Manuela Sáenz

Manuela Sáenz
Libertadora del Libertador
wearing the Order of the Sun medal
1st First Lady of Colombia
In role
17 June 1822  4 May 1830
PresidentSimón Bolívar
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byJuana Jurado Bertendona
6th First Lady of Peru
In role
10 February 1824  28 January 1827
PresidentSimón Bolívar
Preceded byMariana Carcelén
Succeeded byFrancisca Cernadas
1st First Lady of Bolivia
In role
12 August  29 December 1825
PresidentSimón Bolívar
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byMariana Carcelén
Personal details
Born
Manuela Sáenz de Vergara y Aizpuru

(1797-12-27)27 December 1797
Quito, Viceroyalty of New Granada
Died28 September 1856(1856-09-28) (aged 58)
Paita, Peru
SpouseJames Thorne (married 1817 – estranged 1822)
Domestic partnerSimón Bolívar (1822–1830)
OccupationRevolutionary and spy
Signature

Manuela Sáenz de Vergara y Aizpuru (Quito, Viceroyalty of New Granada, 27 December 1797 – Peru, 23 November 1856) was an Ecuadorian revolutionary heroine of South America who supported the revolutionary cause by gathering information, distributing leaflets and protesting for women's rights. Manuela received the Order of the Sun ("Caballeresa del Sol" or 'Dame of the Sun'), honoring her services in the revolution.

Sáenz married a wealthy English doctor in 1817 and became a socialite in Lima, Peru. This provided the setting for involvement in political and military affairs, and she became active in support of revolutionary efforts. Leaving her husband in 1822, she soon began an eight-year collaboration and intimate relationship with Simón Bolívar that lasted until his death in 1830. After she prevented an 1828 assassination attempt against him and facilitated his escape, Bolívar began to call her "Libertadora del libertador" ("liberator of the liberator"). In an unknown letter she wrote, she claimed that "the Liberator is immortal", despite the fact that she was responsible for his survival. Manuela's role in the revolution after her death was generally overlooked until the late twentieth century, but now she is recognized as a feminist symbol of the 19th-century wars of independence.