Colombian War of Independence

Colombian War of Independence
Part of the Atlantic Revolutions, Spanish American wars of independence, Decolonization of the Americas and Napoleonic Wars

From left to right and top to bottom: Battle of Calibío, Battle of Juanambú, Battle of the Palo River, Siege of Cartagena (1815), Battle of Boyacá and Congress of Cúcuta.
DateJuly 20, 1810  April 2, 1825
Location
Result
Colombian and Allied victory
Territorial
changes
Spain cedes New Granada to the Republic of Colombia
Belligerents

Supported by:
Commanders and leaders
Simón Bolívar
Francisco de Paula Santander
Antonio Nariño (POW)
Camilo Torres Tenorio 
Antonio Baraya  
Antonio Villavicencio 
José Miguel Pey
José María Córdova
José Prudencio Padilla
José María Cabal 
Manuel del Castillo y Rada 
Manuel Serviez 
Policarpa Salavarrieta 
Manuel de Bernardo Álvarez 
Francisco José de Caldas 
José de Leyva  
Atanasio Girardot 
Antonio Ricaurte 
Juan Nepomuceno Moreno
Fernando VII
Juan de Sámano
Pablo Morillo
Melchor Aymerich
Miguel Tacón y Rosique
José María Barreiro 
Melchor Aymerich
Agustín Agualongo 
Isidro Barrada
Sebastián de la Calzada
Ignacio Asín 
Casualties and losses
400,000 deaths (15% of the population of the Viceroyalty of New Granada and Venezuela in 1810)

The Colombian War of Independence began on July 20, 1810 when the Junta de Santa Fe was formed in Santa Fe de Bogota, the capital of the Spanish colonial Viceroyalty of New Granada, to govern the territory autonomously from Spain. The event inspired similar independence movements across South America, and triggered an almost decade-long rebellion culminating in the founding of the Republic of Colombia, which spanned present-day Colombia, mainland Ecuador, Panama, and Venezuela, along with parts of northern Peru and northwestern Brazil. Colombia was the first Spanish colony in South America to declare independence from Spain in 1810.

Although Gran Colombia would ultimately dissolve in 1831, it was for a time among the most powerful countries in the Western Hemisphere, and played an influential role in shaping the political development of other newly sovereign South American states. The modern nation-state of Colombia recognizes the event as its national independence day which broke away from Spanish rule that led the first independent nation of South America as well as the third oldest independent republic in the Western Hemisphere after the United States from the American Revolution against the British and Haiti from the Haitian Revolution against the French and white settlers.