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Colombian Civil War of 1876-1877 (guerra civil colombiana de 1876-1877) | |||||||
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Part of the Colombian Civil Wars | |||||||
conservative guerrillas | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States of Colombia Liberals | Conservatives | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Aquileo Parra César Conto Julián Trujillo Santos Acosta Sergio Camargo Tomás Rengifo Fernando Ponce Joaquín Reyes Daniel Aldana Rafael Uribe Uribe |
Recaredo de Villa Antonio Basilio Cuervo Sergio Arboleda Miguel Arroyo Hurtado Joaquín María Córdova Marceliano Vélez Leonardo Canal González Manuel Briceño Manuel Casablanca Felipe Farias Alejandro Posada Francisco de Paula Madriñan | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
source can vary between 30,000-25,000-24,000 government troops | source can vary between 20,000-16,000 conservatives | ||||||
Some 1,000-10,000 deaths (likely 9,000). Some estimates speak of 80,000 deaths in the 1879 uprising.[1][2] |
The Colombian Civil War of 1876 (also called War of the Schools) was a civil war in the United States of Colombia (present-day Colombia) that went on from 1876 to 1877. The causes of the war date back to approximately 1870, when members of the Colombian Liberal Party led by Eustorgio Salgar attempted to introduce public education for the Colombian states, while the Colombian Conservative Party advocated for putting education solely under the control of the Roman Catholic church.[3]