayed and turned in to the Spanish authorities, who later executed her.

          Honouring the dat