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Sucre and was
Antonio José de Sucre, the brilliant young lieutenant of Bolívar who arrived in Guayaquil in May 1821, was to become the key figure in the ensuing military struggle against the royalist forces.
However, the coup de grâce for Mahuad's administration was Mahuad's decision to make the local currency, the sucre ( named after Antonio José de Sucre ), obsolete and replace it with the U. S. dollar ( a policy called dollarization ).
In 1898, La Paz was made the de facto seat of the national government, with Sucre remaining the nominal historical as well as judiciary capital.
Aleixo Garcia was the first European to cross the Chaco and even managed to penetrate the outer defenses of the Inca Empire on the hills of the Andes ( near Sucre ), in present-day Bolivia.
Archaeologists estimate that around 7000 BC, the formative culture was located near the boundary between the present-day departments of Bolívar and Sucre.
In November 1920, he was detained together with Salvador Seguí ( known as El Noi del Sucre ), Martí Barrera, Josep Viadiu, and other trade unionists and was deported to the Castell de la Mola in Mahón, on Menorca.
The two men visit the Ciudad Sucre Center where Mullins presented them with over $ 40, 000 that was raised on his summer ' 94 Ragamuffin Band tour.
During the government of General Pando ( died in 1917 ) and during the Bolivian Civil War, Bolivia's capital was moved from Sucre to La Paz.
Upper Peru () was the region in the Viceroyalty of Peru, and after 1776, the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, comprising the governorships of Potosí, La Paz, Cochabamba, Chiquitos, Moxos and Charcas ( since renamed Sucre ).
On the 17th or 18 July 2006, José Antonio Delgado Sucre from Venezuela died a few days after making the summit, where he was caught by bad weather for 6 days and was unable to make his way down.
He was the only Venezuelan climber, and one of the few Latin Americans, to have reached the summit of five eight-thousanders .< ref name =" Sucre ">
Most portraits about the creation or first uses of the flag show the modern design of it, but the original one ( kept at a museum in Sucre, Bolivia ) was instead a vertical triband with two white bands and a light blue one in the middle.
" Upon inquiring how the President came by some wounds in his face, I was told that in September, 1850, Belzu was invited to take a walk in the alameda of Sucre.
Before the Spanish Conquest, the land comprising the department of Sucre was mainly inhabited by two groups of indigenous people — the Zenú and the Turbacos.
The territory had been under the tutelage of the government settled in Cartagena-except a brief period of time when it was under the jurisdiction of the central government in Bogotá-this control was effective by several denominations while the country evolved from its colonial institutions until its final republican form in 1886 and until the establishment of Sucre as a department independent from Bolivar.

Sucre and named
The sucre was named after Antonio José de Sucre.
It is named after Venezuelan-born Antonio José de Sucre, a hero of Ecuadorian and Latin American independence.

Sucre and honor
After many modifications, the current palace presents fountains encompassed by corridors and halls, such as the Peruvian Sun Hall, decorated with gold donated by the government of Peru ; the Joaquín Crespo Hall, with its four gigantic rock-crystal mirrors ; Vargas Swamp, which conmemorates the Battle of Boyacá, in Colombia ; the Ambassador Hall, where diplomats are received and Ayacucho Hall, in honor of Marshall Antonio José de Sucre and the battle who starred.

Sucre and Independence
* 1824 – Patriot forces led by General Antonio José de Sucre defeat a Royalist army in the Battle of Ayacucho, putting an end to the Peruvian War of Independence.
* 1809 – Chuquisaca Revolution: a group of patriots in Chuquisaca ( modern day Sucre ) revolt against the Spanish Empire, starting the South American Wars of Independence.
Sucre proclaimed Upper Peru's Declaration of Independence in the city which now bears his name on August 6.
Independence was won in 1822, when the famed South American liberator Simón Bolívar joined Sucre and defeated a Spanish army at the Battle of Pichincha.
This beautiful city of Cumaná saw the birth of several national heroes of and contributors to the Independence, movement among whom it can count Antonio Jose de Sucre, the ‘ Gran Mariscal de Ayacucho ’, first among generals and President of Bolivia ; and next to him the Brigadier General D. Juan Francisco Echeto, brave fighter for Venezuelan independence who did not allow his multiple battle wounds lessen his thirst for liberty.
Bolivian Independence Act at Casa de la Libertad, Sucre.

Sucre and Antonio
General Antonio José de Sucre, Commander In Chief, División del Sur
* 1822 – Battle of Pichincha: Antonio José de Sucre secures the independence of the Presidency of Quito.
* President Antonio José de Sucre ( Bolivia )
* June 4 – Antonio José de Sucre, Venezuelan revolutionary leader and statesman ( b. 1795 )
* February 3 – Antonio José de Sucre, Venezuelan revolutionary leader, general and statesman ( d. 1830 )
Assisted by Antonio José de Sucre, Bolívar decisively defeated the Spanish cavalry at the Battle of Junín on August 6, 1824.
Many of the independence heroes of South America, including José de San Martín, Manuel Belgrano, Antonio José de Sucre, Bernardo O ' Higgins, José Miguel Carrera, and Antonio Nariño had sideburns and are as such depicted on numerous paintings, coins and banknotes.
Different titles have been used, such as " Liberator of Bolivia " ( used by Simón Bolívar and Antonio José de Sucre ), and " Supreme Protector " ( by Andrés de Santa Cruz ).
Antonio José de Sucre y Alcalá (; 1795 – 1830 )
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eo: Antonio José de Sucre
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