The life of Maria Felipa is poorly documented. She was born on
Itaparica Island, date unknown, and was a seafood vendor and laborer. She was a freewoman and likely the daughter of an enslaved family of
Sudanese descent; by oral tradition, she was a practitioner of
capoeira. She led a group of 200 people, primarily women of Afro-Brazilian and of indigenous populations of
Tupinambás and
Tapuias, in the
Battle of Itaparica, January 7–9, 1823. The provisional government of Bahia recommended that residents of the island evacuate, but Maria Felipa and the resistance group remained, likely because of long-standing conflict, known as the
mata-marotos, between the Portuguese and ethnic minorities in Bahia. The resistance group fortified the island by constructed trenches along its broad beaches, sending supplies to the inland
Recôncavo region, and watching the coast by both day and night to prevent the landing of Portuguese troops. Ubaldo Osório Pimentel reports that the Maria Felipa's resistance group set fire to some of the 42 Portuguese vessels anchored in the vicinity of the island to invade the city of
Salvador. The group is known to have set fire to the
Canhoneira Dez de Fevereiro on October 1, 1822, on the Beach of Manguinhos and the
Constituição on October 12, 1822, at Praia do Convento. Maria Felipa and other of the independence fought against Portuguese on land in the same period. They used the
peixeira, a knife used in the fishmongering trade; and stinging branches of
cansanção, any of a number of indigenous species of plants highly poisonous to the skin. Two watchmen of the vessels, Araújo Mendes and Guimarães das Uvas, were seduced by members of Maria Felipa's group; once nude and drunk, the Portuguese were beaten with cansanção. The "seduction tactic" was similarly carried out in Saubara in the nearby inland city of
Santo Amaro. Women in both areas also appeared as souls of the dead wearing masks and sheets, a tactic which caused the Portuguese to flee and enabled women fighters to provide relief supplies to Brazilian troops hiding in remote inland areas. ==Aftermath==