Many towns, streets
and even subway stops in Mexico are named after
the events and personalities that shaped the
country’s history from the arrival of the
Spaniards in the 16th century to modern times.
The following list summarizes the significance
of some of these figures and dates.
A–Ignacio Allende (1769-1811): Ignacio
Maria de Allende was one of the major leaders in
the War of Independence against Spanish rule,
although his efforts did not bear fruit until 10
years after he died. Alongside Juan Aldama and
Miguel Hidalgo, Allende led an attack against
the Spanish the morning of September 16, 1810 in
Dolores, Guanajuato, and following several
struggles, triumphantly reached Monte de las
Cruces, where the famous Battle of Monte de las
Cruces was fought and won on October 30. In
1811, Allende became a war prisoner, was killed
and his head displayed in the Alhóndiga de
Granaditas in the city of Guanajuato. Allende’s
remains now rest at the Column of Independence
constructed in 1910 in Mexico City, and his
birthplace, San Miguel el Grande in Guanajuato
State, was later named San Miguel de Allende in
his honor.
B–Bucareli, Antonio Maria de (1717-1779):
Antonio Maria de Bucareli was the 47th viceroy
of Mexico, from September 2, 1771, until his
death. Bucareli's administration was one of the
most successful in the country. Three great
institutions were founded under his leadership:
the Monte de Piedad, a government institution
offering loans to the poor, accepting personal
possessions as collateral; the Hospicio, a home
for the poor; and the Casa de la Cuna, a
religious sanctuary. He also established the
country’s mining court and obtained permission
from the king of Spain to use quicksilver from
Mexican mines. An important Mexico City
promenade bears his name and his remains are
buried in the Colegiata of Guadalupe in the
Basilica.
C–Hernan Cortez (1485-1547): synonymous
with the conquering of Mexico, Hernan Cortez,
together with his army, discovered the Valley of
Mexico and succeeded in destroying the powerful
Aztec empire in the 1520s. Cortez was born in
Medellin, in the southwestern Spanish province
of Extremadura. In 1519, the 34-year-old led a
band of 550 sailors and explorers on an
unauthorized expedition from Cuba to what is now
Mexico. Cortez first landed in Yucatan, where he
met a priest named Jeronimo de Aguilar. Aguilar
had been shipwrecked in 1511, lived among the
Mayans, and learned their language fluently.
Aguilar accompanied Cortez as his force moved
southwest. In Tabasco, after winning a battle
against a local tribe, Cortez received a gift
from the chiefs – a multilingual Indian woman,
Malinche, who became his consort, translator and
advisor, responsible for the diplomatic
maneuvering that was as much a part of the
conquest as the fighting. They later became
intimately involved and she bore his child,
Martin. Following additional conquests and
victories, Cortez was named governor,
captain-general and chief justice of New Spain,
the territory covering not only modern-day
Mexico but also much of Central America and the
southwestern United States.
D–Porfirio Diaz (1830-1915): a notorious
dictator, Diaz was born in the city of Oaxaca of
Mixtec Indian and Spanish ancestry. As an army
officer, he became a hero due to his
participation in the war against the French,
where he won several important victories
including the celebrated Battle of Puebla of
1862. In 1876, he overthrew President Sebastián
Lerdo de Tejada and appointed himself president;
he served one term and then stepped down in
favor of Manuel Gonzalez, one of his underlings,
who followed with a four-year period marked by
corruption. This set the platform for Díaz to
return for the next election, which he won
through vote manipulation, violence and
assassination of his opponents, which as a
result were very few. Although Diaz’s programs
of modernization, including the development of
railroads and telegraph lines across the country
and factory construction were successful, the
poor suffered greatly under Diaz’s dictatorship,
while half the rural population was reduced to
debt slavery -ultimately giving rise to a
revolution headed by Francisco Madero. In 1911,
Diaz was forced to leave Mexico and died in
France in exile.
E–Juan Escutia (1827-1847): born in Tepic,
Nayarit, Juan Escutia was a military student up
until his premature death. On the morning of
September 13, 1847, while Escutia was on guard
at the Chapultepec Military School in Mexico
City, he faced the invasion of U.S army and
resisted against their intrusion. As the
invaders continued to move in to the territory,
Escutia rapidly grabbed the Mexican flag to
prevent it from falling into enemy hands,
wrapped it around himself and threw himself off
the cliff of Chapultepec Castle. His remains,
along with those of other heroic children, were
honored in a ceremony held at the Palacio
Nacional and the main plaza in Mexico City. The
crystal and silver urns that held the remains of
the children were taken through the streets of
Mexico to their final destination, the Monument
of Heroic Children, located in Chapultepec Park.
