Bolívar assigns the task of extending Colombian …

Years: 1816 - 1827
Bolívar assigns the task of extending Colombian rule to the Presidency of Quito (present-day Ecuador) to his lieutenant, Antonio José de Sucre, who goes initially to the port of Guayaquil, where another local uprising has already deposed the Spanish authorities, and eventually wins a decisive victory in the Battle of Pichincha, on the outskirts of Quito itself, in May 1822.

The defeated royalist commander quickly surrenders the rest of the presidency to Colombia.

The royalist army holding out at Pasto is now in an untenable position and surrenders, too.

Guayaquil still poses a problem, for it had been operating as an autonomous city-state since its own rebellion against Spain, but Bolivar has no intention of allowing Quito's principal outlet to the sea to remain outside Colombia.

In July, just days before he meets in Guayaquil with the Argentine liberator Jose de San Martin, who is at this time serving as protector of Peru, which also has designs on Guayaquil, Bolívar's followers take control of the port city.

A vote on joining Colombia is held, but the result is predetermined.

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