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Conservative Party (Mexico)

The Conservative Party (Spanish: Partido Conservador) was one of two major factions in Mexican political thought that emerged in the years after independence, the other being the Liberals.

Conservative Party
Partido Conservador
FounderLucas Alamán
Founded1849 (1849)
Dissolved1867 (1867)
HeadquartersMexico City
IdeologyClericalism
Monarchism
Integralism
Centralism
Nobility
Corporatism
Political positionRight-wing
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Colors  Blue

At various times and under different circumstances they were known as escoceses, centralists, royalists, imperialists, or conservatives, but they tended to be united by the theme of preserving colonial Spanish values, while not being opposed to the economic development and modernization of the nation. Their base of support was the army, the hacendados, and the Catholic Church.[1]

In the constitutional history of Mexico they supported the movement to have a centralized republic as opposed to a federal republic, and produced the Constitution of 1836 and the Constitution of 1838. Certain Conservative intellectuals supported a monarchy for Mexico but between the First Mexican Empire and the Second Mexican Empire such ideas were reduced to a fringe movement.[2] By the time the French launched their invasion of Mexico in 1862, monarchism was insignificant and the French at first struggled to find supporters among the Conservatives in their aims to establish a monarchical client state. Many Conservatives were eventually won over only to be disillusioned with the liberal inclinations of Emperor Maximilian. With the fall of the Second Mexican Empire the conservatives suffered a decisive defeat, and the party ceased to exist.[3]

History

The Plan of Iguala was a triumph for conservative principles, and in fact a reaction against the Trienio liberal in Spain, but monarchism was largely discredited after the First Mexican Empire's fall in 1823. The conservatives suffered another setback with the triumph of federalism during the debates over the drafting of the Constitution of 1824. Their first candidate to reach the presidency was Anastasio Bustamante in 1830, but he both gained and lost the presidency through a coup as most other presidents did during the tumultuous era of the First Mexican Republic. A decade of conservative rule would be inaugurated in 1835 through the establishment of the Centralist Republic of Mexico, but the federalist constitution would be restored in 1846 after the start of the Mexican–American War. La Reforma, and the establishment of the Constitution of 1857 proved to be another triumph for liberal principles especially anti-clericalism, and conservatives lost the War of Reform attempting to abolish the new constitution. During the Second French Intervention, the conservatives would invite Maximilian of Habsburg, to assume the Mexican throne, but the Emperor proved to be a liberal, disillusioning many of his conservative supporters.

Ideology

Centralism

The liberal and conservative parties had not entirely coalesced at the time of the drafting of the Constitution of 1824, and yet the eventual Conservative cause of centralism was at the center of the debates. Ironically, a liberal, Father Mier would lay out the centralist arguments that would eventually form one of the core Conservative principles. Mier argued that the nation needed a strong centralized government to guard against Spanish attempts to reconquer her former colony, and that a federation rather suited a situation in which previously sovereign states were attempting to unite as had happened with the United States. New Spain had never been made up of autonomous provinces. Federation for Mexico, according to Mier would then be an act of separation rather than unification and only lead to internal conflict. [4] The arguments for federation prevailed however, motivated by the long struggle for independence to seek as much autonomy as possible, and an eagerness to reap the salaries that would accompany local bureaucracies.[5]

Conservatives would finally be able to discard the Constitution of 1824 after the overthrow of the liberal presidency of Valentin Gomez Farias in 1832. A newly elected conservative congress began work on a new constitution that would eventually come to be known as the Siete Leyes, which replaced the Mexican states with departments, inaugurating the Centralist Republic of Mexico. The governors of the departments were to be appointed by the central government from among candidates nominated by departmental assemblies. [6]

Another Conservative constitution would be inaugurated in 1843 through the Bases Orgánicas, which continued the departmental system. The departmental governors were once again appointed by the central government from nominees submitted by the departmental assemblies.[7]

Clericalism

Mexico through the Plan of Iguala, gained its independence as a Catholic confessional state, and even the liberal Constitution of 1824 declared the Roman Catholic religion the sole legally permitted religion.

The liberal presidency of Valentin Gomez Farias began a series of anti-clerical measures as early as 1834. The government shut down church schools, assumed the right to make clerical appointments to the church, and shut down monasteries. [8] It was at this point that the government began proposing the nationalization of church lands as well. [9] Conservative backlash led to the fall of the Gomez Farias administration.

