La Independencia del Perú, for article on Peru independence declaration, for article on argentina independence declaration

Peru’s Act of Independence is signed in Lima

On July 28, 1821 C.E., Argentine General José de San Martín stood in the Plaza Mayor of Lima and declared that Peru was free. It was a declaration earned through more than a decade of uprisings, military campaigns, and political sacrifice — and one that would ripple across the entire continent.

Key details

  • Peru independence declaration: San Martín formally proclaimed independence on July 28, 1821 C.E., after royalist forces abandoned Lima — making Peru the last major Spanish stronghold on the Pacific coast to break free.
  • Viceroyalty of Peru: The declaration dismantled one of Spain’s most powerful colonial administrative structures in the Americas, ending nearly three centuries of Spanish rule over a territory that stretched across much of western South America.
  • Indigenous resistance: The road to independence was paved in part by earlier uprisings, most notably the 1780–1781 C.E. Rebellion of Túpac Amaru II, whose Indigenous leaders challenged colonial authority generations before San Martín arrived — and whose demands included the abolition of slavery in Peru.

A long road to Lima

Peru’s independence did not arrive suddenly. The country had been a royalist stronghold for most of the broader Spanish American independence era, with Viceroy José Fernando de Abascal y Sousa using Lima as a base to suppress rebellions across the region. While Argentina, Chile, and Venezuela were already in the midst of revolutionary upheaval, Peru remained tightly controlled.

That began to shift in 1820 C.E., when San Martín’s Liberating Expedition of Peru landed on the Peruvian coast. Rather than launching a frontal assault on Lima, San Martín pursued a strategy of economic pressure and political persuasion. It worked. Royalist forces evacuated the capital, and on July 28, San Martín signed the Act of Independence in Lima.

But the story of Peru’s independence is not only San Martín’s. It stretches back to the 1811 C.E. Tacna rebellion led by Francisco Antonio de Zela, the 1812 C.E. Huánuco uprising involving Indigenous leaders and local magistrates, and the 1814–1815 C.E. Rebellion of Cuzco — a broad coalition in which retired brigadier Mateo Pumacahua, a Quechua curaca who had once helped suppress the Túpac Amaru II rebellion, switched sides and joined the independence cause. His shift was remarkable: a man who had defended the colonial order in his 70s now stood against it.

What made independence possible

Napoleon Bonaparte’s 1808 C.E. invasion of Spain set off a chain reaction across the Americas. When Charles IV and Ferdinand VII abdicated in favor of Joseph Bonaparte, the political legitimacy of colonial governance collapsed. Across Spanish America, autonomous juntas filled the vacuum. Peru followed a slower, more contested path — but the same rupture was driving it.

The independence movements in Peru were notable for the coalitions they formed. The 1811 C.E. Tacna uprising united people across racial and socioeconomic lines in southern Peru. The 1814 C.E. Cuzco rebellion brought together Criollo leaders and Indigenous chiefs around a shared cause. These alliances were fragile and often temporary, but they demonstrated something important: a shared desire for self-determination that cut across colonial social hierarchies.

Peru’s independence was also bound up with the broader continental struggle. Simón Bolívar would later lead the campaign that secured military victory at the Battle of Ayacucho in 1824 C.E., definitively ending Spanish military power in South America. The Act of 1821 C.E. was the declaration; Ayacucho was its military confirmation.

Lasting impact

Peru’s Peru independence declaration rippled outward in ways that extended far beyond its own borders. The defeat of Spanish royalism in Peru — the empire’s most important Pacific stronghold — effectively ended Spain’s ability to hold any part of South America. The last Spanish forces in the region surrendered in 1826 C.E.

The independence era also carried forward, imperfectly, some of the demands that earlier rebels had articulated. Túpac Amaru II had called for the abolition of slavery decades before independence arrived. The question of what freedom would mean for Peru’s Indigenous majority, its enslaved population, and its poor remained contested long after the Act was signed.

Peru’s example helped inspire and sustain independence movements across the continent. The interconnected web of campaigns — from Argentina to Chile to Peru to Bolivia — showed that colonial empires could be dismantled not just by armies but by the cumulative weight of popular resistance over generations. San Martín himself, having declared independence, stepped back from political power and left the continent. It was an unusual act of restraint from a general at the height of his influence.

Today, July 28 is Peru’s national holiday, Fiestas Patrias, observed each year with celebrations across the country and in Peruvian communities abroad.

Blindspots and limits

Independence from Spain did not translate immediately — or in many cases, ever — into meaningful freedom for Peru’s Indigenous peoples, enslaved Africans, or rural poor. The Criollo elite who dominated the new republic largely inherited the social structures of the colonial system they had replaced. The Rebellion of Túpac Amaru II, which had explicitly demanded the abolition of slavery and Indigenous rights, preceded independence by four decades — and many of its core demands went unmet for generations. The act of declaring independence and the act of achieving genuine self-determination for all Peruvians were two very different things, separated by centuries of ongoing struggle.

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For more on this story, see: Peruvian War of Independence — Wikipedia

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