Independence For Latin America

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Independence For
Latin America
1
Revolutions in America

Plantation
 Creoles
 Mestizos
 Joseph Bonaparte
 Cabildos
2
Revolutions in America


The United States Revolution paved the way for many other
revolutions
Why did the revolutions happen?

Life in the 1700s

Rigid social classes
 Highest social class born in Europe
 Enjoyed social privileges and controlled most of the wealth
 Plantation owners
 Plantation is a large farm
 Creoles born in the America
 Parents born in Spain
 Rich and well educated, not trusted
 Jealous of the Spaniards
 Mestizos
 Part Indian Part Spanish
 Crafts People and shop owners
 Few were rich
3
The Lower Classes



Indians
 Made up the majority of the population
 Had little to do with society
 Personal servants and laborers
 Poor and had few Rights
Africans—slaves
 Property of their owners
The three lower classes made up the majority of the
people living in Spanish America

Poor
 Few rights
 Little chance at an education

Class systems varied from colony to colony but the
general situation was the same.
4
5
What Events Inspired Spanish America?

Enlightenment


Locke and Voltaire
American Revolution

Colonies win

French Revolution

All of these events led the people in Spanish
America to demand their own rights
6
French Help

1799 a revolutionary leader came into power


Napoleon Bonaparte
1808 Invades Spain


Joseph Bonaparte is placed on the throne of Spain
This event allowed the Spanish colonies to declare
independence with out being disloyal to the king

Revolutions broke out in 1810 with local governments

Cabildos—small governments or city councils







The time was right to declare independence from Spain
Caracas- Venezuela
Buenos Aires-Capital of La Plata
 Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia, Paraguay
Bogata-New Grenada
Quito-Ecuador
Santiago-Chile
All of these revolutions began with Cabildos

Mexico is the only exception
Started by a Creole Priest
7
Baukman and Haiti

Hispaniola
 Mulattos
 Voodoo
 Maroons
 Baukman
 Machetes
 Night of Fire
9
Haiti Prior to 1791

French Colony called St. Domingue

Western third of Hispaniola

Richest colony in the Caribbean
 Taken over in the late 1600’s by the French
 18th Century African Slaves were brought to the
colonies

Sugar, coffee, cotton and indigo.


Indigo is a deep blue dye used in cotton
The French landowners became very wealthy

Need for more land and slaves



700,000 slaves
35,000 French
40,000 mulattos

French fathers, slave mothers
10
Hispaniola
11
The beginning of Revolution

French to Slave Ratio


20-1
Why didn’t the slaves rebel?

The French controlled all the guns
 The slaves didn’t stand a chance

August 1791

Maroons were hiding in the mountains practicing Voodoo


Drums beating celebrating a voodoo rite


Maroons-escaped slaves
A revolution was being planned
A priest named Boukman led the ceremony

Leaders of the slaves from across Plain du Nord
12
Baukman

A foreman who ran field crews, worked his way up
to a coachman
 Boukman was a huge man that commanded
respect
 He inspired his followers by telling them that if they
die during the rebellion they would wake up in
Africa
 One week later

August 22
 50,000 Slaves rose up armed with scythes and machetes



Machetes-a large heavy knife used to cut sugarcane and brush
Killed and tortured plantation owners and their families
Set fires to everything
 The night became as bright as day
13
 All plantations in Plain du Nord were destroyed
The Struggle Continues
Boukman’s uprising surprised the French
 The French soldiers fought back even harder


Thousands of slaves were killed
 The rest were chased into hiding

St Domingue is divided into two parts

Mountains-slaves
 Coastal towns- French soldiers and planters and officials

The uprising spread to the western part of the
island and was largely controlled
 Boukman was killed in “battle” (beheaded)


Head publicly displayed
Boukman was replaced by Biassou and Jean
Francois
14
Toussaint L’Ouverture in Haiti
Toussaint L’Ouverture
 Guerilla Army
 Napoleon Bonaparte
 General Leclerc
 Dessalines
 Yellow Fever

16
Toussaint l’ouverture

Francois Dominique Toussaint



Added l’Ouverture to the end of his last name
Born 1743 on a plantation in Northern St. Domingue
His father was an African chief captured