The issue of nationalizing church lands was brought up again by Gomez Farias once more who had once again found himself in the presidency during the Mexican-American War. This time Gomez Farias urged the nationalization of church lands as a means of funding the war effort, but the efficacy and prudence of such a measure was questioned by Conservatives, even by moderate liberals.[10] There were clashes in the cabinet over the matter, [11] and another Conservative revolt known as the Revolt of the Polkos once again toppled Gomez Farias.

A final and ill-fated Conservative effort to fight back against the anti-clerical measures of the Liberal Party took place during the pivotal La Reforma period which was inaugurated by the Plan of Ayutla that brought the liberal Juan Alvarez to power. This time it was not only the nationalization of church lands, but the question of religious freedom, and thejurisdiction of canon law over clergy that was brought to fore during the discussions regarding the drafting of the Constitution of 1857. Jose Julian Tornel wrote a pamphlet defending the Catholic Church's management of property and finances against advocates of disestablishment, warning that the private market in both fields would be much less generous to the public.[12] Opponents of religious freedom argued that it would undermine national cohesion.[13] In the end however, the liberal measures triumphed, church properties not related to religious functions were nationalized, priests remained under the jurisdiction of canon law only in non-civil cases, and for the first time a Mexican Constitution did not declare Catholicism as the state religion.

Conservative backlash would trigger the Reform War, and it was during the war that the liberal president Benito Juarez went much further than the earlier reform measures by nationalizing all the remaining church properties in order to fund the war effort. The Conservatives would eventually lose the war in 1860, and the liberal separation of church and state remained entrenched.

The Military ‘Fuero’

In the Hispanic legal tradition, a fuero is a legal privilege in general and even in contemporary times it is still the term used to refer to legal immunity enjoyed by legislators and other statesmen. The fuero of the Conservative slogan ‘religion y fueros’ referred to a specific legal military privelage that amounted to a separate legal system for Mexican soldiers.

The fuero system in Mexico dated back to the colonial era, and historian Lyle McAlister writes that “the [fuero] rendered [the army] virtually immune from civil authority”.[14]

The efforts of the liberal president Valentin Gomez Farias to abolish the fuero a system contributed to the uprisings against his government.[15]

In 1852, under the Conservative presidency of Santa Anna, there were some efforts to moderately reform the fuero system. Under Minister of War, and future Conservative president of Mexico, Manuel Robles Pezuela, there were discussions to confine the fuero to military related criminal matters.[16]

Liberal efforts to abolish the fuero system through the Ley Juárez later integrated into the Constitution of 1857, further inflamed Conservative opposition and eventually helped trigger the Reform War, which the Conservatives ended up losing, effectively putting the matter to rest.

Corporatism

Corporatism is the principle that the legislative power of a nation ought to include representatives from bodies or corporations of various segments or classes in society.

The Constitution of 1843, formally known as the Bases Orgánicas took into account such principles, because while it established a chamber of deputies representing geographic districts, it also established a senate “composed of 63 members, one third from the industrial classes, including merchants”[17]

When the Conservative Mariano Paredes overthrew the liberal president Jose Joaquin Herrera at the end of 1845, he arranged for a new congress to be elected also taking into account corporatist principles. “Congress was to be composed of 160 deputies, representing the following nine classes, namely: real estate owners and agriculturists; merchants; miners; manufacturers; literary professions; magistracy; public functionaries; clergy; and the army.”[18]

Monarchism

Certain conservative intellectuals would support the establishment of a monarchy, and the Conservative Party would eventually collaborate with the French to establish the Second Mexican Empire. However, after the fall of the First Mexican Empire, Mexican monarchism was reduced to a fringe movement. A Conservative government was in power when Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada published his monarchist essay in 1840, indeed it was directly addressed to President Anastasio Bustamante, but in response to its publication Estrada found himself facing backlash from both Conservative and Liberal parties, accusations of sedition, and was forced to flee the nation.[19]

In December 1845, the Conservative general Mariano Paredes published a pronunciamiento against the liberal government of the liberal president Jose Joaquin Herrera, ostensibly because the president intended to recognize the independence of Texas, but the pronunciamiento was also publicly perceived as containing monarchist sympathies. [20] Herrera was overthrown and Paredes became president. As the new government announced a plan for constitutional reform, the press began to attack monarchism,[21] and meanwhile the Mexican-American War broke out. Paredes would eventually later declare his loyalty to the republican system for the time being and shifted his focus to the war effort. [22]

The overthrow of the liberal president Mariano Arista in 1850 brought the monarchist statesman Lucas Alaman to the position of Foreign Minister, serving under the Conservative presidency of a restored Santa Anna. The Mexican government now began official efforts at seeking a European candidate for a Mexican throne. Alaman kept his efforts secret from the public and from most of his fellow ministers.[23] The project was completely ended when Santa Anna was overthrown by the liberal Plan of Ayutla in 1855.[24] The monarchical project had been dealt an earlier blow when Alaman himself had died in 1853.

