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  2. A liberator is someone who provides liberty, or freedom, to people held captive or repressed. At the end of the Holocaust, allied forces entered Germany and Poland, acting as liberators for millions of Jews held in concentration camps during World War II.

    • Great South American Patriots Who Fought the Spanish for Independence. In 1810, Spain controlled much of the known world, its mighty New World Empire the envy of all the nations of Europe.
    • Simón Bolívar (1783-1830) There can be no doubt about #1 on the list: only one man earned the simple title "The Liberator." Simón Bolívar, greatest of the liberators.
    • Miguel Hidalgo (1753-1811) Father Miguel Hidalgo was an unlikely revolutionary. A parish priest in his 50's and a skilled theologian, he ignited the powder keg that was Mexico in 1810.
    • Bernardo O'Higgins (1778-1842) A reluctant liberator and leader, the modest O'Higgins preferred the tranquil life of a gentleman farmer but events pulled him into the War of Independence.
  3. someone or something that helps a person or thing be free: People came out into the streets to welcome the liberators. The drug was hailed as a liberator of older women, promising to hold back the signs of aging. See. liberate. Fewer examples. The enemy soldiers were greeted as liberators by the peasants.

  4. May 20, 2024 · William Lloyd Garrison, American journalistic crusader who published a newspaper, The Liberator (1831–65), and helped lead the successful abolitionist campaign against slavery in the United States. He also championed temperance, women’s rights, and pacifism. Learn more about Garrison’s life and career.

    • John L. Thomas
  5. someone or something that helps a person or thing be free: People came out into the streets to welcome the liberators. The drug was hailed as a liberator of older women, promising to hold back the signs of ageing. See. liberate. Fewer examples. The enemy soldiers were greeted as liberators by the peasants.

  6. Simón Bolívar first liberated Venezuela in 1813. Upon entering the capital city of Venezuela on August 6, 1813, Bolívar was given the nickname “El Libertador” (“The Liberator”). Venezuelan independence didn’t last long (Bolívar was ousted in 1814), but Bolívar’s nickname did.

  7. 1. : to set at liberty : free. specifically : to free (something, such as a country) from domination by a foreign power. 2. : to free from combination. liberate the gas by adding acid. 3. : to take or take over illegally or unjustly. material liberated from a nearby construction site Thorne Dreyer. liberator. ˈli-bə-ˌrā-tər. noun. liberatory.

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