title: 5.23- Ayacucho
author: Revolutions
contenttype: podcast
publication: Revolutions
published: 2017-01-15T19:36:29-05:00
sourceurl: https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/pscrb.fm/rss/p/traffic.libsyn.com/secure/revolutionspodcast/5.23-AyacuchoMaster.mp3?dest-id=159998
word_count: 5912
Hello, and welcome to Revolutions. Episode 5.23, Ayakucho. Okay, so I'm back. I managed to survive the last month and get the manuscript turned in on time, so everything is aces. The general timeline for the book from here on out, for those of you who have been asking, is that we plan to have all revisions and edits wrapped up by early March, and then it'll move into production and marketing over the summer, with an eye on releasing the book officially in October. The wheels do move slowly in publishing, but they are moving. Meanwhile, back here at the Revolutions podcast, we have five more episodes of Spanish-American Independence, as Simone believe our first completes the liberation of South America, and then slowly descends into a fatal labyrinth from which he will not return. After believe our slips the mortal coil in December of 1830, we will hop back across the Atlantic and then back in time just about six months to cover the July Revolution in France to set up the great failed revolutions of 1848. And 1848 will put a closing bracket on our age of liberal revolutions, because 1848 also happens to be the year the Communist Manifesto was published, and budding young revolutionaries will turn away from the kind of bourgeois enlightenment, liberalism they've been espousing, and move on to proletarian socialism, communism, and anarchism that will be the principal drivers of our 20th century revolutions. So getting back to it, if I'm not mistaken, we left believe our in Guayaquil in August of 1823, finally feeling begged enough to sail down to Lima to take over the struggle for Peruvian independence. And it would be quite a struggle, not just because the last 19,000 Spanish troops left on the entire continent had taken up a strong position high in the Andes and were proving impossible to dislodge, but also because plenty of people in Peru were not interested in dislodging them. Of the four old vice royalties, so new Spain, Peru, New Grenada, and the Rio de la Plata, there's no question that Peru was the most conservative and had largely been untouched by the successive waves of unrest that had been triggered elsewhere in Spanish America by the applications of Bion, and then the subsequent fallout from the peninsula war. As their neighbors fell to patriotic independence movements, one by one, Peru had remained loyal to Spain. For the most part, the rich and prosperous Creoleo aristocracy of Lima looked on a gasped as those independence movements folded in a degree of racial revolution. Because both Bolivar and San Martín had succeeded thanks to armies composed of a motley array of blacks and Indians, partos, mastizos, and everything in between. And if the choice was to remain with Spain and keep their existing racial hierarchies, or declare independence and drowned under a rising tide of black and Indians, Peru's elite Creoleo seemed happy to remain with God and the King, as Simone Bolivar was about to discover. At the end of August 1823, Bolivar got on a boat and sailed south. On September 1st, he arrived in the port of Cajal that served Lima and made what was for the moment, at least, a triumphant entry into the great city. Bolivar was a well-traveled guy. He had been to Paris and Rome and London, but certainly no city in the Americas could match the splendid opulence he found in Lima. Built from the silver hauled out of the mines up in the mountains, Lima was filled with magnificent churches and palaces that were all now draped in festive decorations to greet the liberator. Bolivar would soon learn, however, that those who espoused patriotic slogans only did so when they thought the patriots were going to win, and many of those out there welcoming him with open arms were willing, even eager, to go back to God and the King at the first opportunity. Navigating these treacherous and duplicitous waters would literally suck the life out of Bolivar, and he would ultimately conclude that Peru was a chamber of horrors, confirming his diagnosis in the letter from Jamaica that the vice-reality of Peru was fatally corrupted by gold and slaves, of which he said in the letter, the first corrupts all it touches, the second is corrupt in and of itself. But for the moment, everything was splendid. There was good food, good drink, lots of parties, lots of socializing, Manuel Assainz was of course right by Bolivar's side, introducing him around to the society that she herself was a prominent member of. It was only mildly awkward that science was married to another man. To keep up the thinnest of appearances, she officially lived