Women and Independence in Latin America An exploration of women's involvement in the Latin American Wars of Independence |
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Buenos Aires, 1834 |
Fan |
Other names: Valentina Desean
Gender:Female
Ethnic origen: Unknown
Events:
1828 | - | Buenos Aires | - | Not applicable | - | Born |
1847 | - | Buenos Aires | - | Unknown | - | She eloped with a parish priest on 11 December 1847. |
1847 | - | Corrientes | - | Unknown | - | She went into hiding in Goya, Corrientes in 1847. |
1848 | - | Buenos Aires | - | Unknown | - | She was executed on 18 August 1848. |
Connections:
Education for Girls (Argentina)Biography:
Born in 1828, she met Uladisloa Gutiérrez, a parish priest, when she was aged 19. They fell in love and decided to run away from Buenos Aires on 11 December 1847 towards San Fernando using the names Valentina Desan and Máximo Brandier. They took a boat to Goya, Corrientes and set up a school there, winning the support of the inhabitants there. Some months later a priest recognised Gutiérrez and denounced him to Rosas. The pair were imprisoned. It is believed that Camila wrote to Manuela Rosas asking her to intercede on her behalf. Manuela Rosas bought furniture for Camila's cell, but she could not persuade Rosas to free them. Rosas sentenced the pair to death, much to Camila's family's horror. They were executed on 18 August 1848. (Sosa de Newton, 451-452)
She was the granddaughter of Ana María Perichón de Vandeuil de O'Gorman
References:
Sosa de Newton, Lily (1986) Diccionario biográfico de mujeres argentinas