Mexico
By the early 19th century, the local middle classes had grown tired of sharing their wealth with Spain, and an obsession with independence began to grow. In particular the Creoles � those born in New Spain of  Spanish parents � resented being considered inferior by those born in the European homeland. They saw an opportunity in the Spanish war against Napoleon's invasion of 1808. The main protagonists of the Independence were the priests Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla and Jose Maria Morelos. On September 16, 1810, Hidalgo freed the prisoners in the town of Dolores, locked up the Spanish authorities and called the people to rebel by ringing the church bells. Hidalgo started out with 600 men, but soon had 100,000 and overran towns of central Mexico. Hidalgo was tricked, caught and condemned the following year, and was executed by firing squad on July 30, 1811.    Morelos, from the western city of Valladolid � now Morelia � led successful campaigns in 1812 and 1813,  which included the capture of Acapulco, the main port on the Pacific coast.   He was captured and shot on Dec. 22, 1815.    
Despite the setbacks, the independence movement continued under the Creole colonel Agustin de Iturbide. On September 28, 1821, the first independent government was named with Iturbide at the head. Independence was followed by 30 years of great political turmoil, which included the Mexican-U.S. war of 1846-1848 in which Mexico lost Texas, California and New Mexico to the victors.   
Then came a period of reform, led by the educated of the country. The liberal Benito Juarez, who would be elected president  in 1861, promoted reform laws that were incorporated into the Constitution of 1857. As provisional president, he also reduced the powers of the Roman Catholic Church, and confiscated church property.  
In 1864, Austrian Archduke Maximilian was made Emperor with the backing of Napoleon III.   Maximilian ruled Mexico until 1867,  when he was defeated and shot after Napoleon pulled out his troops to fight a war with Prussia.   The return to government of Juarez is also known as the Restoration of the Republic.riod of unprecedented economic development under Diaz, with the construction of railroads, ports and telecommunications. But Diaz's repressive government and the increasingly wide gap between rich and poor, coupled with Diaz's courting of foreign investors and large landowners, led to discontent and uprising after he won yet another election in 1910, his sixth consecutive re-election.
The 1910-1917 Revolution was started by Francisco Madero,  a democratically minded politician who was opposed  to re-election.   With military uprisings by Francisco Villa (or "Pancho" Villa as he is commonly known) in the north, and Emiliano Zapata in the south, Diaz was soon forced to resign and go into exile.   Madero became president, but his army chief Victoriano Huerta staged a coup in 1913 and had him killed.   Huerta stepped down in 1914, and Venustiano Carranza become president.
A new Constitution  was promulgated in 1917 which, among other things, restored communal land to the Indian population and renewed the anticlericalism of the Juarez years.
By 1920, the three main leaders of the revolution � Madero, Carranza, and Zapata � were dead.   In 1929, the party that would later become the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, was formed as a way of consolidating the reforms that were included in the 1917 Constitution, and which had begun to be implemented during the 1920s.
A series of presidents under the PRI embarked on a course of fervent nationalism in the following decades, which included the nationalisation in 1937 of the railways and in 1938 of the oil industry from British and U.S. firms.   The PRI kept a tight control on power.
In 1994, Mexico joined the U.S. and Canada in the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA. Later that year, it was admitted into the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development.
The PRI lost its first presidential election in 2000 to Vicente Fox of  the conservative National Action Party.   By that time, however, the PRI had already moved far away from its socialist roots, reversing most of the nationalisations during the previous 15 years or so, and courting foreign investors like no one had since Porfirio Diaz.
Map Of Mexico
Cultural Traditions In Mexico
Modern Problems
Timeline of Events
Fun Facts
References
Story of a Citizen
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