Luz de América

History of Ecuador

This article is part of a series
Ancient Cultures of Ecuador
Pre-Columbian Ecuador
Las Vegas Culture
Valdivia culture
Inca Empire
Spanish conquest
Spanish colonization of the Americas
Colonial Ecuador
Viceroyalty of Peru
Viceroyalty of New Granada
Ecuadorian War of Independence
Luz de América
Battle of Pichincha
Guayaquil conference
Ecuador as part of Gran Colombia
Republic of Ecuador
1830–1860
Marcist Revolution
1860–1895
1895–1925
1925–1944
1944–1960
1960–1990
1990–present
Topics
Ecuador – Peru Conflicts
Military history
Demographic history
Economic history

Ecuador Portal

The first uprising against Spanish rule took place in 1809, but only in 1822 did Ecuador fully gain independence and became part of the Federation of Gran Colombia, from which it withdrew in 1830.[1] Luz de America was the nickname given to Ecuador's capital Quito which saw the first revolt against Spanish occupation. The nickname served the urge for the call of independence that was heard around the continent, and inspired the eventual domino collapse of the crown throughout Latin America.