Legend
 Taught him that knowledge is power

Step-Father taught him how to get power



Taught him how to read and write in French and Latin
How to use herbs and plants for healing
Did not participate in the Night of Fire

When the rebellion reached his plantation

Family first
 Family of the plantation manager

Joined the revolution
17
Early in the revolution

Toussaint was a doctor

Then began giving military advise and medical care


Toussaint urged leaders to teach the troops discipline
 Stop destroying everything
 Use the things to help themselves
Toussaint is made a commander

Taught the soldiers discipline
 Trained them like professional soldiers
18
Toussaint Leads the revolution

Biassou and Jean Francois were poor leaders

They were disloyal to the cause of freedom

1791 French looked to be putting down the revolt


Biassou and Jean Fran腔is agreed to turn over the former slaves
in exchange for their own freedom
Toussaint organized the slaves into a guerilla
army

Guerilla army- a group of soldiers that are not well
trained

They attacked the French when they least expected it
 Attack- and retreat into the mountains


Very fast and in unexpected directions
The French could never relax
19
Toussaint

Memorable figure
as he rode

Rode without a
saddle
 Dressed in a
French uniform
 Handkerchief on his
head
 Odd shape under
his coat

Hunchback
20
Victories (triumphs)

Won several victories over the French

Promised the townspeople that he would treat them well if
they surrendered

The French refused to free the slaves
 Spain and Great Britain were at war with the French

Toussaint joined the Spanish forces in Santo Domingo
 Named a general an won battles for the Spanish


1794 France passed a law freeing all slaves


Still felt some loyalty to France
Toussaint joined the French and drove the Spanish from
the island
1795 most important man in St. Domingue
21
The most important man

Concerned about the economy of the island

Most of the plantations were destroyed
 Asked the former slaves to come back to work and share
in the profits

Toussaint began to create a separate government

Constitution was written


Negotiated treaties with Great Britain and the United
States


Declared slavery ended forever
Traded sugar for arms
1801 Ruler of Hispaniola
22
Napoleon

Napoleon needed the wealth of St. Domingue to
fund his wars


Economy could only be brought back through slavery
The invasion of St. Domingue

Led by his brother-in-law General Victor Leclerc


Spies reported Napoleon’s plans to Toussaint


43000 soldiers—largest invasion force in France history
“I have known they would come and that the reason
behind it would be that one and only goal: reinstatement
of slavery. However, we will never again submit to that.”
Preparations for war

Imported weapons from the US, reinforced forts
 Dug pits and trenches in the forest
 Drafted all men over 12
23
The invasion of St. Domingue
“The people are besides themselves with fury. They
never withdraw or give up. They sing as they are
facing death and they still encourage each other
while they are dying. They seem to not know
pain…
 …send reinforcements”
 Leclerc knew that he didn’t stand a chance


“Meeting” with one of his officers



Toussaint and his family are captured and sent back to France
“In overthrowing me you have cut down in St. Domingue only the
trunk of the tree liberty. It will spring up again from the roots, for
they are many and they are deep.”
Toussaint and his family are separated

Sent to Switzerland
24
France Loses St. Domingue

The French were having a new problem

The guerilla war continued



Thousands of black people were killed
The more that were killed the greater the resistance
Jacques Dessalines

No loyalty to France
 Wanted to end slavery
 Make St. Domingue independent

Burning of plantations continued

French had superior weapons
 Only a matter of time
25
Yellow Fever

Deadly disease spread by mosquitoes




Thousands of French Soldiers died
Unable to conquer the epidemic
8000 soldiers lived to sail back home
Why didn’t the Slaves get Yellow fever?

