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Political History of Mexico

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Page 1: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

Political History of Mexico

Page 2: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

After the Spanish conquered Mexico,

they forced their language (Spanish)

and their religion (Roman Catholic

Christianity) on the Indians of Mexico.

Page 3: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

Spaniards even tore down Indian temples and pyramids and built Christian churches

on top of their foundations.

Mitla, Mexico

Page 4: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

Still today, the Roman Catholic Church is the main church in Mexico

and Spanish is the main language.

Page 5: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

So you should be able to answer this now:

How did the Spanish language get to

Mexico?

Page 6: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

And you should be able to answer this:

How did the Catholic Church get to

Mexico?

Page 7: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

Spaniards born in Mexico controlled most of Mexico.

(They were kind of like our American colonists.)

But they were still controlled by the King of Spain.

Page 8: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

In 1810, the Spaniards in Mexico rebelled against the King of Spain.

In 1821, they won their War of Independence.

Page 9: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

The Spaniards in Mexico were now independent. Instead of being ruled by

the King of Spain, they elected their own Congress.

This Mexican flag was first used in the Independence Parade of September 1821.

Page 10: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

So who ran Mexico now?

the Spanish king?

the Spanish people born in Mexico?

the native Mexicans?

Page 11: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

How do you suppose the U.S. ended up with the northern half of Mexico’s land?

This was Mexico in 1821.

Page 12: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

In 1845, when the U.S. Congress voted to add Texas to the U.S., a war started between Mexico and the U.S.

http://medias.photodeck.com/dab155e2-3d7b-11e0-91c9-61cfc2a031ac/001639_xgaplus.jpg

Page 13: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

In the treaty that ended the war, the U.S. took not just Texas but also

New Mexico, Arizona, California, Utah, Nevada, and part of Colorado & Wyoming.

Page 14: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

What city names in these states tell us that they used to belong to Mexico?

Amarillo

Sacramento

San Francisco

El Paso

Los AngelesLas Cruces,

NM

Durango, CO

Escalante, UT

San Antonio

Page 15: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

Creoles (full-blooded Spaniards born in Mexico) controlled Mexico until 1910. This is when the Mexican Revolution

started.

Page 16: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

This revolution called for “¡Tierra y Libertad!” This time, it was the Indian and mixed race

(mestizo) people demanding “Land and

Liberty!”

Page 17: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

In 1917, the fighting ended and a new Constitution was written.

Page 18: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

The new Constitution:

limited the power of the wealthy Catholic Church, included mixed-race (mestizo) Mexicans in the government, and included protections for workers.

Page 19: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

This is also when the Mexican flag was designed. The new flag honored

Mexico’s Indian heritage.

Page 20: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

Most of the people in Mexico today are mestizos – a mixture of Indian and

Spanish blood.

Page 21: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

After the revolution, the country was supposed to be a republic – with

democratic elections.

Voting booths

Page 22: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

But Mexico was actually run by one political party – PRI, the Institutional

Revolutionary Party (Partido Revolucionario Institucional).

Page 23: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

It was illegal NOT to vote in Mexico, but elections were controlled so only one party

could win.

Page 24: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

In 1939, the National Action Party – PAN (Partido Acción Nacional) – was formed.

They challenged the power of the PRI party.

PAN leaders were harassed by PRI officials.

Page 25: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

PAN never won elections until 1989, when their candidate won the

governor’s election in the state of Baja California.

Page 26: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

To prove that the 1994 national elections would be free and fair,

Mexico’s government invited outside groups to observe the election process

and watch for problems.

There were 775 foreign and 81,620 Mexican observers that carefully

watched.

Page 27: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

A PRI candidate still won, but the 1994 elections were the first proven free and

fair presidential elections in Mexico.

https://www.ndi.org/files/images/mexico.jpg

Page 28: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

In the next national election six years

later, a PAN candidate was

elected as Mexico’s President. It was the first time in over 70 years that someone

NOT in PRI was elected as Mexico’s

President.http://library.cqpress.com/cqresearcher/file.php?path=/images/CQ_Researcher/r20001103-fox.jpg

Page 29: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

In 2012, PRI’s candidate won the presidency. Some people claimed that PRI had cheated to win control again.

But there was no proof.

http://images.latintimes.com/sites/latintimes.com/files/styles/large_breakpoints_theme_lt_desktop_1x/public/2015/08/21/pena-nieto-se-parece-

pendejo-hoy.jpg

Unfortunately for PRI, he

has not been a very popular

president.

Page 30: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)
Page 31: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

Three main political parties now help balance political power in Mexico.

https://www.canninghouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/Fig1-Chamberofdeputiesv.0.2-2.png

Page 32: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

PRI = Institutional Revolutionary Party

PAN = National Action Party

PRD = Party of the Democratic Revolution

Page 33: Political History of Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Mexico, they forced their language (Spanish) and their religion (Roman Catholic Christianity)

Image Sources

• http://www.travel-island.com/countrymaps/mexico.gif• http://www.ontheroadin.com/mitla_oaxaca_ancient_and_colonia.htm• http://www.texancultures.utsa.edu/nativeamerican/texas_native_americans/htms/TheMeetingSpanishandNApg.htm• http://www.pe.com/imagesdaily/2007/01-22/migrant22mza_400a.jpg• http://www.elbalero.gob.mx/kids/history/html/colonia/criollos.html• http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Column/7292/Flag1821.gif• http://blm.utep.edu/crta/images/1821.jpg• http://www.mohonasen.org/grade5/lpurch1.jpg• http://web.stratfor.com/images/northamerica/map/4_4_latino_us_978.jpg• http://cache.eb.com/eb/image?id=92785&rendTypeId=4• http://www.uncg.edu/rom/courses/lachesak/107/zapata.jpg• http://www.mexicanamericans.com/PanchoVilla.jpg• http://www.oberlin.edu/faculty/svolk/zapata-rivera.jpg• http://www.nga.gov/education/classroom/self_portraits/img/img_siqueiros_revolutionaries_sm.jpg• http://www.liquoranddrink.com/image/article12_Flag.jpg• http://www.fotw.net/images/m/mx%7Dpri).gif• http://www.atlasgeo.net/fotw/images/m/mx%7Dpri.gif• http://www.pickatrail.com/jupiter/location/north_america/mexico/map/baja_california.gif

• www.ft.com/dkreports/mexico4