Flag of Bolivia, for article on Upper Peru revolts

Upper Peru’s 1809 revolts fire the first shots of South American independence

In the spring and summer of 1809 C.E., two cities in Upper Peru — the region that would one day become Bolivia — did something no Spanish colony in South America had done before. The people of Chuquisaca rose up on May 25, 1809 C.E., and the people of La Paz followed on July 16, 1809 C.E., each throwing off colonial authority and declaring local self-governance. These twin uprisings, known together as the first cries of independence in Spanish South America, set in motion a revolution that would take another 16 years to complete — but the spark, unmistakably, was lit here.

What the evidence shows

  • Upper Peru revolts: The Chuquisaca Revolution of May 25, 1809 C.E. is widely recognized as the first open act of defiance against Spanish colonial rule in South America, preceding even the more famous uprisings in Buenos Aires and Caracas.
  • La Paz uprising: Just weeks later, Pedro Domingo Murillo led a second revolt in La Paz on July 16, 1809 C.E., establishing a governing junta and explicitly invoking liberty — an act for which he was executed by Spanish authorities the following year.
  • Spanish American independence: Both uprisings were suppressed within months, but their ideas spread rapidly across the continent, contributing to the broader wave of independence movements that reshaped Latin America between 1810 C.E. and 1826 C.E.

A colony built on deep roots

To understand 1809 C.E., it helps to understand what Spanish colonial rule had replaced — and what it had cost.

The region had been a center of human civilization for millennia. Near Lake Titicaca, the Tiwanaku civilization flourished from roughly 600 C.E. to 1150 C.E., building a sophisticated society that absorbed neighboring cultures, managed vast agricultural systems, and traded across the Andes. The Inca Empire absorbed the region in the 15th century C.E. Then the Spanish arrived.

Francisco Pizarro’s conquest of the Inca Empire in the early 16th century C.E. brought Upper Peru under Spanish control. The human cost was devastating. Indigenous populations, already vulnerable to European diseases for which they had no immunity, declined catastrophically. The mita system of forced labor, used especially in the silver mines of Potosí, extracted enormous wealth for Spain while killing tens of thousands of Indigenous workers. Upper Peru became one of the most profitable — and most brutalized — corners of the Spanish empire.

Resistance never fully stopped. In the late 18th century C.E., Túpac Amaru II led a major Indigenous revolt across the highlands of Peru and Upper Peru. Spanish authorities suppressed it with extreme violence, but the memory lingered. It was one piece of a larger pattern: a colonial system under growing pressure from below.

What changed in 1809 C.E.

By the early 19th century C.E., a new political climate was arriving from Europe. Napoleon’s invasion of Spain in 1808 C.E. threw the colonial administration into crisis. With the Spanish king deposed, colonists across Latin America faced a genuine question: who, exactly, held legitimate authority?

In Upper Peru, that question had a sharp answer. On May 25, 1809 C.E., the audiencia — the colonial court — in Chuquisaca was effectively overthrown. Local creoles and mestizos argued that sovereignty, in the absence of a legitimate Spanish monarch, reverted to the people. It was a radical claim, drawing on Enlightenment ideas that had also shaped the American and French revolutions.

Pedro Domingo Murillo took the argument further in La Paz. His junta issued a proclamation of liberty that went beyond administrative reform — it was a declaration that Upper Peru should govern itself. Before his execution in January 1810 C.E., Murillo reportedly said that the torch he had lit could never be extinguished.

He was right, though not quickly. Both uprisings were crushed by loyalist forces within months. Sixteen more years of conflict would follow before Simón Bolívar and Antonio José de Sucre secured full independence. The Republic of Bolivia was formally proclaimed on August 6, 1825 C.E., named in Bolívar’s honor.

Lasting impact

The 1809 C.E. revolts mattered beyond Bolivia. Chuquisaca’s May 25 uprising is now commemorated across Argentina as well — it directly influenced Buenos Aires’s own independence movement in May 1810 C.E. The dates rippled outward, each act of defiance emboldening the next.

The revolts also demonstrated something important: that the drive for self-determination in Latin America did not begin with creole elites alone. Indigenous communities, mestiozs, and local intellectuals each played roles, drawing on their own traditions of resistance alongside Enlightenment political theory. The ideas circulating in 1809 C.E. were genuinely plural — shaped by centuries of Andean resistance to colonial power as much as by European philosophy.

Bolivia’s independence eventually created the conditions for what became one of the most Indigenous-majority nations in the Western Hemisphere. That legacy would find expression, centuries later, in the rise of Evo Morales — the country’s first Indigenous president — and in Bolivia’s 2009 C.E. constitution, which formally recognized the rights of Indigenous peoples and the concept of Buen Vivir (living well in harmony with nature and community).

Blindspots and limits

The 1809 C.E. revolts were led primarily by creoles — people of Spanish descent born in the Americas — who sought self-governance but did not always envision full equality for the Indigenous and Afro-Bolivian populations who formed the majority of Upper Peru’s people. The republic that eventually emerged in 1825 C.E. excluded most Indigenous citizens from political life for more than a century. The uprisings were a genuine milestone in the struggle for liberty, but their promises took generations — and many more struggles — to even partially reach the people who had lived under colonial extraction the longest.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — History of Bolivia: Struggle for independence

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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