*** Welcome to piglix ***

Dolores Vargas Paris

Dolores Vargas París
Dolores Vargas París.jpg
First Lady of Gran Colombia
In office
September 5, 1830 – April 30, 1831
Preceded by María Josefa Mosquera Hurtado
Succeeded by Juana Jurado Bertendona
Personal details
Born Dolores Vargas Paris
1800
Santa Fe, Viceroyalty of New Granada
Died October 28, 1878
Caracas, Venezuela
Spouse(s) Rafael Urdaneta
Children Rafael Guillermo Urdaneta Vargas
Luciano Urdaneta Vargas
Octaviano Urdaneta Vargas
Adolfo Urdaneta Vargas
Eleázar Urdaneta Vargas
Nephtalí Urdaneta Vargas
Amenodoro Urdaneta Vargas
Susana Urdaneta Vargas
Rosa Margarita Urdaneta Vargas
María Dolores Urdaneta Vargas
Rodolfo Urdaneta Vargas

Dolores Vargas París, in full María Magdalena Dolores Vargas de París y Ricaurte (1800 – 1878). Young heroine of the independence of Gran Colombia, and wife of General Rafael Urdaneta, first lady of the republic between 1830 and 1831, born in Santa Fe in the year 1800. She was one of the daughters of the marriage between Ignacio de Vargas Tavera and María Ignacia París Ricaurte.

With just 15 years of age, Dolores lost her mother, who died on October 7, 1815, while giving birth to a son. A few months later, after the Viceroyalty of New Granada was reestablished with the reconquest of the United Provinces of New Granada by the Spanish Empire, her father and grandfather Jose Martin Paris Alvarez were taken to prison by order of General Pablo Morillo, leaving Dolores alone to take care of her two younger siblings: Jose Ignacio and Teresa. Demonstrating the strength that characterized many of her lineage, she presented herself before the courts in order to negotiate the liberation of her father and grandfather, in exchange for jewels and other very valuable objects that belonged to her family for generations; the value amounted to about 40,000 reales. The Spanish had recently reconquered the rebel nation, and as retribution to her family for having been part of those who had instigated revolts around the region, they took the jewels, but also hanged her father and sentenced her grandfather to death by firing squad. She was banished from the city and ordered to march to Facatativa with her grandmother Genoveva Ricaurte Mauris. This act earned her the title of heroine among the people of her city.

Years later, after the triumph of the patriot troops over the royalists at the Battle of Boyaca on August 7, 1819, the Santa Fe society organized an act of triumphal entry for the official victors. For the act, Dolores was designated to place the laurel crown on El Libertador, Simon Bolivar, since she was considered to be the most beautiful woman of Santa Fe, just like her mother and grandmother before her. She was also attributed with having "a strange sympathy and an extraordinary talent" in virtue of which she was made popular with the saying "ni por la mocha" ("not even for the mocha"), which means that a person will not take a determined action even for the love of the most beautiful woman (alluding to Dolores who in this case received the nickname mocha for being the daughter of El Mocho Vargas). Her father was popularly known by that nickname after assisting a dance with a shoe that was missing a tongue.


...
Wikipedia

...