in her own house, but spent her nights with Bolivar in the house that he had commandeered, the same house San Martín had lived in during his own unhappy years in Peru. It had been a full year now since San Martín had left, and in that time the Peruvian government he had helped inaugurate in September of 1822 had been buffeted by defeat and treachery. The president of the new congress was supposed to be Jose Bernardo de Torre Toglay, but a defeat at the hands of the Spanish just a few months later led to a military coup spearheaded by General Jose de la Dreeva Aguero. As we saw last time when sucrez showed up to pave the way for Bolivar's arrival, it was Riva Aguero, who had gone marching out to confront the Spanish in July of 1823, and instead left Lima wide open and undefended, allowing a Spanish army to march in and strip the city clean. And it was that sack, more than anything else, that led the begging of the Patriot leaders in Lima to reach the proper pitch to draw Bolivar down from Guayakil. But Bolivar now likely on the way, Torre Toglay reasserted his claim to the presidency with the help of lavish bribes to key members of the congress. So before Riva Aguero made it back to Lima, he found himself ousted from power, but instead of accepting this counter coup, Riva Aguero refused to relinquish the presidency and instead fled north to Trejillo, a good-sized port on the Pacific coast about halfway between Guayakil and Lima. So when Bolivar walked into Lima, he found the government fractured with two men claiming to be president. Bolivar, for his part, recognized the congress in Lima, read by Tarty Toglay, and entered negotiations to determine what the liberators' role would be in Peru. The congress wanted to vote Bolivar full dictator, with just blanket political, military, and economic authority. But as usual, Bolivar scrupulously avoided the job. He wanted only full military authority. The political power should remain in civilian hands, and Tarty Toglay should remain president. It's just another reminder that Bolivar shared with George Washington a passion for being a military hero rather than a political tyrant and both wanted sovereign authority to stay out of the hands of military heroes. On this front, Washington was the North American Bolivar and Bolivar was the South American Washington. On September 2nd, the congress appointed Bolivar Supreme Military Commander. Bolivar then wrote letters to Riva Aguero imploring him to stand down, accept the government, and unify the Patriot cause. But now extra resentful that Bolivar had come down from Colombia to hog all the glory. Instead, Riva Aguero did an about face. He opened up a channel to the Spanish and said he was ready to talk about joint operations to evict the Patriots and return Peru to Spanish rule. But for the moment, Riva Aguero's treasonous treachery did not extend to his senior officers. They were unwilling to go along with the betrayals, and instead arrested Riva Aguero and shipped him down to Lima. President Tarty Toglay naturally wanted to execute him, but Bolivar intervened and put Riva Aguero on a boat to Europe, and that is the last we will ever hear of him. But the Patriot government now unified under President Tarty Toglay. Bolivar assessed the military situation. Up in the mountains, looming high above Lima, the Spanish had about 19,000 men spread across Peru and Upper Peru as far south as La Paz. For the past decade, these forces had fended off incursions both from Argentina and Coastal Peru without really too much effort at all, and they still held the minds that were the true economic engine of the continent. These last Spanish armies were now led by Viceroy José de la Serna, a general who had forced his way into the job in the wake of San Martín's arrival back in 1821. He had withdrawn into the mountains when Lima fell to San Martín's army of the Andes. Alongside La Serna was a French-born general named José de Cantarac, who had come to South America with the Armada of Pablo Moreo, and then migrated south down to Peru. Cantarac had been the principal field marshal for all the operations around Lima and had developed a healthy disdain for the Patriot military. He personally remained undefeated in the field against them and had recently led the capture and methodical sack of Lima. Also serving under Viceroy La Serna was an unreconstructed royal absolutist named Pedro Agneta, who was as opposed to treasonous liberal Spaniards as he was to these patriotic American dogs. Taking over command of the American dogs, Supreme Commander Believar inherited four armies in various states of disrepair. They were now mostly Peruvian conscripts, as nearly all of San Martín's veterans from the army of the Andes had either now been killed, captured, or gone home. Though it does appear that I misspoke last time when I said they were all gone, because while