When the French began their invasion of Mexico in 1862, at the behest of certain Mexican monarchist exiles, they found that monarchism no longer existed even among the Conservatives. Most of the Mexicans lobbying for the establishment of a monarchy had been living in Paris for a significant amount of time and lacked awareness of true state of Mexican affairs. [25] After the French invasion began, leading Conservative José Maria Cobos published a manifesto arguing that ‘no one’ supported a ‘foreign monarchy’.[26][27] Conservative ex-president Miguel Miramón also opined that that there was no monarchical party in Mexico.[28] During this time, the official Conservative Party newspaper also endorsed republicanism. [29]

The Spanish commander Juan Prim who had already backed out of France's intervention noted the Mexican opposition faced by the French, arguing that “if the reactionary party wants to fight the French who intend to come to their country with the flag of monarchy, who remains in Mexico with monarchical ideas?”[30].

Some Conservatives had sought French intervention, but only to provide military aid in the aftermath of losing the Reform War, without any attempt to replace the Mexican Republic with a monarchy. Historian Hubert Howe Bancroft writes that “at first they only hoped for aid to restore their strength, without any thought of the European powers entertaining the idea of a monarchy in Mexico. The thought was, most probably, put into their heads by Napoleon III.”[31] Mexican minister to the United States at the time, Matias Romero opined that the Conservatives never would have considered a monarchy "if they had not received, directly or indirectly, the indication of proposing it from the French government. " [32] Mexican historian Francisco Bulnes has concluded that Napoleon made military intervention in favor of the Conservatives conditional upon accepting monarchy. [33] Eventually Conservatives would begin to join the French and the aforementioned ex-president Miramon would even die alongside Emperor Maximilian when he was executed after the fall of the Second Mexican Empire.

Conservatives

Presidents

  • Anastasio Bustamante He was the first conservative president of Mexico,[34] and the leading minister of his first administration was the conservative intellectual Lucas Alaman. During his later rule in the Centralist Republic he nonetheless rejected Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada’s pleas in 1840 to establish a monarchical government, and also wavered a bit from conservative principles when during a coup attempt in 1842, he offered to restore the federal system.
  • Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna While known for repeatedly switching sides, he did have his periods of conservative rule. His overthrow of the liberal Valentin Gomez Farias led to the end of the First Mexican Republic and the establishment of the Centralist Republic of Mexico. His last dictatorship from 1852 to 1853 was also conservative and included official efforts led by Lucas Alaman to seek a foreign monarch for Mexico.
  • Jose Justo Corro He oversaw the publication of the Siete Leyes and was a devout Catholic who succeeded in establishing diplomatic relations with the Holy See.
  • Nicolas Bravo He tried to overthrow the liberal administration of Vicente Guerrero and then served as interim president at times during the Centralist Republic.
  • Francisco Javier Echeverria He came from a business background and believed in centralism as making for more effective fiscal policy.[35]
  • Jose Mariano Salas Overthrew the conservative administration of Mariano Paredes and reestablished the federalist constitution of 1824, yet nonetheless sided with the conservatives during the Reform War and was elected regent during the Second Mexican Empire.
  • Mariano Paredes A military man with aristocratic views,[36] he was one of the very few Mexican presidents to ever express official interest in setting up a monarchy in the country.
  • Valentin Canalizo A puppet rule for Santa Anna during the Centralist Republic, he later abandoned conservative principles when he served as Minister of War under the liberal President Valentin Gomez Farias and supported the administration's aims at nationalizing church property.
  • Felix Zuloaga Overthrew the progressive government of Ignacio Comonfort after the latter had overseen the ratification of the many measures of La Reforma which included a series of anti-clerical laws. He restored the previous legal rights that the church and the army enjoyed and promised to return the church lands that had been nationalized. He then led the conservatives through the first year of the Reform War.
  • Manuel Robles Pezuela A moderate who overthrew the government of Felix Zuloaga in an attempt to end the war through diplomacy and compromise with the liberals.
  • Miguel Miramon A clerical general who played a role in the early revolts against La Reforma before winning a series of important victories during the first year of the Reform War. During the war, Miramon ascended to the presidency and would continue to lead the conservatives until they lost the war in 1860. He went into exile and returned to the country during the Second Mexican Empire, but the liberal Emperor Maximilian sent him again out of the country to diffuse conservative opposition to his rule. As the Empire began to fall Miramon returned to offer his services. After the triumph of the liberals he was executed by firing squad next to the Emperor, and his fellow conservative general Tomas Mejia.