January 1, 1804 St. Domingue declared independent
 New name Haiti



Dessalines becomes dictator


Indian name before Europeans settled there.
Haiti is Rebuilt
October 1806 he is murdered
Haiti has been ruled by dictators since and is now one of the
poorest countries of the world
26
Mexico’s Fight for independence
 Hacienda
 Padre
Miguel Hidalgo y Castilla
 Grito De Dolores
 Jose Maria Morelos
 Agustin de Iturbide
28
Mexico’s Fight for independence

The Revolution for Independence began with a group of men called the
Literary and Social Club of Queretaro
 Not really a social club, they were plotting the revolution against Spain

The Indians were unhappy


Not enough land
Forced to work on haciendas or farms

Little or no pay
 Owed money to the landowners
 Couldn’t leave until their debts were paid

The Mestizos were unhappy




Poor and didn’t have good jobs
Looked down upon
Hoped that independence would bring more power power
The Creoles were unhappy

Shut off from the power


Professionals and landowners (owned the haciendas)
No Spaniards, the Creoles could control the government
29
Padre Miguel hidalgo y Castilla

The leading member of the Literary and Social Club of
Queretaro
 Priest in the village of Dolores
 Creole who lived on a hacienda until he was 12
 Sent to school at 12 and studied for 12 years
 Became a priest and a teacher
 Eventually became the head of the Catholic college at
Valladolid


He had become a trouble maker



He was a success, Paid well, well respected, did important work
Spent his time teaching about how to improve the government
Put the college in debt
Forced to quit his job and became a priest in a very small
village
30
A good Priest

Spent 10 years in a small village before moving on
to a larger church in Delores
 There he helped the Otomi Indians plant grape
vines and mulberry trees

Wine and silk worms
 Illegal

He went to Queretaro to meet with his friends

Juan Aldema,


Ignacio Allende


Military officer opposed to Spanish rule
Captain and commander in a local army post
Talked about the problems of the country
31
Revolutionary Times

1810 Mexico had been under Spanish control for
300 years
 Spanish king is dethroned

Joseph Bonaparte
 The revolutionaries were now fighting against France

The members of the LSCQ began to plot the
revolution
Wanted to improve people’s lives
 Wanted more power for themselves



They were Creoles
The LSCQ had been plotting for a year and decided
that October 2 was the date for the uprising to begin
32
September 15th


The revolution begins
Their plot had been discovered



What should be done?
Hidalgo “In action everything is accomplished, we must not lose time;
you will see the oppressor’s yoke broken and beaten to the ground”
Hidalgo rang the church bell and the people gathered in front
of the church



Hidalgo told them now was the time to throw out the Spaniards
No more haciendas
“Independence and Death to the Spaniards! Long live the Virgin of
Guadalupe”


Called the Grito de Dolores
News spread quickly within a week 25000 people had joined
the rebellion
33
Padre Miguel Hidalgo y Castilla

57 years old when the
revolution began
 No military experience
 Medium height, dark
complexion, rounded
shoulders
 Green eyes
 Slow movements
 Head drooped over his
chest
 Nearly bald
34
The beginning of the Revolution

The army quickly captured several towns

Guanajauto

Hundreds versus thousands 500-2000
 The town was defenseless and the army looted
 Hidalgo ordered them to stop but they ignored

Lack of discipline was a problem


They continued to win battles


More people joined
October—on to Mexico City



Hidalgo felt that soldiers should be allowed to loot as a reward for
helping the rebellion
Few people along the way joined
Hidalgo changes his mind
On to Guadalajara


Time to plant crops
The army dwindled

Down to 7000 soldiers
35
Guadalajara

Hidalgo was greeted like a hero
 Time used to train the army, make cannons and
weapons
 Spain was also preparing
 The battle lasted 6 hours


A lucky shot
The survivors fled to Saltillo

Led into an ambush and captured
 Leaders were tried and sentenced to death
 Hidalgo is shot by a firing squad on July 31, 1811

Hidalgo failed to win the revolution

He is still the main hero of Mexico’s struggle for
independence
36
Jose Maria Morelos

After Hidalgo the army broke up but the revolution continued

Guerilla attacks


Lots of leaders
Jose Maria Morelos


Friend of Hidalgo
Didn’t think they could win by fighting the Spaniards in open battle


Continued the guerilla war for 5 years


Guerilla tactics
Well disciplined and well equipped
He had a specific plan for the revolution

Governments should treat everyone as equals
 Only people born in Mexico should be allowed to hold political office
 Take land away for hacienda owners