I was prepping this week's show, I found about 1500 Argentinian cavalry still holding the fort down in Cajal, and I didn't realize they were there. But they're still there. The commitment of the Peruvian conscripts was shaky at best, and indeed shortly after Believar assumed command, one of these armies marched into the interior with 5,000 men and returned home with only 850, and they never even fought a battle. Mother Nature and terrible morale had done all the necessary damage. While Believar assessed his dismal situation and tried to figure out a plan of attack, he took to try to make this a great Pan-American enterprise to evict the last remaining Spanish, his simple argument being that so long as any Spanish remained on the continent, nobody on the continent was safe. But by now, everyone else had their own problems. Buenos Aires and Montevideo were entering into yet another round of civil war, mixed with a foreign war against Brazil. The last thing they wanted was for another San Martín to wander off with one of their armies and never come back. Down in Chile, Bernardo O'Higgins was personally a committed Pan-American patriot, and he even traveled to Lima to meet with Believar. But having fought and won independence, most of his fellow Chileans wanted to focus on securing their country not go marching off to try to liberate another one. The Vantage-Chaléon Navy elected to stay in Chilean waters and not get sucked into war in Peru. So Believar's letters and treaties and begging were falling on deaf ears, and he was going to be on his own. Nowhere was the refusal to respond more maddening than from Vice President Santander and the Colombian Congress in Bogota. Though, to be fair, no one was more sick of listening to Believar's begging than Vice President Santander and the Colombian Congress in Bogota. It had now been two years since the liberator had ridden out of town. He was supposed to go secure Quito on his way to Guayaquil to make Gran Colombia a reality, and after one year of hard fighting, he had done it. Gran Colombia was now unified. But instead of coming back, Believar had kept going and taken a Colombian army with him. Now every time Santander opened a letter from Believar, it was demands that Colombia's and men, money, guns, food, anything, everything down to Peru. And it's not like the economy of Gran Colombia was awesome after a decade of nonstop revolutionary civil war. It was hard to just keep the country afloat without sending much needed resources out to be consumed by Believar as he tilted now at Peruvian windmills. The correspondence between Believar and Santander became Kurt and Accusatory, and then ultimately quite silent. And it was one of those times where both sides were wrong and both sides were right. Believar was right that they couldn't leave a Spanish stronghold on the continent, and also right to point out that none of them would have gained their independence, had not foreign troops been of assistance. The Venezuelans had fought for New Grenadins, and then they had both fought together for Quetal. But now nobody wanted to keep going and helped the Peruvians. But Santander was right that this was getting expensive and endless over commitments might reverse what they had already achieved. If Believar's point was that leaving the Spanish in place would destroy Colombia, Santander's point was that pursuing them might also destroy Colombia. Being Believar deal with these frustrations was Manuel Assainz, who now moved beyond just being another of Believar's mistresses. She was so fiercely invaluable that Believar enrolled her in the army as a cavalry officer with all due rank and pay and put her in charge of his papers. From that position, she kept a central eye on all his affairs and became a clearinghouse for patriotic correspondence and planning. So she now traveled with his entourage, not merely as his girlfriend, but as one of his principal secretaries and advisors. But for a variety of reasons, Assainz did not accompany Believar on the inspection tour at the end of 1823 that nearly killed him, and so the couple became separated for far longer than either imagined. By now, the years of revolutionary toil were taking their toll on Believar. Though still only in his mid-40s, he was prematurely aged from years of earning that affectionate nickname Iron Ass, and while returning to Lima in early January 1824, he contracted a severe fever. The fever was so bad that the ship he was on had to dock at a random little village on the coast, and there in a small house Believar drifted in and out of consciousness for an entire week, and he very nearly died right then and there. Even when the fever finally broke, Believar was in terrible shape. Always short and trim, Believar emerged from the fever a hollow-eyed skeleton. He was unable to travel and had to post up in this tiny little village