Manuel Atanasio Girardot Díaz (2 May 1791 – 30 September 1813) was a Neogranadine military officer and one of the heroes of the Colombian and Venezuelan wars of Independence. He is famous for having died during the Battle of Bárbula, trying to plant the republican flag on Bárbula Hill.

Atanasio Girardot
Posthumous portrait of Girardot by José María Espinosa circa 1848.
Birth nameManuel Atanasio Girardot Díaz
BornMay 2, 1791
San Jerónimo, Antioquia Province, Viceroyalty of New Granada
DiedSeptember 30, 1813
Bárbula Hil, Bárbula, Naguanagua, Venezuela
AllegianceSpain (until 1810)
United Provinces of New Granada
Service/branchSpanish Army
Army of the Union
Years of service1805-1813
RankColonel
UnitAuxiliary Infantry Battalion of Santafé
Battles/warsColombian war of Independence
Venezuelan War of Independence

The son of Louis Girardot, wealthy merchant and French miner, Girardot fought in the first battle of the Colombian War of Independence, at the Battle of Bajo Palacé on March, 28 1811 and fought with the distinction earning his promotion to captain.

Girardot later took part in the New Granada civil war of 1812 when he switched sides from being in the centralist army to the federalist army.

In 1813 he was assigned to Brigadier Simón Bolívar's army that took part in the Campaña Admirable , participating with distinction in many of the battles. At the Battle of Bárbula, he led the assault on the Spanish positions on the hill which as was successful however when he , tried to plant the republican flag on Bárbula Hill he received gunshot to his heart killing him instantly.

Early Life

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Manuel Atanasio Girardot Díaz was born on May 2, 1791 in the town of San Jerónimo, in the Antioquía Province of the Viceroyalty of New Granada. 5 days later he was taken to the chapel of La Candeleria in the city of Medellín where he was baptized. His father was Frenchmen Louis Girardot who was born in Paris on June 23, 1752, he immigrated to Spain and joined the Spanish army serving in the Walloon Guards Regiment, after serving some time he immigrated to New Granada in Spanish America. There he married María Josefa Díaz de Hoyos with whom he had Atanasio, their first child.

In 1801 the family moved from Antioquía to the capital of the viceroyalty; Santafé de Bogotá. On December 12, 1801, Louis Girardot was given Spanish citizenship by royal decree of the King of Spain Charles IV in recognition of his services in the Spanish army as well as the recommendations provided by the high society of New Granada. Spanish citizenship meant that young Atanasio would now be able to get an education, thus he was subsequently enrolled in Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Señora del Rosario. It is not known when he was exactly admitted but it is known that he culminated his studies in October of 1810 earning a degree in Philosophy and Civil Law.

While studying at the Colegio del Rosario, Girardot followed the footsteps of his father and enlisted in the Spanish army as a cadet in the Auxiliary Infantry battalion of Santafé; the main garrison force of the viceregal capital.

War of Independence

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On July 20, 1810 the criollos of Santafé sparked a popular revolt that aimed at establishing a governing junta, this revolt would end up sparking the war of independence of New Garanda (now modern day Colombia). The revolt led to the removal of the Viceroy and most of the royal government. The Spanish army units in the city also joined in the revolt and swore fealty to the newly established Supreme Junta of Santafé, their Spanish commander was arrested and exiled along with the other royal officials. At the time of the revolt Girardot was a lieutenant in the Auxiliary battalion.

In late 1810 the patriots who had established a junta in the Cauca Valley in southern New Granada requested assistance from the Santafé junta as they were being threatened by the Spanish governor of Popayán who planned to march on them and dissolve the junta by force. The Junta immediately ordered the creation of an expeditionary force to help their fellow compatriots, Colonel Antonio Baraya was named commander of this expeditionary while lieutenant Girardot was given command of the vanguard. The expeditionary force composed of 150 troops along with 16 artillery men and cannons departed Santafé for Cali in November of 1810.

Baraya reached Cali, where the available forces of the Confederation gathered on December 26, and dedicated himself to preparing the campaign to capture Popayán. On March 25, 1811, the Republican army, with more than a thousand men, left Corrales for Piendamó, preceded by a vanguard under the command of the 19-year-old lieutenant, Atanasio Girardot. His instructions were to reach the Cofre River and wait there but, not finding the enemy, he continued his advance to the bridge over the Palace river, where he fortified the heights that dominated it. An Imprudent decision of the impetuous commander, who until then had never entered into combat and longed to deal with the enemy. On March 28, the Battle of Bajo Palacé occurred when a royalist force five times superior forced the passage of the bridge at 12:30 p.m., with artillery support. Girardot tenaciously defended his position, immediately informing Baraya, who was in Piendamó, two hours from where the combat was occurring, which indicates to what extent his impetuous subordinate had detached himself from the bulk of the army.

When Baraya reached the Palacé river well in the afternoon, Girardot was still holding his positions, in front of the bridge head that his adversary had achieved on the north bank. Baraya immediately attacked in support of his subordinate with his own infantry and the Vallecaucan cavalry. The clash was violent. Girardot attacked from his positions and at dusk the royalists had been defeated in was the first battle of the Colombian war of Independence.

For his actions he was promoted to Captain and awarded badge of honor with the colors red and yellow with an inscription Defensor de la Libertad en Palacé (Defender of Liberty at Palacé).