Captured on Nov 15 1815

Shot
37
The Long Road to Victory

The country had been at war for 5 years

Crops failed

Landowners driven from land or run away
 Indians were fighting
 Bandits
 Poor business


The Spanish could not defeat the rebels, The rebels could
not beat the Spanish
1821 Agustin de Iturbide joins the rebels




Spanish army officer accused of misusing funds
Brought his army unit into the war on the side of the rebels
The tide turned in favor of the rebels
September 27, 1821 Mexico becomes a free and independent nation
38
Simon Bolívar the Liberator

Francisco de Miranda
 Simon Bolívar
 Liberator
 Conspirator
 Royalist
 Sucre
39
Simon Bolívar The Liberator

Born in Spain

Met Maria Teresa at the age of 17


Fell in love immediately, got married at 18
Moved to Venezuela

Maria dies one year later from yellow fever
 If he had stayed in Spain she would not have died
 If he stayed South America would be much different

Simon Bolívar was the most famous liberator of
South America

Liberator- a person who frees a country from an
enemy.
40
After the Death of Maria

Bolívar returns to Spain

Read books by Locke, Voltaire and Montesquieu


Venezuela must become independent
1805 Visits Italy

Climbs to a Religious shrine above Rome


“I swear by the God of my fathers and the honor of my
country. I will not rest, not in body or soul, till I have
broken the chains of Spain.”
“My wife’s death led me early in my career onto the
road of politics.”
41
Failed Rebellion

1806 Francisco de Miranda tries to liberate
Venezuela

Miranda fought in the French Revolution
 Been to the US. GW, BF, TJ
 150 Men 3 ships 1 from Saint Domingo one from
Britain


Stopped before he could land on Venezuelan soil
Went to Barbados

more ships and men from the British
 Could not get local support

The Creoles Enjoyed being 2nd and thought Miranda was a
troublemaker
42
Return to Venezuela

1807 Bolívar returns to Venezuela



Returned to his family hacienda and became a
wealthy Creole farmer
1808 Napoleon overthrows the Spanish King
and places Joseph on the throne
1810 the Creoles begin to think that Miranda
was right

Simon Bolívar was one of the conspirators

Conspirator-someone who secretly plans an unlawful
action
43
The Beginning

The Creoles removed the Highest ranking
Spanish officer in Venezuela


Bolívar went to get help from Great Britain



Loyalty to the king
Failed but was able to get Miranda (60) to come
back
July 5 1811 Venezuelan independence is
declared
Spanish forces were organizing

Some Creoles still opposed independence
(royalists)
44
The Earth Shakes

The revolution army gained important victories


No support for a new government
Bolívar and Miranda began to argue

Bolívar- Creoles
 Miranda- Mestizos and Indians
 Both were strong willed and proud.

The both wanted the glory and power of being a leader
 Gave the royalists the upper hand

Earthquake

20000 casualties
 Royalist controlled towns spared (God)
45
Aftershocks

Miranda tried to negotiate letting the rebels
leave

Bolívar turned him over to Spanish authorities



Bolívar and his allies leave the country
Bolívar goes to Bogota, New Grenada

Joins rebels in Cucuta as a commander


Miranda dies four years later in prison
Promoted to general
Back to Venezuela

Fight became very bloody

Rebels were executed
 Executioners were exterminated
 Both sides committed acts of terror and cruelty
46
On to Caracas

Bolívar reached Caracas within 3 months

The people began to call him “The Liberator”

Quick victory but the war was far from over


Llaneros (cowboys) were supportive of the
royalists and drove Bolívar back to New
Grenada


More bloody and brutal
Led by Boves--very blood thirsty
King Ferdinand Returned to power and sent
11000 men to regain Venezuela and New
Grenada

Spanish commanders were ruthless in attacking

Bolívar Escapes to Haiti
47
Bolívar’s Daring Plan

Bolívar never gave up and asks Pétion (leader
of Haiti for help

Recognize the Haitian government
 Free all slaves

Bolívar leaves with 200 soldiers on 7 small
ships



Could not land
The llaneros had become unhappy with the
spanish
Up the Orinoco River to Angostura

