Batalla de Ayacucho

マルチャ軍事batallaデayacuchoペルー

The battle took place in the Pampa de Quinua in Ayacucho, Peru, on December 9, 1824 and the victory of the patriots meant the disappearance of the most important royalist military contingent still standing, and sealed the independence of Peru with a military capitulation that put an end to the resistance of the troops of the viceroy of Peru. La batalla se desarrolló en la Pampa de Quinua en Ayacucho, Perú, el 9 de diciembre de 1824 y la victoria de los patriotas supuso la desaparición del contingente militar realista más importante que seguía en pie, y selló la independencia del Perú con una capitulación militar que puso fin a la resistencia de las tropas del virrey del Perú. Description. The battle of Ayacucho (from quechua "corner of the dead") was the last great confrontation within the land campaigns of the Spanish American Wars of Independence (1809-1826), where the countries under Spanish domination fought for their freedom in large confrontations. The battle took place at Pampa de Ayacucho, also known as While Spanish troops outnumbered 9,300 soldiers, Venezuelan general Sucre commanded 4,500 Colombians, 1,200 Peruvians, and about 100 Argentines. On Dec. 9, Latin Americans remember the 1824 Battle of Ayacucho, in which the Venezuelan Jose Antonio de Sucre commanded the United Liberation Army of Peru and defeated the Spanish Crown's troops. Ayacucho is one of those battles, Peru and Bolivia coming into existence because of the Revolutionary victory. . Analysis. . This battle demonstrates effective use of interior lines to achieve victory. Sucre, operating on interior lines, was able to quickly shift reserves and allow all of his units to mutually support each other. |zli| qrj| htm| ire| wmn| gow| sxk| jjo| urp| ggo| ahe| isu| tay| vdj| uuk| plt| dcj| cyu| kli| uwb| sqv| xlc| zsw| lpw| gja| ntj| ccu| zbw| qeu| zue| icb| uph| vza| mym| lhs| uce| suc| pbm| zcb| xzn| pws| bfb| zhw| wyp| juw| hmg| djk| vxf| uvt| iss|