Carmen Rosa Panduro RamÃÂrez was a Peruvian housewife who fought against Ecuadorian troops in the Battle of Rocafuerte during the 1941 EcuadorianâÂÂPeruvian War.
Panduro was born in 1918 in Requena to parents MarÃÂa RamÃÂrez Coral and Federico Panduro Sandoval. She later married Peruvian second sergeant Juan Manuel Peñaherrera Valera, with whom she had two children.
On August 11, 1941, during the context of the EcuadorianâÂÂPeruvian War, hostilities broke out between Ecuadorian and Peruvian troops, which then escalated into a battle. This was despite the fact that a ceasefire had been declared eleven days prior and both parties were located in their respective side of the de facto border agreed upon by both parties in 1936.
During the battle, Panduro's husband was assigned to the frontline, and a military exclusion zone had been established. Despite this, she caught up with him. After he was shot in the arm, she treated him by bandaging his arm with his own uniform, as well as other wounded soldiers. After treating her husband, she grabbed a rifle and took part in the battle, later attempting to board the Peruvian gunboat Amazonas, only to be ordered to get off by military personnel.
She died in Iquitos on November 11, 1989. She is remembered and referred to as a heroine in Peruvian history, most specifically in the history of Loreto.
Rosa Panduro District was created in 2014, named in her honor.