for two full months, and for weeks he took audiences from behind a curtain so that people did not see how frail he had become. And ironically, it was because he was in such bad shape that it was agreed that Manuel assigns would not rush to his side to care for him. They were both afraid it would spark dangerous rumors in Lima that the liberator was finished. Now whether it was because of Believar's condition or just a coincidence, just as Believar was beginning to pull himself together in February, he was handed grave news from the capital. That Argentine garrison holding the fortress of Kajau mutinied because they had not been paid in approximately forever. So just like that, the Patriots lost control of the all-important port servicing Lima. In the wake of this drastic emergency, the Patriot Congress declared Believar dictator. They gave him all authority whether he wanted it or not and Believar just had to accept it this time. But President Tore Toglay sniffed at the offence of being so easily brushed aside. And as President, he himself was intimately familiar with the military and political situation and determined that at this point, Spanish were likely to prevail. So on February the 27th, 1824, President Tore Toglay and 350 high-ranking military officers, political officials and congressmen, defected and declared their allegiance to God and the King. Now obviously, this had been worked out in advance with Vice-Royal Asserna, who promptly announced that with the capital back in royalist hands, that an army would be arriving shortly to secure the situation. The defection of Tore Toglay sent the truly committed Patriots of Lima into a hasty flight with most everyone streaming north for the relative safety of Trujillo. Among those fleeing the capital was Manuel Ass for recapturing Lima. As a moment Believar was personally mending and finally ready to travel after a two-month convalescence. He sailed for Trujillo, reunited with science, and there scrambled a response. Believar established a provisional patriot government in exile in Trujillo, using his powers as dictator to dull out an array of titles and ministries, something he was by now a pretty well-practiced hand at. Through to Believar's outlook and predicament, the government's principal job for the moment was winning the war. And for the first time in his life, Believar did not just go racing off chasing glory. He carefully planned his next move. Very much as San Martín had done in Cuyo, Believar redirected everyone and everything in Trujillo towards the war effort. In fact, he had been manufactured war material, women-soed uniforms, everyone contributed silver in all other metals, precious or otherwise. Cattle, mules, horses were all pressed into service. Believar also conscripted like crazy. And he soon had about an equal number of peruvians to go along with the 5,000 or so Colombian veterans who formed the core of his army. He drew these recruits from the ranks of the lower classes, from the Partos and Mestizos and Indians, who unlike the elite Criollo of Lima, looked forward to liberation, real liberation, and they were ready to fight for it. As his army came together, Believar also developed a plan to take the fight into the interior. Control of Lima obviously meant nothing. The capital had changed hands multiple times over the past few years with no obvious change to the balance of power. As long as the Spanish remained in the ancient Incan fortresses of the high Andes, Peruvian independence was impossible. And those Spanish forces could remain in the rich and fertile valleys of the interior indefinitely, and their close proximity to the mines meant that their men were always paid on time and in full. So there was very little hope that those Spanish armies would just disintegrate of their own accord. So as he drilled his new soldiers, Believar sent Sukre ahead to scout the way through the valleys and foothills that paralleled the mountain south. And once that route was scouted, Sukre was to identify the best route up into the mountains near the mining region of Pasco, where they would meet the first major garrison on the road to Kusko. That garrison of 2,000 men was located in the fertile valley around Lake Hunin and led by General Cantorak, living a very comfortable life and reading reports of patriot activity, with leisurely contempt. But all was not well on the royal side. Had they stayed united, it is likely that the coming campaign would have gone very differently, but the die was cast even as Believar lay in bed recovering from his near fatal fever. The conservative Spanish general Olañeta decided that he was the only one left on the whole damn continent fighting for the true principles of bourbon absolutism, so suddenly refusing to take orders from Viceroy La Sona, Olañeta withdrew with his army deep into the south in the middle of January 1824. La