José Leonardo Chirino
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José Leonardo Chirino (April 25, 1754 – December 10, 1796) was a free zambo who helped to lead a 1795 uprising in Santa Ana de Coro, Venezuela. José Leonardo Chirino Airport is named after him.
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1795 rebellion
1795 was perhaps the most revolutionary year in Caribbean history, with rebellions in Grenada, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent, Curaçao, Dominica, Guyana, Trinidad, Jamaica, and the unfolding Haitian Revolution.[1]
The Coro rebellion grew out of and contributed to this revolutionary conjuncture, especially under the leadership of Chirino, who had recently traveled to Saint-Domingue and heard news of the rebellion there as well as the more-distant French Revolution, and also the leadership of José Caridad González, a Congolese man who had studied the philosophy, strategy, and tactics of the unfolding French Revolution.[2]
The Coro rebellion had four primary objectives:
- First, the application of the new legal system of the French Revolution, i.e. the abolition of monarchy and colonialism and the constitution of an independent, democratic republic.
- Second, the freedom of all enslaved Africans and the abolition of slavery.
- Third, the abolition of tribute payments that had been imposed upon the colony's indigenous population under Spanish rule.
- Fourth, the abolition of white supremacy, or privilege and prejudice on the basis of skin color.[3]
Betrayal and execution
After the rebellion was suppressed, Chirino was betrayed by an associate, captured and condemned to death.[4] His children were sold into slavery.[5] He was executed on December 10, 1796.[6]
References
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