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Antonio José de Sucre
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Everything about Antonio Jos De Sucre totally explained

Antonio José de Sucre y Alcalá (February 3 1795June 4 1830) was a South American independence leader. Sucre was one of Simón Bolívar's closest friends, generals and statesmen.
   Sucre was born to a wealthy and prominent family in Cumaná which was then part of the Spanish Viceroyalty of Nueva Granada and the Captaincy-General of Venezuela. There is some dispute as to his ancestry. According to one noted Venezuelan genealogist, Sucre is a descendant of Charles de Succre, a member of a French-Flemish family appointed by the king of Spain to be governor of Cuba. According to the German "Lexikon des Judentums", however, Sucre is a descendant of a Bavarian Jewish family named "Zucker".

Early military life

In 1814, Sucre joined the battles for American independence from Spain. He proved himself an able military leader; in 1818, he was promoted to the rank of colonel and in 1821, at the age of 26, he was given the rank of brigadier general, making him one of the youngest Generals in the army. After the Battle of Boyacá, Sucre was made Bolívar's chief of staff.
   In 1821, Bolívar put him in charge of the campaign to liberate Quito, and Sucre won a decisive victory at the Battle of Pichincha on May 14, 1822. Shortly after the battle, Sucre and Bolívar entered the newly-liberated Quito and Sucre was named President of the Province of Quito, much to his chagrin.

Hero of Ayacucho

Further victories followed over the Spanish forces in Perú, notably on August 6, 1824 at the Battle of Junín. On December 9, Sucre decisively captured the bulk of the Spanish troops and command, including the Viceroy, at Ayacucho. The victory ensured the independence of Peru and Alto Perú, which Sucre and others soon established as the new country of Bolivia, thus ending all fighting for independence in Spanish South America. As a reward for his efforts, Sucre was given the highest possible honorary title of "The Grand Marshall of Ayacucho" at the age of 29.
   After the victory at Ayacucho, Bolívar would write his Resumen Sucinto de la Vida del General Sucre, a short biography full of flattering comments about his lieutenant. In a letter telling Sucre of the biography he'd written, Bolívar said:
Post-independence period Sucre was elected president of Bolivia in 1826, but he became dissatisfied with local political developments. In 1828, when a strong movement rose up against Bolívar, his followers and the very constitution he'd written for Bolivia, Sucre resigned and moved to Quito, the home city of his wife, Mariana de Carcelén y Larrea, Marquess of Solanda. He was never entirely comfortable in politics and intended to retire from it.
   In late 1828, at the urging of Bolívar, the Congress of Gran Colombia named him President of Congress. They also intended to name him president of the republic as Bolívar's would-be successor, but it never came to pass because Sucre likely would have it turned down. Sucre was named member of a commission, led by José Antonio Páez, that traveled to Venezuela in 1829 to quell political separatism among local authorities. The difficulty of this task added to Sucre's continuing dissatisfaction with Gran Colombia's political environment.

Death and legacy

In early 1830, when Sucre learned that Bolívar had resigned and intended to leave the country, he decided to go to Quito in order to resume his private life, but was shot from ambush near Pasto, in southern Colombia, on June 4, 1830.
   The details of the murder were unclear and theories about the reason for it abound. One of the older and better documented theories says that José María Obando was the assassination's mastermind, and one of the alleged assassins named in this theory was later executed for his apparent role. Later theories implicated different (or additional) individuals, such as Juan José Flores, Agustín Gamarra, and Francisco de Paula Santander.
   Some have argued that Sucre was assassinated so as to leave no clear successor to Bolívar. Sucre represented, according to historian Tomas Polanco Alcantara, "the indispensable complement to Simón Bolívar". When news of Sucre's death came to Bolívar, he said, "Se ha derramado, Dios excelso, la sangre del inocente Abel..." ("The blood of the innocent Abel has been spilled, God almighty ..."). Bolivar later wrote (Gaceta de Colombia, July 4, 1830):

   The department of Sucre in Colombia and the city of Sucre in Bolivia are named for him. The former currency of Ecuador was the sucre, and the State of Venezuela in which he was born, Cumaná, was renamed Sucre. Some of his descendants in Venezuela have followed in his military and political footsteps.
   Antonio José de Sucre is buried in the Cathedral of Quito, Ecuador, as it was expressed by him in life "I want my bones to be forever in Quito"

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