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104:. Juan Lovera (1835). Lovera painted this scene from memory. Emparán (black uniform with red lapels) on the steps of the Cathedral surrounded by the city council members (in grey) and other prominent members of the crowd, who led him to the Cabildo. (Palacio Federal Legislativo, Caracas).
146:, United States, from where he reported to the Spanish government on the events of 19 April, before returning to Spain. There, it seems, he was tried for his failure to stop the establishment of a junta, but was acquitted. He died in
94:, the king who was being held captive by the French invaders. In January 1809 the Central Junta ratified his appointment to replace the former captain general, Manuel de Guevara y Vasconcelos, who had died two years earlier.
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services to orchestrate popular agitation for the establishment of a junta. The crowd prevented him from arriving at the cathedral for the day's services and he was directed to the
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Emparán arrived in
Venezuela in May 1809. During the following year he successfully avoided several attempts by the elites to establish a junta in Venezuela (among them the famous
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112:), often by personally talking with proponents of the movements. Although a well-liked governor, on 19 April 1810, various members of the municipal council (
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recently installed government named him
Captain General of Venezuela, but after this appointment Emparán crossed over to the territory controlled by the
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130:) just across the main square from the cathedral. There he met with an expanded council (
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between 1792 and 1804, where he had gained a favorable reputation among
Venezuelans.
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Pre-Revolutionary
Caracas: Politics, Economy, and Society, 1777–1811
67:, in 1747 as the son of José Joaquín de Emparan. He was governor of
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20:
16:
18/19th-century Basque colonial official in
Spanish Venezuela
242:as Interim Captain General after Guevara's death.)
78:By 1808, Emparán had returned to Spain during the
207:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985.
219:Historia de la Primera República de Venezuela
48:; 1747 – 3 October 1842) was a Spanish
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302:People of the Venezuelan War of Independence
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90:. He swore allegiance to the Junta and to
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221:. Madrid: Ediciones Guadarrama, 1959.
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191:Diccionario de Historia de Venezuela
193:. Caracas: Fundacíon Polar, 1997.
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235:Manuel de Guevara y Vasconcelos
73:Captaincy General of Venezuela
1:
297:Captains general of Venezuela
110:Conspiración de Los Mantuanos
249:Capitan General of Venezuela
138:transformed itself into the
126:building (today site of the
259:Fernando Miyares y Gonzáles
164:First Republic of Venezuela
154:, Spain on 3 October 1842.
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41:[biˈθenteempaˈɾan]
25:Vicente Emparán (1777) by
307:Independence of Venezuela
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217:Parra Pérez, Caracciolo.
148:El Puerto de Santa María
140:Supreme Junta of Caracas
203:McKingley, P. Michael.
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37:Spanish pronunciation:
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88:Supreme Central Junta
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287:People from Azpeitia
55:Emparán was born in
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256:Succeeded by
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228:Military offices
27:Antonio Carnicero
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132:cabildo abierto
120:Maundy Thursday
69:Cumaná Province
50:Captain General
44:, or sometimes
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33:Vicente Emparán
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282:1842 deaths
277:1747 births
102:19 de Abril
271:Categories
253:1809–1810
170:References
84:Joseph I's
61:Guipúzcoa
158:See also
82:. There
57:Azpeitia
136:cabildo
124:cabildo
115:cabildo
71:in the
46:Emparan
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152:Cádiz
209:ISBN
195:ISBN
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