Granadine Confederation
State | Defunct
1858 CE to 1863 CE
The Granadine Confederation (Spanish: Confederación Granadina) is a short-lived federal republic established in 1858 as a result of a constitutional change replacing the Republic of New Granada.
It comprises the present day nations of Colombia and Panama.
It is replaced by the United States of Colombia after another constitutional change in 1863.
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In an unexpected act, Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera captures Bogotá on June 18, 1861, declares himself president of the provisional government, and arrests Ospina Rodríguez, his brother Pastor Ospina, and Bartolomé Calvo, the newly elected president of the confederacy.
Rebel troops of the southern states in the Granadine Confederation (present-day Colombia), defeat government forces on October 25, 1862.
The Colombian Civil War ends in November 1862 when the last leaders of the conservative opposition die or give up.