F– Ricardo Flores Magon (1873-1922):
reformist turned anarchist, Magon was legendary
in inspiring the people to rise up, gradually
paved the way for the Mexican Revolution. Magon
founded the Mexican Liberal Party (PLM) which
organized two uprisings against Diaz. Flores
Magon was later exiled and during this period,
Flores Magon’s vision evolved into anarchism,
influenced by the infamous Emma Goldman. Flores
Magon did not believe that the liberalists would
in fact address the issue of property rights.
Among his famous quotes, Flores Magon said,
“..the emancipation of the workers must be the
work of the workers themselves.” Flores Magon
was arrested several times in the U.S. and died
in prison, apparently beaten to death. His
legend lives on in the Zapatista movement.
G–Grito de Dolores (Cry of Dolores):
Miguel Hidalgo's cry of Dolores was the crucial,
impulsive action that catalyzed Mexico’s bloody
struggle for independence from Spain. Although a
movement toward Mexican independence had already
been in progress since Napoleon’s conquest of
Spain, Hidalgo’s passionate declaration "Mexicanos,
Viva Mexico!" in the city of Dolores in
Guanajuato State was what really set things off.
The cry (El Grito) is shouted every year at
midnight on September 15 in the central plazas
of cities around Mexico; Mexico’s president does
the honors from the balcony of the Presidential
Palace in Mexico City.
H–Miguel Hidalgo (1753-1811): before the
historic moment when his voice cried out
“Mexicanos, Viva Mexico!” to demand Mexico’s
independence from the Spanish crown, Miguel
Hidalgo was an old priest from a parish in the
small town of Dolores, Guanajuato. His radical
ideas led him to join forces with a group of
liberals, including Ignacio Allende, Juan Aldama
and Mariano Abasolo, who planned an overthrow of
Spanish rule for October 1810, a date later
moved up to September 16, 1810 because they were
discovered. In 1811 Hidalgo was sentenced and
shot to death, but his fight was not in vain, as
Mexico gained its independence on September 21,
1821.
I–Agustin de Iturbide (1783-1824):
Iturbide, the revolutionist and emperor of
Mexico (1822–23), was born in the city of
Valladolid (known today as Morelia) of a Spanish
father and a Mexican mother. Though Iturbide
claimed his entire life that his mother was a
creole (Mexican-born but of pure Spanish
descent), the rumor persisted that she had
Indian blood. An officer in the royalist army,
he was sympathetic to independence. In 1820,
Iturbide was commissioned by Viceroy Apodaca to
lead royalist troops against Vicente Guerrero.
In 1823, Iturbide was forced to abdicate and go
into exile in Europe. Congress decreed him a
traitor and an outlaw, forbidding his reentry
into Mexico. Iturbide, ignorant of the decree,
sailed back to Mexico in 1824, where he was
captured, tried and shot. Iturbide has been
regarded by conservatives as the champion of
Mexican independence, more so than Hidalgo or
Morelos y Pavon. In 1838 a conservative
government placed his remains in Mexico City’s
National Cathedral.
J–Benito Juarez (1806-1872): a heroic
figure and referred to as “Mexico’s Lincoln,”
Juarez was born in the village of San Pablo
Gueletao in Oaxaca State, of Zapotec Indian
heritage. His strong inclination towards
politics led him to become a defender of Indian
rights and serve as Oaxaca city councilman
between 1831 and 1833, even before receiving his
law degree. In 1841, he became a civil judge and
after a stint as a federal deputy, he served as
governor of Oaxaca between 1847-52, after which
he became director of his alma mater, the
Institute of Science and Art. In 1853, Juarez,
along with a group of liberal thinkers, was
exiled from Mexico by the dictator Antonio López
de Santa Anna. Juarez moved to New Orleans or a
period from Mexico, along with a group of
liberal thinkers, but returned some years later
to eventually become president of Mexico. Juarez
is most famous for his reforms to separate the
powers of Church and State and remains one of
the most popular and beloved figures in Mexican
history.
K–Enrique Krauze (1947-present): Krauze
is a renowned Mexican writer whose short
biographies of Mexican leaders have sold over a
million copies. In 1997, he published the
internationally acclaimed “Mexico: Biography of
Power - A History of Modern Mexico 1810-1996.”
He served for twenty years as co-editor of the
intellectual journal Vuelta whose editor was
Nobel prizewinner Octavio Paz, and has also
written for the New York Times, Time, Wall
Street Journal, New Republic and other leading
publications. He is now editor-in-chief of the
intellectual monthly magazine Letras Libres and
is a leading advocate of democratic reform in
Mexico.
L–Lopez de Santa Anna, Antonio (1794-1876):
one of Mexico’s most egotistical dictators and
notorious for wild extravagance, betrayal and
lies, Lopez de Santa Anna was born in Xalapa,
Veracruz, and decided early on in his childhood
that we wanted to be a military leader. As an
adult, Lopez de Santa Anna fought in the
royalist army, but later joined Iturbide in the
struggle (after he was offered the title he
desired) that won independence for Mexico. In
February of 1836, Santa Anna led the forces that
overwhelmed the Alamo, and was involved in a
host of other uprisings, losing his leg in the
process. He served as president on several
occasions, emptying the national treasury every
time; and was also exiled on several occasions.