The llaneros joined along with 4000 British
volunteers
48
On to Bogotá

Bolívar decided to go on to Bogotá

Crossing the Llanos was horrible

Clothing Mildewed
 Saddles and boots fell apart
 Horses hooves rotted

By the time they reached the mountains the horses
were dead.
 All the soldiers had left were their guns

The battle of Boyaca

Surprised the Spanish troops and won easily
 Marched on to Bogatá without resistance
49

Bolívar returns to Angostura


The Battle of Carababo


Joins forces with Páez
Surprised the royalists and ended most Spanish
resistance
June 28, 1821 Bolívar marches into Caracas
again

Independence had finally been won
50
Bolívar’s Dream

Bolívar wanted South America to be united like
the United States
Gran Colombia’s constitution written in 1821
 Bolívar becomes the first president


Lima was next


Quito was along the way
1821 Bolívar sent Sucre to Guayaquil to gather
an army

1822 the Spanish are defeated in Quito
 Ecuador had been liberated and Peru was left

Someone was already there
51
San Martin

San Martin and Bolívar met up in July of 1822

Neither one of them were willing to give up power
 San Martin went to Chile
 Bolívar went to Lima, Peru

The Peruvians didn’t trust him


They didn’t want to be part of Gran Colombia
Asks Sucre to lead the army of liberation



Sucre met and defeated the Spanish Army
Peru was freed from Spanish rule
Sucre frees upper Peru who wanted to become independent
 They became Bolivia in honor of Bolívar
 Sucre Became the first president
52
The End of Bolívars Dream

Bolívar had liberated most of South America


Things turned against him
Returned to Lima

The Peruvians were plotting against him


They wanted to become independent
Conflicts arose in Gran Columbia

Bolívar had tuberculosis
 Bolívar was a better general than president
 His dream had failed


Sucre had been killed by political rivals
He died in December 1830
53
Revolution in the South
Viceroy
Santiago
de Liniers
La
Plata
Jose de San Martin
55
Trouble in Buenos Aires

One morning in 1806


10 large British warships anchored in the bay
The people waited to see what the viceroy would do

Viceroy- a rule of a colony or territory


British defeated the Spanish army easily


Packed up his bags and fled
Stole all of the money from the treasury and sent it back
to Great Britain
The people organized a militia to resist the invasion

Led by Santiago de Liniers

Commander of the Spanish fleet that was away during the
invasion
56
The Militia

Made up mostly of Creoles



8000 + 1000 Spanish from Montevideo
Drove off the British and their fleet
The Cabildo refused to let the old viceroy back

Santiago de Liniers was elected as the new Viceroy


Revolutionary Act
Great Britain sends a larger fleet


12000 men were defeated
Everyone helped in the defeat

Why do we need the Spanish Government?
 Santiago de Liniers is appointed as the temporary viceroy



Allowed British ships to come in and trade
Replacement came and began to enforce the old trade rules
People began to make less money
57
Independence in La Plata

Joseph Bonaparte
 The people of Buenos Aires were unhappy
 Mariano Moreno becomes the leader of the cabildo

Convinces the city council to exile the viceroy
 Wanted La Plata to be independent

Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Bolivia

The people knew they could run their own affairs
 Died in 1811

People in La Plata refused to accept the rule of
Buenos Aires

Upper Peru was still under Spanish rule
58
Jose de San Martin Returns

Born in La Plata—returned to Spain at 6
 Officer in the Spanish Navy that fought in many
wars
 1811 Retired and met with Miranda in London
 1812 returned to La Plata
 The leaders in Buenos Aires wanted to go through
Upper Peru to get to Lima

Martin said that it would be easier to liberate Chile First
and then attack Lima by sea.
59
Independence come to Chile

San Martin was a tricky man

Pretended to be sick as an excuse to be governor in the
province of Cuyo


On the border of Chile
Spent two getting troops ready

Sent spies to Chile to find out where the Spanish camps
were, how many soldiers, to spread rumors, and try to
gain support
 Invited the Pehuenche Indians to a meeting


Gave them gifts and asked for permission to cross their territory
into Chile
He would cross the Andes over the highest pass and
attack from the east
60
Attack

