• Asignatura: Inglés
  • Autor: lorecarrillo2014
  • hace 6 años

The Battle of Boyacá, the final feat of the independence of Colombia Under the command of Simón Bolívar, the Liberation Campaign achieved a forceful victory in the Battle of the Boyacá Bridge, an event that determined Colombian independence. The Boyacá Bridge, located 14 kilometers from Tunja and 110 kilometers from Bogotá, the site of one of the largest battles that have been fought in Colombian territory for our independence: The Battle of Boyacá. Occurred on August 7, 1819, it not only marked the end point in the warlike disputes for power in Colombian territory, but it also established the independence victory that the country had drawn on July 20, 1810. This confrontation has great historical importance in the independence of Colombia, because it guaranteed the success of the liberation of the Spanish empire with the definitive fall of the Viceroyalty of New Granada. It all started with a series of struggles waged by the Liberation Campaign which — led by Simón Bolívar — resisted the Spanish reconquest in 1819. After overcoming various obstacles, the patriot army emerged victorious in the Gámeza fighting (July 11) and the Vargas Reservoir (July 25), which were key in the outcome of the Battle of the Boyacá Bridge. After 77 days of formation of the Liberation Campaign, that August 7 was decisive. Bolívar's strategy was clear: to take by surprise the royalist army that, without remedy, had to pass through the Teatinos River to go to Santafé, where it would be safe from patriotic attacks. Under the command of Simón Bolívar, Francisco de Paula Santander and José Antonio Anzoátegui, the patriot troop made up of 2,850 fighters (creoles, mulattos, mestizos, zambos, indigenous and blacks) assaulted the royalist army that had 2,670 men led by Colonel José María Barreiro. In a combat that lasted about six hours, the liberating troop took the victory and achieved the surrender of the Spanish, who were taken prisoner. After being taken prisoner, Barreiro attempted to bribe fifteen-year-old soldier Pedro Pascacio Martínez, who refused and handed him over to Bolívar. As soon as it became known of the realistic defeat, the viceroy Juan Sámano fled from Santafé, a city that was left under the command of the Creoles. This battle not only marked a definitive step in our independence, but it also influenced the victories of Carabobo in Venezuela, Pichincha in Ecuador, and Junín and Ayacucho in Peru. The bridge, which suffered severe damage, was rebuilt on August 7, 1919 by President Marco Fidel Suárez.


lorecarrillo2014: A. WHEN WAS THE BATTLE OF BOYACÁ?
B. HOW DID THE BATTLE OF BOYACÁ TAKE PLACE?
lorecarrillo2014: C. WHAT DID THE BATTLE OF BOYACÁ MEAN FOR THE HISTORY OF COLOMBIA?
D. UNDER THE COMMAND OF WHOM THIS BATTLE GIVEN?
E. WHAT WOULD HAVE HAPPENED IF COLOMBIA HAD LOST THIS BATTLE?
.
lorecarrillo2014: F. PERFORM 4 SCENE OF THE BATTLE OF BOYACA DESCRIBING IN ENGLISH
WHAT HAPPENS IN EACH SCENE WHICH DRAW OR STICK
G. FIND THE FOLLOWING VOCABULARY IN ENGLISH AND HAVE PRAYERS WITH
EACH WORD: batalla, combatir, puente, disputar, territorio, triunfo, independencia,
patriota, victoria, tropas, derrotar, monumento, libertad, comandante, coronel

Respuestas

Respuesta dada por: milibelengarcia2
1

Respuesta:

La batalla del Puente de Boyacá fue la confrontación más importante de la guerra de independencia de Colombia que garantizó el éxito de la Campaña Libertadora de Nueva Granada. Este acontecimiento tuvo lugar el día 7 de agosto de 1819 en el cruce del río Teatinos, en inmediaciones de Tunja. La batalla finaliza con la rendición en masa de la división realista, y fue la culminación de 78 días de campaña iniciada desde Venezuela por el Libertador Simón Bolívar para independizar la Nueva Granada.

Explicación:

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