Angélica Larrea

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Angélica Larrea
Queen consort of the Afro-Bolivians
Reign18 April 1992 – present
Coronation18 April 1992 (ceremonial)
3 December 2007 (official)
Born1944
Santa Ana del Yacuma, Beni, Bolivia
SpouseJulio Pinedo
Occupationpolitician, grocer, shop owner, farmer
Styles of
Queen Angélica
Reference styleHer Majesty
Spoken styleYour Majesty

Doña Angélica Larrea (born 1944) is the Ceremonial Queen of the Afro-Bolivians, as the wife of Ceremonial King Julio Pinedo. She twice served as the mayor of Mururata.

Biography[edit]

Larrea was born in 1944 in Santa Ana del Yacuma.[1]

She married Julio Pinedo in 1976. Her husband succeeded his grandfather, Bonifacio Pinedo, as Ceremonial King of the Afro-Bolivians in 1992.[2][3] Their ceremonial coronation took place in a Catholic service on 18 April 1992.[4] King Bonifacio died in 1954, and between his death and her husband's succession, her mother-in-law Doña Aurora led the community. Pinedo and Larrea's official coronation ceremony, held by the government in La Paz, took place on 3 December 2007.[2][5]

Larrea and her husband in their ceremonial robes

The couple, who have no biological children,[6] adopted their nephew and heir, Prince Ronaldo.[2][1] Larrea and her husband are Catholic.[7]

Larrea and her family live on their farm in Mururata, Nor Yungas Province.[2] She runs a small shop that sells grocery items and co-manages the family farm.[2][1] She operates her store from the first floor of her home, located fifty meters from Mururata's main square.[5]

Larrea twice served as mayor of Mururata. In 2013, she enrolled in adult educational classes to improve her reading and writing abilites.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Angélica Larrea". Team Queens. 2022-12-24. Retrieved 2024-05-02.
  2. ^ a b c d e "African royal's heirs live on in Bolivia - Taipei Times". www.taipeitimes.com. December 22, 2014.
  3. ^ "Bolivia's little-known tribal kingdom". www.bbc.com.
  4. ^ "La monarquía afroboliviana busca trascender a pesar del tiempo". France 24. April 21, 2021.
  5. ^ a b Rodríguez, Andrés (November 14, 2016). "The last king of the Americas". EL PAÍS English.
  6. ^ "Crowning Afro-descendant Memory and Visibility in an Indian/Mestizo Country on JSTOR". No. 127, Afro-Latin America Rising (2019).
  7. ^ a b "El último rey de América". La Nacion. Buenos Aires, Argentina. 10 March 2013. Retrieved 2 May 2024.