January 18 1817

4000 soldiers, 1000 men, 10600 Mules, 1600 horses, 700 cattle


One of the greatest military accomplishments in history
Crossed the Andes in the shadow of Mt. Aconcagua

4300 mules, 511 horses
 Had enough supplies to press the attack

The Spanish leaders knew that the attack was coming




The didn’t know where though
Divided their armies to cover different routes
Surprise!
Chacabuco



600 men and supplies captured
Easy road to Santiago
Chile Declares independence on February 12, 1818
61
Failure in Peru

Peru was where Spain had its strongest forces

4000 vs 23000
 San Martin Hoped the Peruvians would rise up and revolt
 Peru declares independence July 28, 1821

Bolívar and San Martin Get together

San Martin returns to Lima disappointed
 Resigns and returns to Chile
 Bolívar completes Peru’s independence

Returned home to find his wife dead

Took his young daughter back to Europe
 Dies in 1850

He and Bolívar both hoped to unite all of Spain’s
South American provinces; neither realized
achieved dream
62
Brazil Finds Another Way
João
Exports
Imports
Pedro
64
Brazil Finds Another Way

Napoleon had begun to conquer Europe.

Marching through Spain tells Portugal to break ties with
Great Britain




Told to close their ports to British ships
Take all property from British citizens
Arrest all British citizens
João didn’t like taking orders from Napoleon

João was the king of Portugal
 Closed the ports but did nothing more

Napoleon invades Portugal

When he reaches Lisbon, João boards a British ship and
goes to South America
65
The Journey


36 ships
All of the royal treasures


10,000 people


Jewels, papers, books, paintings and statues
Members of the court
Terrible voyage


Ships filled with fleas, rats, and lice
Quarters were cramped and smelly

Some of the ships carried 3 times their capacity

Sailing took 2 months
 Storm



Some of the ships are separated
Kings first stop was Salvador da Bahai
The people were surprised
66
In Bahai

No paved streets
 No hotels or places fit for a king

The king had to stay in the homes of citizens
 Carlota Lost her hair

Visit by the governor of Bahai
Asked him to open Brazil’s ports to international trade
 João could see that restricting trade was bad for the
economy


He immediately opened the ports
 Exports increased by 15%
 Exports—goods that leave a country
 Imports increased by 50%
 Imports—goods that come into a country
67
Rio becomes an imperial City

João travels on to Rio de Janeiro.

Made the capital of the Portuguese Empire

All Portuguese colonies were ruled from Rio
 All taxes came to Rio

People came to Rio to be near the court and to do business


João ordered that buildings be built to hold the treasures that
he had brought with him






Population of Rio doubles in 10 years
Naval and military academy
Medical school
Fine arts
Primary and Secondary schools
Printing presses
João encouraged the people to develop industry and
agriculture
68
Other Changes for Brazil

Government offices were located in Rio

They became familiar with government structure

They found that it was easier to get the government
to listen to them and hear what they needed
 They were also under close observation
 Many people in João’s court thought that this was a
temporary situation

Thought they would return as soon as Europe as soon as
Napoleon was gone
 Napoleon withdraws in 1808


João loved Rio and had no intentions of leaving
1815 Napoleon suffers defeat at _______

João continued to rule from Rio
69
Brazil becomes an empire

João could have stayed in Rio forever

Portugal was undergoing a revolution

Wanted to write a new constitution and limit the power of the monarch
 Demanded the return of João


João takes his court and returns leaving Pedro to rule in his
place
Meanwhile the Brazilians were well aware of the other
revolutions taking place in Spanish America

Some of the leaders wanted to make Brazil free


João knew this and told his son “If Brazil demands independence,
proclaim it yourself, and put the crown on your own head.”
Portugal’s Revolutionary leaders worried that Pedro might
make Brazil independent and wanted him to return as well



Pedro tore the Portuguese flag off of his uniform and declared
“Independence or Death!”
Some Portuguese tried to defend Brazil for Portugal and they were
quickly defeated
70
Brazil was independent in a nearly bloodless revolution.
Mexico after independence

