Sesquicentennial of the Independence of Peru

To commemorate the 150 years of the country's independence from Spain, the Revolutionary Government established two years prior organized a Commission to manage the celebrations and the establishment of new memorials for the duration of the event.

[1] On September 16, 1969, the National Commission for the Sesquicentennial of the Independence of Peru was created by Decree Law No.

[2] This commission was made up of representatives of state institutions, the academic community and civil society, assumed by EP Division General Juan Mendoza Rodríguez [es], also as an objective for the preparation and execution of the commemorative program throughout the country, for the 150th anniversary of Independence of Peru in 1971.

Another of the relevant activities was the contest for the creation of military marches, where musicians and citizens in general participated in the elaboration of the scores in honor of the sesquicentennial celebrations; the launch of commemorative stamps between 1970 and 1971, the issuance of commemorative coins, the restoration and expansion of the National Museum of Archaeology, Anthropology and History of Peru, the V International Congress of History in America, etc.

[1] The figure of Tupac Amaru II became the symbol of the agrarian reform and the social change proposed by the government.