The War of Independence - Mario G. Valadez Instructor of History
Transcription
The War of Independence - Mario G. Valadez Instructor of History
Topics • War of Independence 1810-1821 – What were the causes of the independence movements? – Who were the main leaders? What were their goals? – How is Mexico independence achieved? – What are the major problems after independence? 1 • gachupín con criollo, gavilán con pollo (Spaniard with criollo, sparrow hawk with chicken) 2 Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla 1753-1811 • • • • • • • El Zorro Criollo Guanajuato Educated in Jesuit college Liberal priest 1808 family loses hacienda Organizes literary club 3 War of Independence in New Spain • Influence – Ideas of Enlightenment • social contract (Rousseau) – The state that the king rules by the "consent of the governed" – American Revolution 1776-1783 – French Revolution 1787-1799 – Haitian Revolution 1790-1804 4 • External Factors – 1808 Spain invaded by French troops – Napoleon’s sets his brother Joseph on Spanish throne – Spanish King is in Cadiz Goya’s May 3, 1808 7 • Internal Factors – Criollo discontent & independent wealth – A drought in 1807-1808 that causes a famine – Mobile population due to mines 8 9 10 Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla 1753-1811 • • • • • • • El Zorro Criollo Guanajuato Educated in Jesuit college Liberal priest 1808 family loses hacienda Organizes literary club 11 • 1803 Hidalgo sent of Dolores, Guanajuato – Ignacio Allende – Juan de Aldama – Miguel Dominguez, Josefa, La Corregidora – Plan uprising Dec. 8, 1810 • 1810 September 16 “ El Grito de Dolores” 12 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cqqNzZXUyTQ September 16, 1810 El Grito de Dolores My children: a new dispensation comes to us today. Will you receive it? Will you free yourselves? Will you recover the lands stolen three hundred years ago from your forefathers by the hated Spaniards? We must act at once… Will not you defend your religion and your rights as true patriots? Long live our Lady of Guadalupe! Death to bad government! Death to the gachupines! 13 14 Padre Hidalgo •Atotonilco –Banner of Guadalupe •Generalissimo (caudillo) 15 Insurgents Spanish loyalist • La virgen de los remedios 16 • 1810 September 28 Alhóndiga de Granaditas (public granary) El Pípila 17 18 19 20 Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla 1753-1811 • Social Revolution – End of caste system • Almost no criollo support • Oct. 30 retreats from Mexico City • July 31, 1811 executed in Chihuahua, Chihuahua 21 22 1833 Cholera Epidemic 23 Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon 1765-1815 Mestizo priest More successful on the battlefield than Hidalgo 24 25 1813 Chilpancingo Congress Congress of Anáhuac • political vision for • Mexico 26 Article for discussion • Who wrote the article? When? • What do we know about the author? • What is the author’s feelings about Hidalgo and his followers? • Does the author see Hidalgo as the “father of Mexico?” • What are the goals of the document? • Does Morelos want to create a society where all Mexicans are equal? 1813 Sentimientos de la Nación ("Feelings of the Nation“) • America is free and independent of Spain and all other nations, governments, or monarchies. • The Catholic faith is the sole religion, and no others will be tolerated. • Division of powers into appropriate executive, legislative, and judicial branches. • Jobs to be reserved for Americans only. • An end to slavery and discrimination based on castes. • December 12 to be dedicated to the Virgin of Guadalupe , and celebrated. 28 December 22, 1815 Tezmalaca 29 El Angel de la Independencia 30 California Hippolyte Bouchard • 2 vessels Santa Rosa & Argentina • 1818 attacks Monterrey & San Juan Capistrano • California remains loyal to Spain 1815-1821 War of Independence 32 1815-1821 War of Independence • Felix Fernandez Oaxaca • Vicente Guerrero Acapulco Francisco Javier Mina • Agustin de Iturbide 33 Plan de Iguala 1821 1. The Mexican nation is independent of the Spanish nation, and of every other, even on its own Continent. 