Queipa Revolution Explained

Conflict:Queipa Revolution
Place:Venezuela
Partof:the Venezuelan civil wars
Result:Crespistas VictoryJoaquin Crespo dies in combat
Combatants Header:Belligerents
Combatant1:Crespistas
Combatant2:Mochistas
Commander1:Joaquín Crespo
Commander2:José Manuel HernándezLuis Loreto Lima
Units1:2,000 soldiers
Units2:1,600 soldiers
Date:2 March 1898 – 12 June 1898

The Queipa Revolution was a military uprising that took place in Venezuela on 2 March 1898,[1] after 1897 when Joaquín Crespo organized electoral fraud to ensure the victory of his ally, Ignacio Andrade. The defeated candidate and leader José Manuel Hernández, better known as Mocho Hernández, rose up against Crespo.

The crespistas and the mochistas clashed in the battle of on 16 April,[2] when Crespo was shot dead in combat. The rebel army quickly grew to 1,600 fighters, while the government had 2,000, including loyalist caudillo militias. The Minister of War, Antonio Fernández, also scored a victory on June 5, defeating 600 rebels. Andrade commissioned to carry out the campaign, who defeated and captured Hernández on June 12 in El Hacha, Yaracuy state.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: VenezuelaTuya .
  2. Web site: Mata Carmelera, combate de Fundación Empresas Polar . 2022-07-28 . bibliofep.fundacionempresaspolar.org.