Sona could not live with this threat in his rear, so even as Spanish forces were retaking Lima, La Sona was forced to peel off a good third of his total army and dispatched them south to bring Olañeta to heal. And then even after Believar recovered and began building an army out of the city of Chorhio, he was still not briefed on the depth of his enemy's troubles. It wasn't until the end of April that he was told that the Spanish were actually up in the mountains fighting a war against themselves. When he got this news, all of his old instincts fired. He called a war council and laid out the situation for his officers and then called on a young colonel to offer the first opinion of what the army should do. The young colonel surveyed the maps and said I think we should attack at once. So Believar rolled up all the maps and said this boy has taught us all a lesson we march in the morning. So by mid-May 1824, 9,000 men and 6,000 heads of cattle were on the move south, keeping the mountains to their left as they followed the valleys towards the place that Sukre had identified as the best place to start going up. Believar led the army from the van and with Manuel's sainte in the rear with all his papers and Believar being Believar, he carried on in a fair with a local girl that he met along the way. Believar led to furious messages from sains in the rear but both being fairly liberty in their habits when the army kept moving, the girl went home and sains returned to believe our side after. No doubt giving him an earful. By July, the army was preparing to enter the mountains and as was standard for crossings into the Andes, it was not going to be an easy march. Narrow paths that skirted sheer cliffs, various mountain streams and rivers and waterfalls, there were chasms, bare hard cold wet rock. But this is a new look Believar we're dealing with here and he did think ahead this time. The advance crew under General Sukre had stashed supplies all along the planned route and had even built rudimentary shelters along the way. This planning would help keep the tradition to a minimum as the army began a slow, sometimes single file climb up into the mountains. Because Believar's army approached Cantorac's position in the Valley of Hunin where he was sitting with a thousand infantry and a thousand cavalry, the French General did not seem particularly concerned at all. Believar may have a reputation but Cantorac dismissed him as an overhyped empty shirt who had not yet met a real army or general in battle. And it's not like Patriot armies hadn't attempted to come up into the mountains before, but Mother Nature had always taken care of them. So Cantorac didn't even try that hard to keep tabs on Believar and it came as something of a surprise when on August the 2nd, 9,000 men suddenly started emerging onto a high mesa overlooking the Valley of Hunin. And even then it took Cantorac another four days to decide that he should probably do something. The thing he decided to do was order a retreat out of the Valley and that's when Believar came down to try to stop him. On August the 6th, Believar personally led about 900 of his cavalry down onto the plains by the lake. Many of these being old Generos veterans who had volunteered for further service, many of whom had now been fighting for Believar for years. Cantorac responded by sending his own thousand cavalry out to try to buy the infantry time to escape the Valley and the two sides started dancing around each other and then they started making sweeping passes at each other and pretty soon alternating revolving waves of cavalry started clashing. Except it was all done exclusively with swords and lances. No sound rang out except for the pounding of horse hooves and the cries of wounded men. And by this point in the history of war, this is practically unheard of. But if it was going to be a battle of lances, Believar's cavalry was eventually going to win and they did, proving to Cantorac that he was dealing with a much different kind of army than he had in the past. These guys deployed the old retreat, chase and turn trick that Paas had taught them all long ago. And much to Cantorac's surprise and dismay his cavalry started taking heavy casualties. 