Caudillo
 Antonio Lòpez de Santa Anna
 Benito Juárez
 Cinco de Mayo
 Pancho Villa
 Emiliano Zapata
72
Mexico after independence

Independence didn’t solve all of the problems facing
the people in Latin America

It was also easier to achieve than stability
 The countries had trouble establishing stable, trustworthy
governments to replace the Spanish governments

Many of the countries had strongmen in power
called caudillos

Caudillo-a military dictator in Latin American countries
 They would fight among themselves until a clear victor
emerged


Each Caudillo would rule until another caudillo replaced him.
Class issues also persisted

The Creoles refused to treat the Mestizos and Indians as
equals
73
Mexico’s Violent History

Iturbide
Became the emperor of Mexico and spent all of Mexico’s
money
 Overthrown




Told if he ever returned he would be shot
1824 he returns
The Creoles take over the government

The Spanish were gone but the class system still existed
 The Indians and Mestizos felt like the revolution was only
half complete

They wanted equality
74
General Santa Anna


The Creoles were vulnerable to attacks by Caudillos
One of the most famous was General Santa Anna


Santa Anna was a proud man




Statues of himself
“your most serene highness.”
Dishonest and unprincipled
American settlers in Texas demanded independence in 1836


President and ruler of Mexico 11 different times in 30 years.
Remember the Alamo
At war with the United States

Mexican-Indian War 1846-2848

Lost California, New Mexico and Arizona
 Weakens Santa Anna and he is overthrown for the last time
75
Benito Juárez

Indian Lawyer from southeast Mexico

Very honest, and had sympathy for the poor
 Strong belief in democracy and freedom of speech
Helped to create Mexico’s constitution of 1857
 Became President


Began to work toward reform
 Forced to leave, returns later
 Mexico is in serious financial difficulties
 Mexico stopped paying their debts in 1862 to France,
Great Britain, and Spain


France and Britain left
Napoleon III ordered his troops to conquer Mexico
76
Cinco de mayo

French Troops marched onto Mexico City.

May 5 1862 a small Mexican force won a glorious victory
over the much larger French Army near the city of Puebla
 One of Mexico’s festive holidays

France still occupied Mexico City


Juarez fled to the north
Napoleon III left Maximilian as the emperor of
Mexico for three years

Pulled the troops out
 Maximilian is captured, convicted of treason and
executed
 Constitutional government is restored

Juárez is restored as president
77

Juárez worked hard to rebuild the country




Juárez is remembered as a great lawmaker and patriot and
as the man who saved Mexico’s independence
Porfirio Diaz 1876-1911




Built schools and roads
Did what he could for the poor
Modernized Mexico
Foreigners and wealthy Mexicans benefited from it.
Indians sank back into poverty
In the 1910s more revolutions swept through Mexico


Revolutionaries wanted to complete the revolution
Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata
78
Pancho Villa


Violent and Brave
Helped to topple Diaz from power

Lost faith in the new government



Became an outlaw and waged war on the new government
Villa’s success is attributed to his amazing knowledge of the
land and his use of guerilla tactics


Believed that it betrayed the cause of the poor
He and his men would stage lightning raids and disappear into the
hills
Staged a raid across the border and killed 16 Americans


Woodrow Wilson sent out a search expedition
Villa was able to disappear into the night
79
Emiliano Zapata

Guerilla leader from the South of Mexico
 Mestizo that joined the revolution against Diaz
 Gave land from the rich and gave it to the poor indians
 Zapata was an amazing guerilla leader
 Fought for the revolution and then fought against it when it
didn’t do what it was suppose to do
 Supported by Pancho Villa
 Both of them agreed to fight together until their plan was
established
 They were successful because the fought for the causes of
the poor


Land freedom and justice
Zapata was tricked into a meeting with enemies

Ambushed and killed
80
Toward Equality

1920 a new government established law and order

2 million Mexicans died in fighting


Deadliest revolution in the Americas
Convinced Pancho Villa to retire

His enemies shot him to death
Mexico settled down in the middle of the 20th
century
 Most Latin American Countries continue to
experience the cycle of caudillos, revolution, civil
war, and violence

81
82
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