M–Francisco I. Madero: famous liberal
political leader with a foreign education,
Madero denounced President Porfirio Díaz and
headed an armed revolt to overthrow Diaz’s
dictatorship in November of 1910. In a span of
six months, Madero was successful and Díaz was
forced to resign fled to France in exile, while
Madero was elected president in November of
1911. In 1913, Madero was overthrown by his own
general, Victoriano Huerta, and murdered.
N–Nueva España (New Spain): the fall of
the Aztec Empire and capture of its ruler
Cuauhtemoc in 1521 left Spanish conquistador
Hernan Cortez in charge of a vast land known as
Nueva España (New Spain) in 1522. Cortez
promptly founded Mexico City on the ruins of the
majestic Tenochtitlan, building a European-style
colonial capital with the rubble left from Aztec
pyramids, temples and palaces. Soon Cortez
dispatched his lieutenants in every direction to
explore and conquer more territory and search
for riches, while he himself set off south
towards Honduras on an expedition that would
last nearly two years. In 1535, Antonio de
Mendoza was appointed the first of 61 viceroys
who were to rule over Nueva España for the next
three centuries. During Mendoza's 15-year rule
the dimensions of colonial territories continued
to grow, eventually expanding as far south as
Honduras, as far north as modern-day Kansas and
as far east as today's New Orleans. Nueva España
was later divided into regions, including Nueva
Galicia founded in 1548; Nueva Vizcaya in 1562;
Nuevo Leon in 1579; and Nuevo Mexico in 1583.
O–Alvaro Obregon (1880-1928): born in
Sonora, Alvaro Obregon was a schoolteacher and
garbanzo bean farmer turned general and later
president of Mexico. Obregon joined Carranza in
the overthrow of Victoriano Huerta, and was
later a commander against Francisco “Pancho”
Villa and other opponents. An enlightened
leader, Obregon became Carranza’s minister of
war and was elected president twice, but was
assassinated in 1928 by a religious Roman
Catholic fanatic fanatic before taking office.
P–Puebla: founded on April 16, 1531,
Puebla de los Angeles was the only city in New
Spain conceived as a “republic of Spanish
agriculture.” The region was originally
populated by Toltec, Chichimec and Xicalanca
Olmec Indians. Nahua groups arrived in the area
around the 10th century A.D. and by the 15th
century, the Mexica dominated virtually all of
what is now the state. When the Spanish
conquerors arrived, they introduced the famous
Talavera ceramics and regional food, which
resulted in a unique blend of Spanish and Indian
influences. Today, Puebla is known for its
magnificent artisans and unique craftwork, as
well as its optimal location with abundant
natural resources and annual folkloric
manifestations in its temples, convents and
religious schools. But in the history of Mexico,
Puebla is most famous for the Battle of Puebla
against French rule which took place in 1862 —
the reason why Mexicans celebrate “Cinco de
Mayo.”
Q–Andres Quintana Roo (1787-1851): born
in Merida, Yucatan, Quintana Roo was a notable
writer and politician who published articles in
support of Mexico’s independence in several
newspapers, including Seminario Patriota
Americano and El Ilustrador Americano. When
Mexico won its independence, Quintana Roo became
mayor, senator and head of the Supreme Court. He
was later named Secretary of Foreign Relations
and the state that bears his name is home to the
Mexican resort destinations of Cancún and
Cozumel.
R–Revolucion Mexicana (1910): in the
early 20th century, Mexico, suffering the
effects of Porfirio Diaz’s long dictatorship,
was a country marked by poverty, illiteracy and
injustice, with the majority of wealth in the
hands of a few powerful leaders – paving the way
to protest and uprisings by the people. The
Mexican Revolution was initiated by liberalist
leader Francisco Madero and his army in 1910,
who denounced Diaz and successfully overthrew
the dictatorship in a question of months. Madero
was later elected president.
S–Fray Junipero Serra (1713-1784): born
in Spain, Serra arrived to New Spain in 1749, as
a missionary. After the Jesuits were expulsed
from New Spain in 1767, the viceroy Carlos
Francisco de Croix sent Serra to California
where he founded several missions, including San
Fernando and San Diego (1769), San Carlos de
Monterrey (1770), San Luis Obispo (1772), to
name a few.
T–Tlatelolco (Plaza of the Three Cultures):
once a great market precinct in the Aztec
capital city of Tenochtitlan in the 15th
century, Tlatelolco became the site where the
last Aztecs who refused to give up were confined
by the Spanish conquistadors. Now known as the
Plaza de las Tres Culturas, the plaza was
designed by Mario Pani and completed in 1964,
named after the juxtaposition of Aztec, Spanish
and Modern Mestizo architecture in the area. The
site was home to a brutal massacre of students
in 1968 by Mexican authorities.
