Brigida Silva de Ochoa was born in Peru in 1776. She came from a family of insurgents in Peruvian war of independence. Her older brother, Coronal Remigio Silva, was arrested during the conspiracy of 1809 and imprisoned, and her younger brother Mateo was a supporter of the failed governmental overthrow of 1809. Her brother Mateo was arrested and imprisoned for ten years. At age 18 she married Francisco Ochoa Camargo, a Cuzco native, who shared her family’s politics.[1]
She devoted her life to helping imprisoned insurgents, especially those who were sent to Spain after the failed uprising of Aguilar and Ubaide in Cuzco. She also served as an intermediary, transporting communication between the patriots in the outskirts of the capital. Although this task was dangerous, she was never caught nor suspected of involvement since her oldest son worked as an officer in the Artillery, at the service of the King of Spain. This situation gave her easy access to where her brother Remigio was imprisoned and permitted her to have inside information which was used to help the patriots in their victory at Maipu.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b Camacho, Diego. Mujeres Ilustres del Peru: Para la Educación Nacional. Lima, Peru: Editaciones Carpesa. pp. 57–60. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
Further reading
edit- Catherine Davies; Claire Brewster; Hilary Owen (1 January 2006). South American Independence: Gender, Politics, Text. Liverpool University Press. p. 143. ISBN 978-1-84631-027-0.
- Nancy LaGreca (2009). Rewriting Womanhood: Feminism, Subjectivity, and the Angel of the House in the Latin American Novel, 1887-1903. Penn State Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-271-03438-6.