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Duarte, Rosa. Apuntes para la historia de la isla de Santo Domingo y para la biografía del general dominicano Juan Pablo Duarte y Diez. Santo Domingo, 1994. García, José Gabriel. Compendio de la historia de Santo Domingo. 4 vols. Santo Domingo, 1968. García, José Gabriel. Rasgos biográficos de dominicanos célebres. Santo Domingo, 1971.
Juan José Duarte Rodríguez was born in Vejer de la Frontera, Province of Cádiz, Spain, on September 15, 1768, son of Manuel Duarte Jiménez and Ana María Rodríguez Tapia. [1] Not much is known about his childhood and adolescent, but he did, at some point, migrate to Santo Domingo in the 1790s.
Statues of the three founding fathers. From left to right: Francisco del Rosario Sánchez, Juan Pablo Duarte and Matías Ramón Mella. La Trinitaria (Spanish: [la tɾiniˈtaɾja], The Trinity) was a secret society founded in 1838 in what today is known as Arzobispo Nouel Street, across from the "Del Carmen's Church" in the then occupied Santo Domingo, the current capital of the Dominican Republic.
Francisco del Rosario Sánchez (March 9, 1817 – July 4, 1861) was a Dominican revolutionary, politician, and former president of the Dominican Republic.He is considered by Dominicans as the second prominent leader of the Dominican War of Independence, after Juan Pablo Duarte and before Matías Ramón Mella.
Juan Pablo Duarte; Rosa Duarte Manuela Díez Jiménez (June 26, 1786 – December 31, 1858) was a key female figure in the forming of the independence of the Dominican Republic . She was the mother of Juan Pablo Duarte , the founder of the Dominican Republic , or the so-called father of the nation.
Español: Juan Pablo Duarte (1813-1876) Fundador de la República Dominicana. Homenaje a la figura máxima de la historia dominicana, cuyo padre, Juan José Duarte, naciera en Vejer de la Frontera en 1768, luego emigró a Santo Domingo de Guzman donde procreó familia, incluyendo a quien sería el futuro Padre de la Patria.
Juan Pablo Duarte By 1838, Mella's association with Perez allowed him to be introduced to his mentor, Juan Pablo Duarte . Duarte was looking to recruit new members for the nationalistic movement, La Trinitaria , a secret organization that sought to establish an independent nation by liberating the Dominican people from Haitian rule.
Altar de la Patria, or Altar of the Homeland, is a white marble mausoleum in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic that houses the remains of the founding fathers of the Dominican Republic: Juan Pablo Duarte, Francisco del Rosario Sánchez, and Ramón Matías Mella, collectively known as Los Trinitarios.