U–Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico:
founded in 1910, the National Autonomous
University of Mexico is the largest university
in the world, establishing a variety of
reputable educational programs and achieving
significant honors throughout the years. That
same year, Leopoldo Zea, one of the University’s
philosophers, received the Doctorate Honoris
Causa from Universidad Nacional y Capodistriaca
de Atenas – a historical event in education
marking the first time ever a Spanish-speaking
professional was distinguished with such a
degree. It is also home to some of Mexico’s most
popular art movie houses, theaters and concert
halls. The university buildings are decorated in
mosaics, making it worth a visit.
V–Pancho Villa (1878-1923): referred to
as Mexico's Robin Hood, Francisco (“Pancho”)
Villa was the rebel general of the Mexican
Revolution who invaded U.S. territory and led
American soldiers on a wild chase all over the
Mexican countryside for months. Along with
Emiliano Zapata and Francisco Madero, Villa led
peasant armies to victory over the corrupt and
repressive regime of Mexican dictator Porfirio
Diaz. Today, he is remembered as one of the
greatest leaders of the most important military
campaigns of the constitutionalist revolution,
in which his troops were victorious as far south
as and Mexico City, as far east as Tampico, and
as far west as Casas Grandes. His Columbus
escapade and subsequent evasion of U.S. troops
are two of the reasons he is often cited as the
only foreign military person to have ever
"successfully" invaded continental U.S.
territory.
W–Henry Lane Wilson (1857-1932): Henry
Lane Wilson was a major conspirator against
Mexican liberator Francisco Madero. From 1909 to
1912, during his post as U.S. ambassador to
Mexico, he openly communicated his support for
Dictator Porfirio Diaz and his contempt for
Madero – two common bonds with General
Victoriano Huerta. In the following years,
Wilson became an un-indicted co-conspirator in a
significant international crime – the plot to
kill Madero. He ordered Huerta, who had been
appointed by Madero as leader of the loyalist
forces, to either banish Madero or put him in an
insane asylum in an effort to "do what is best
for the country." Immediately after Madero's
deposition and murder, Americans believed Henry
Lane Wilson's claim that Madero was "a man of
disordered intellect" and Huerta "the Mexican
Cromwell." Today, justice has prevailed and
Madero shares honors with Juárez and Hidalgo in
the pantheon of Mexican heroes, while Huerta is
universally despised and Wilson is a figure of
scorn on both sides of the border.
X–Xochimilco: located 17 miles south of
Mexico City, the agricultural area of Xochimilco
formerly served as the main water source for
Mexico City up until the 19th century. Today,
the area features well-preserved colonial and
16th-century structures, as well as a network of
canals that date back to the Aztecs who built a
lush habitat in the midst of an adverse
environment. Many Mexican families and tourists
now head to Xochimilco for boating picnics
several times a year. Flat boats, called
trajineras, are traditionally used to cross the
canals for both work and pleasure and smaller
trajineras pull up alongside the larger boats to
offer food, drinks and handicrafts to visiting
tourists.
Y–Yucatan: Yucatan has one of the longest
recorded histories in the Americas. Reliable
archaeological evidence suggests that human
presence in the Yucatan stretches back as early
as 10,000 B.C. Mayan civilization began to
develop in what is now Chiapas and Guatemala in
500 B.C. The Spanish were the first European
explorers in the Yucatan, arriving early in the
16th century. Hernan Cortez crossed the base of
the peninsula in 1525 and by 1549, half the
peninsula was under Spain's domination until the
early 19th century, when Mexico and Central
America won independence. Today, the Yucatan
peninsula is comprised of the Mexican states of
Yucatan, Campeche, Chiapas, Tabasco and Quintana
Roo.
Z–Emiliano Zapata (1879-1919): born in
Anenecuilco, Morelos, Zapata was a sharecropper
and horse trainer who became a sergeant and
later president of the village council. In this
capacity, he campaigned for the restoration of
village lands confiscated by hacienda owners,
using the slogan "Tierra y Libertad," (Earth and
Liberty) and siding with Madero. Between 1910
and 1919, Zapata continued his fight for land
and liberty, rebelling against anyone who
interfered with his Plan of Ayala which called
for the seizure of all foreign owned land, all
land taken from villages, confiscation of
one-third of all land held by "friendly"
hacendados and full confiscation of land owned
by persons opposed to the Plan of Ayala. On
April 10, 1919, Zapata was tricked into a
meeting with one of Carranza's generals who
reportedly wanted to "switch sides." The meeting
was a trap, and Zapata was killed as he arrived
at the meeting. |