400 dead and wounded and another 100 captured. But the survivors of this skirmish escaped as did the entire infantry. All of them now running towards Kusko. Believar's liberating army then poured into the Valley. And after one lousy cavalry skirmish, the emotional course of the war flipped with Believar's men now believing that they were destined for victory, while the Spanish aura of invincibility had been permanently shattered. Once again though, it was a more tempered Believar running this campaign. So rather than putting on the rocket skis for Kusko, the liberator fanned his men out across the Valley to consolidate their political and military authority and generally make the region a new forward base for supply and defense. He also got word that in the wake of the Battle of Hunin, the vice-warrior Lassarna was finally prioritizing Believar over the renegade conservative Olanyeta and was massing upwards of 12,000 men in Kusko to properly respond to this Patriot army now in their midst. So that Patriot army remained in the Valley of Hunin for two full months. By October Believar was about to restart the campaign only to be hit by heavy rains that made any march logistically impossible. So he ordered the army to settle down and wait it out, while Believar himself decided that with the campaign idled that he himself should make a return trip to Lima. The Spanish army that had moved in after Torre Toglis' defection had moved on again after beefing up the garrison at Kajau and taking any supplies they could find. So there was a good chance Believar would be able to restore Lima to Patriot hands, even if Kajau itself would remain out of reach and looming ominously on the coast. The leaving Sukre to lead the army, the liberator retraced his steps back down out of the mountains. It was while on the road back to Lima at the end of October 1824 that Believar received devastating news. The Congress in Bogota at Vice President Santander's instigation had voted to strip Believar of the presidency and all military authority that had been granted to him by Columbia. The justification was that by accepting the dictatorship of Peru, the Believar had abdicated his claim to sovereignty in Columbia. The Congress further ordered that Believar immediately give up control of all Colombian forces to his second in command. Now as fate would have it, that second in command was General Sukre, the ever loyal protégé of Believar. Had it been practically anybody else, it's possible Believar would have rejected the order from Bogota, but instead he raged in his tent and then wrote two letters to Sukre. The first was his official public notice of the orders of the Congress, the second a personal letter to Sukre where he blistered at the perfiddle of the politicians in Bogota, but told Sukre to accept the change in command. Not yet thirty, General Antonio Jose de Sukre was now commander in chief of the Patriot Army. Sukre and Believar's other senior officers were of course outraged by all of this, but Believar forbade them from ignoring the Congress, or from breaking off the campaign against the Spanish just on his account. He still had the power and authority vested in him as dictator of Peru, and he could wield it back in Lima to the benefit of the greater cause. But though he took the removal of his command in remarkable stride, there is no question that Believar would have been crushed. He was a general. He wanted military glory, that's what he was always after. Now he was going to be forced to sit on the sidelines and all the glory would go to Sukre, who had already kind of stolen his thunder and keto when he found the third sister. I mean really, if it had been anybody but Sukre, who Believar was handing the army over to, this all would have played out very differently. Over the next few weeks though, Believar continued to pick his way down out of the mountains, headed for the district around Lima, and then he finally got some good news. Though everybody else had abandoned him, way back off in his home of Venezuela, Jose Antonio Paz came through. Though he too was no happier about Believar's demands than anyone else, he at least complied. Paz sent 4,500 men on a long march south to reinforce the Patriot cause in Peru. These men were arriving in the country, just as Believar was descending from the mountains, and though he had been stripped of his Colombian authority, Believar asserted his authority as dictator of Peru, put himself at the head of these troops, and led them to Lima. So yet again, an army marched virtually unopposed into the capital. Ex-President Torre Toglay and his fellow defectors, plus any remaining Spanish troops, fled into the fortress of Kajal. With his enemies trapped inside the fortress, Believar began a siege in early December, just a few days before Sukre fought the great, decisive battle of Ayacucho. Believar's last order to Sukre, well, recommendation really since he had been stripped of his ability to give orders, was for Sukre to maintain a strong defensive crouch and not get sucked into a battle. It was one thing to overwhelm a small garrison, quite another to take on the cream of the Spanish army, and Believar doubted the Patriots capacity to win any battle up in the mountains, not for the least that the Spanish were far more acclimatized to the thin mountain air. But Viceroy LaSerna was not going to let Sukre just avoid a battle, and in late November, he marched out of Kusko to go hunt down and destroy the Patriot army. Sukre did his best to follow