2. Its religion shall be the Catholic, which all its inhabitants profess. 3. They shall be all united, without any distinction between Americans and Europeans. 8. His Majesty Ferdinand VII shall be invited to the throne of the empire, and in case of his refusal, the Infantes Don Carlos and Don Francisco de Paula. 9. Should His Majesty Ferdinand VII and his august brothers decline the invitation, the nation is at liberty to invite to the imperial throne any member of reigning families whom it may select. Attract conservative criollos White = religion Green = independence Red = union 3 guarantees Religion Independence Equality 34 Abrazo de Acatempa Feb.10 1821 35 Treaty of Córdoba • August 24, 1821 • Agustín de Iturbide • the last royal viceroy Juan de O’ Donojú 36 Mexican Empire 8 months from July 21, 1822 to March 19, 1823 1st Emperor Agustín de Iturbide • Generalísimo de Tierra y Mar (120,000 pesos) • Becomes emperor July 21, 1822 • U.S. minister Joel Poinsett • Caudillo – Dissolves legislative branch • Sends troops to Central America to crush rebellion Vicente Filisola 39 Mexican Politics during the 19th Century Overall instability – Military dominated politics: 1821-1860 (50 presidents) – 1821 Iturbide Empire: Constitutional Monarchy – 1824-1835 Federalist Republic: Constitution – 1835-1846 Centralist Republic: new Constitution called Siete Leyes – 1846-1863 Federalist Republic – 1863-1867 2nd Empire – 1867-1876 Restored Republic – Foreign Invasions 40 Age of Santa Anna 1821-1855 • Plan de Veracruz – Proclaims republic • Plan de Casa Mata – Overthrow Iturbide • Caudillo • Mexican Constitution 1824 – Modeled on U.S. 42 Mexican Republic 1824 Guadalupe Victoria 1824-1829 1st president Nicolas Bravo Vice-President Revolts against Victoria 1827 43 Miguel Gomez Pedraza Conservative Wins election of 1828 Overthrown by Santa Anna & Federalists Vicente Guerrero April-Dec. 1829 Federalist take power by force Anti-slavery law 44 Spanish Invasion 1829 • 3000 Spanish troops from Cuba • Lands in Tampico, Tamaulipas • Santa Anna repels invasion 45 Anastasio Bustamante (president 3x) 1830-1832 Conservative Vice-president Overthrows Guerrero’s govt. & executes Guerrero 46 Texas – – – – Stephen Austin empresario 300 Families cotton plantations 47 Texas • Colonization Law 1824 – Plan intended to populate the region – Develop the region economically 48 Tejanos • Cultural brokers Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819 50 General Manuel Mier Teran 17891832 • 1827-1828 Expedition • Writes a report: warns Mexico against the belligerence of the immigrants • Proposed: – 1829 decree-abolished slavery in Texas – 1830 decree-curtailed further immigration Major Battles in the Texas Revolution, 1835–1836 52 Issues between Americans and Mexican government • • • • 1824 Coahuila y Texas joined 1829 Anti-Slavery legislation 1830 Immigration Ban Change to a centralist government, which did away with the 1824 Constitution 53 54 Battle of San Jacinto 55 The Treaty of Velasco • Highly controversial treaty due to: – Establishes the Republic of Texas – Boundary line at the Rio Grande – Mexico’s refusal to ratify the agreement 56 Pastry War 1838 • 1828 French bakery destroyed by Mexican troops • 600,000 pesos demand from Mexican government. • Santa Anna hero 57 Antonio de Padua María Severino López de Santa Anna y Pérez de Lebrón http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVZ1lNVRDhs General Santa Anna's Wooden Leg (Illinois State Military Museum) 58
Similar documents
Western Europe- High Middles Ages
yourselves? Will you recover the lands stolen three hundred years ago from your forefathers by the hated Spaniards? We must act at once… Will not you defend your religion and your rights as true pa...
More information