New Granada Civil War

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On January 10, 1812, Baraya triumphantly entered Santafé. Since the previous September, Antonio Nariño had acceded to the presidency of Cundinamarca, with editorials from the newspaper La Bagatela that had led to the resignation of former President Jorge Tadeo Lozano. A supporter of a strong centralist government to face an uncertain future, Nariño decided to incorporate the provinces of Tunja and Socorro into the nascent state. Promoted to brigadier, Baraya marched to Tunja. Girardot, now captain, commanded the vanguard. Previously, Colonel Joaquín Ricaurte had occupied El Socorro. In a sudden change of front, the two expedition commanders switched to the federalist side of the Congress of the United Provinces of New Granada, and explained their reasons in an act, where Girardot’s signature does not appear.

Baraya would have so much confidence in his young captain, that he ordered him to act against the vanguard of a centralist army, commanded by his own father and under the orders of José Miguel Pey. For Girardot, duty was put before all consideration and, in an act that must have weighed a lot on his soul, he obtained the surrender of the unit, and captured his father Don Luis.

Baraya and Ricaurte, after a first success at the Battle of Ventaquemada, advanced on Santafé, put on a war footing by Antonio Nariño. It was up to Girardot, in Baraya’s plan, to take the positions on the slopes of Monserrate, which he did with his usual boldness, and launch from there his attack in the final assault on the city. Nariño managed to immobilize him in his positions, through ruse in which he simulated an order from Baraya. Biting his impatience, the young captain had to observe the disaster of the Federal Army, and retreat to Tunja with his troops intact, while his companions fell prisoners.

The civil war ended after the centralist victory at the Battle of San Victorino, the federalists and Centralists then joined forces to face the growing royalists offensive that threatened the north and south of the country.

Admirable Campaign in Venezuela

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Simón Bolívar, an exiled Venezuelan military officer who had fled to New Granada after the fall of the first republic of Venezuela to the Spanish, was commissioned in the army of the union of the federal congress and made a brigadier. Bolivar requested that the congress allow him to take neogranadine troops to invade and liberate Venezuela, as the royalists in Venezuela posed a threat to the republic and had already taken the border city of Cúcuta. The congress approved and sent troops to assist him along with centralists who also contributed some troops as well. This campaign led by Brigadier Bolívar would come to be known as the Admirable Campaign. Colonel Atanasio was selected to be part of this force, he commanded the vanguard, made up of the 3rd, 4th and 5th Battalions of La Unión, a total of 560 neogranadine troops. Girardot’s performance along the bristling combat itinerary corresponded exactly to his temperament. Leaving San Cristóbal on May 28, 1813, Bolivar's army occupied the city of Mérida six days later. Without delay they continued their march on Trujillo, who fell into their hands on June 12. On the 14th, Bolívar arrives with the rearguard and there he promulgates his infamous decree of the War to Death. The southern flank of the invasion offered the greatest risk, because of the large number royalist troops concentrated in the area of Barinas. Bolívar decided to execute a risky setback maneuver over the provincial capital, achieving the annihilation of the column commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Martí and occupying the capital of the province. To destroy the rest of the forces of the Spanish commander Antonio Tizcar, he dispatched Colonel Girardot who, in a rapid penetrating maneuver, reached the town of Nutrias, headquarters of the enemy headquarters, and managed to annihilate him by surprise: only Tizcar and his entourage escaped the disaster.

Bolívar’s final advance towards Caracas on the San Carlos-Valencia road, left Girardot as a rearguard, in the Apure region. The neogranadine officer countermarched quickly, reaching the bulk of the Army on July 29 in San Carlos. This was how he was able to take part in the battle of Taguanes, commanded by the Liberator. In his report to the Congress of New Granada, Bolívar highlighted in the first place, Girardot’s intrepidity and heroism during the battle.

Bolivar and his army then entered Caracas shortly after, establishing the second republic of Venezuela. However royalist uprisings in various parts of Venezuela, along with important Spanish reinforcements received by sea from Puerto Rico and Cuba as well as the wear and tear of the republican troops, allowed Captain General Monteverde to lead a counteroffensive. With 1,800 men he left the fortified redoubt of Puerto Cabello and, heading south, occupied the double position of Las Trincheras and the hill of Bárbula, somewhat separated from each other, which allowed them to be beat in detail.

 
Death of Atanasio Girardot next to the flag of New Granada on September 30, 1813

On September 30, 1813 it dawned clear, without a cloud. Since the night before Bolívar had arranged the attack on the Bárbula with a triple column, under the command of Girardot, D’Elhuyar and Urdaneta. With his usual intrepidity Girardot attacked. A few steps away he was accompanied by Urdaneta, whose Memories testify to the action. The neogranadine colonel, accustomed to leading at the head of his men, took the flag of his Battalion, the 4th of New Granada and led the assault on the hill. The attack forced the royalist commander to abandon his solid positions, to which Girardot said to Urdaneta: “Look there comrade, at how those cowards flee!” At that moment a royalist bullet pierced his heart.

For Bolívar, the loss of this subordinate was an emotional blow and at the same time an irreplaceable military vacuum. He had been trusting Girardot with the most risky operations and he had, with each one, gave him a victory. He was, by far, the most brilliant of his officers. Never, neither before nor after the Bárbula, did the Liberator issue a decree of honors like the one he promulgated to honor the sacrifice and eternalize the memory of the hero, whose mortal remains were repatriated to Santafé de Antioquia, and his heart taken to Caracas, which so decisively contributed to its liberation. The 4th Battalion. of the Union, his, would always be called Girardot, a mandate that Venezuela and Colombia have always honored

Legacy

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Portrait on a Department of Antioquia stamp of 1902.

Various places have been named in tribute to him: