I am José Gabriel Condorcanqui Noguera, alsocalled José Gabriel Túpac Amaru, later known asTúpac Amaru II or simply Túpac Amaru, he was an indigenous leader and leader of the largest anti-colonial rebellion that occurred in Latin America during the 18th century
I WAS BORN ON MARCH 19, 1738, SURIMANA, CANAS, VIRREINATO DEL PERÚ. MY PARENTS, MIGUEL CONDORCANQUI AND ROSA NOGUERA
I was raised (up to 12 years old) by the Creole priest Antonio López de Sosa and later at the Colegio San Francisco de Borja, he showed preference for the Creole, mastering Latin and using refined Hispanic clothing
He was an indigenous leader and leader of the largest anti-colonial rebellion that occurred in Spanish America during the 18th century called the "Great Rebellion."
He led the largest indigenous and independence movement in the Viceroyalty of Peru. I was the first to ask for the freedom of all Spanish America from any dependency
This was developed in the Viceroyalty of Río de la Plata and theViceroyalty of Peru, belonging to the Kingdom of Spain, and beganon November 4, 1780 with the capture and subsequent execution of the magistrate Antonio de Arriaga.
In addition, it decrees the abolition of black slavery for the first time in Latin America itself (November 16, 1780)
It was a character of mestizo origin in which Inca and Creole blood converged. Descended from Túpac Amaru I, the last Inca of Vilcabambawho was executed by the Spanish in the 16th century
My spouse was MICAELA BASTIDAS, I died on May 18, 1871 DECAPITATED
His movement constituted a "watershed", due to which the colonial authorities eliminated the already scarce indigenous noble class andincreased the repression against the Andean for fear that somethinglike this would be repeated.
On May 25, 1758, he married Micaela Bastida who had three children:Hipólito, Mariano and Fernando (all surnamed Condorcanqui Bastidas);-six years after his marriage he was appointed chief of the territories that corresponded to him by elemental inheritance.
In Peru he has been recognized as the founder of the Peruvian national identity. He was used as a capital figure for the Velasquista regime (1968-1975) and since then he has remained vindicated in the popular imagination.