Believar's recommendation and avoid a confrontation with the Spanish, but recognizing that LaSerna was trying to swing around him and cut off his line of retreat to the north, Sukre mobilized his forces and led them through a series of deft retreats that prevented the Spanish from outflanking him. But eventually, LaSerna's forces proved too fast and too well acquainted with the terrain. And after a few weeks dancing around each other, Sukre determined that if he was going to make it out of this, he was going to have to turn and punch LaSerna right in the nose. So on December 6th, near the plains of Ayacucho, Sukre decided to stop running. With other contingents of his army spread out on their own lines of retreat, Sukre had about 5,800 men under his direct command, while up in the hills overlooking Ayacucho, were more than 9,000 Spanish. They had a nearly 2-1 advantage and held the high ground, but Sukre was now determined to fight. And it would seem that just as Believar was becoming more prudent, his protégé was picking up the most gloriously reckless of the liberators' old habits. On December 9th, 1824, the two sides lined up for battle. And from LaSerna's perspective, things could not be better. He had the numbers, he had the high ground, all of his best officers were running his army. Sukre didn't even have an artillery, well, he had one single solitary cannon. But it's not like the Spanish troops were in great shape. It had been marching like crazy over the last few weeks and were now badly under provision. They were tired and hungry. But when the battle started, it predictably went against the Patriots, who endured artillery, fire and a steady press of Spanish infantry and cavalry. But then at the center of the Patriot lines, a young cavalry general dismounted his horse and shot it in the head. He told his fellow officers that he wanted no opportunity to escape. Then he ordered everyone to pick up their long, generos lances. The next time the Spanish cavalry charged, the Patriot center didn't just stand firm. They charged right back. The spears played hell with the Spanish horsemen and after a half hour of intense fighting, Vice-Roy LaSerna could only look on helplessly as the Patriot center not only held but surged forward. Rushing the Spanish artillery positions on the hills and capturing them. With his army now suddenly buckling, LaSerna ordered a massive infantry to go retake his artillery positions, but they failed and were sent reeling backwards. In the midst of all this, his generals then started getting wounded and captured. Cantorac was among them. And then in a humiliating blow, LaSerna himself was surrounded in his command tent and taken prisoner. Everywhere else, his soldiers were rather dead or in full retreat, or in the process of being captured. They left 1900 dead on the field with another 2500 now prisoners of war. General Sookre lost only 310 men. At the battle via Cucho, General Sookre won a battle worthy of believe our in all of his old glory. Sookre outnumbered, charged uphill against superior forces. And not only was it a great victory, but it was the final victory. When LaSerna captured and his army destroyed, there was no Spanish resistance left in Peru. For practically nowhere else, the only remaining Spanish forces now followed Olaneta south to La Paz. Believe our himself well knew what this victory meant when he heard about it. He was not expecting Sookre to fight a battle let alone win one so decisively. When he heard the details he wrote, General Sookre is the father of Ayacucho. He is the redeemer of the children of the son. He has broken the chains with which Pizarro bound the empire of the Incas. Posterdi will picture him with one foot on Pichinicha and the other on Potosi, bearing in his arms the cradle of Monco Copac and contemplating the chains broken by his sword. The battle of Ayacucho marked the beginning of permanent independence for Peru. But more importantly, it was the last major battle of the Wars of Spanish-American independence. There would be mop-up work to be done in Upper Peru and Sookre was already redirecting his forces to secure that very last territory that was still under the chains of Spanish oppression. But at the dawn of 1825, Believe Art could look back with satisfaction on the oath that he had made on the sacred mountain roam so many years ago. He had now liberated his country and he had not died. Want free checking? That's really free? Free from fees? Free overdraft protection? Free mobile banking and free access to ATMs nationwide? That's what you get with free checking from Redwood Credit Union. We love to help you succeed. Take control of your finances at Redwood Credit Union. Start today at redwoodcu.org or stop by a local branch. Redwood Credit Union for you, for free, for all that you love. 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