Clergy

 
Father Francisco Javier Miranda
  • Archbishop Antonio de Labastida the Archbishop of Mexico and a staunch opponent of La Reforma which sought to nationalize church properties. He was a member of the Regency of the Mexican Empire during the Second Mexican Empire.
  • Father Francisco Javier Miranda – one of the leaders of the reaction against La Reforma. He found himself exiled during the liberal presidency of Juan Alvarez but came back disguised and became one of president Ignacio Comonfort’s fiercest enemies. Miranda led one of the conservative revolts in the initial stages of the Reform War[37] During the period of the Second Mexican Empire, he would form part of the commission that travelled to Europe to offer the crown of Mexico the Maximilian of Habsburg.
  • José Sebastián Segura priest, mining engineer, translator, poet,[38] and conservative[39] writer.
  • Manuel de San Juan Crisóstomo Nájera[40] priest, linguist of Mexico's native languages, and educator who also contributed to Lucas Alaman's monarchist newspapers El Tiempo and El Universal. After Nájera's death, Alaman would write a biographical essay on him.
  • Basilio Arrillaga[41] Jesuit priest, deputy to the Spanish Cortes, deputy to the Mexican congress, and rector of the Colegio Carolino in Puebla. He was a staunch opponent of anti-clericalism.
  • José Mariano Dávila y Arrillaga physician, priest, and historian of the Jesuits.

Statesmen

 
Rafael Martínez de la Torre
  • Manuel Diez de Bonilla Was the Mexican minister plenipotentiary to the Holy See and to Colombia in the 1830s. He contributed to Lucas Alamán's first monarchist newspaper, El Tiempo [42] and supported the conservatives during the Reform War.
  • Jose Hidalgo Monarchist diplomat who along with Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada sought to find support in Europe for the establishment of a monarchy in Mexico. He formed a part of the commission which traveled to Europe to invite Maximilian to accept the Mexican throne. After the fall of the Second Mexican Empire, he lived in Paris writing novels and a book reflecting on the Mexican monarchical experiment.
  • Rafael Martínez de la Torre conservative lawyer, regidor of the Mexico City ayuntamiento, and deputy to congress who defended Emperor Maximilian during his trial after the emperor was captured by the liberal government.
  • José Bernardo Couto congressional deputy, member of the council of state, and jurist who sided with the conservatives once the War of Reform broke out.
  • Joaquín Velázquez de León coming from a mining background, de Leon was a minister under Santa Anna's last dictatorship, and later became a supporter and minister of the Second Mexican Empire. He was among the men who took part in the commission that travelled to Miramare Castle in order to offer the crown of Mexico to Maximilian of Habsburg.
  • José Hilario Elguero y Guisasola Was minister of government under President Felix Zuloaga as a member of the Junta Superior which organized the Second Mexican Empire.
  • Carlos María de Bustamante Activist for Mexican Independence who later became an advocate of centralism and served as a member in the Supremo Poder Conservador. Nonetheless, openly opposed monarchy in the wake of the publication of Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada's essay advocating for such a government in 1840.
  • José Hipólito Odoardo A prosecutor for the Real Audiencia of Mexico under Spain who later served as president of the newly established Mexican congress. He was also a Bourbonist, a monarchist during the initial stages of Mexican Independence, who advocated for a member of the Spanish Royal Family to assume a newly established Mexican throne.
  • Tomás Murphy y Alegría A Veracruz-born merchant, secretary of commerce, and minister plenipotentiary to Austria who supported the conservatives and later the Second Mexican Empire and considered the liberals to be tools of the United States.
  • Crispiniano del Castillo Senator, jurist, and supporter of the Second Mexican Empire.

Military

  • Tomas Mejia Clerical general and a member of the Otomi people, who supported the conservatives during the Reform War and later the Second Mexican Empire. After the triumph of the liberals he was executed by firing squad next to the Emperor, and his fellow conservative general Miguel Miramon.
  • Luis G. Osollo A leading conservative general during the Reform War. He died of typhoid fever before the war had ended.
  • Leonardo Marquez Supported the conservatives during the Reform War and remained at large even after the liberals had won the war. He succeeded in assassinating the liberal statesman Melchor Ocampo and then killed the leading liberal general Santos Degollado who had been sent after Marquez in response. He later supported the Second Mexican Empire and escaped when the Empire fell eventually becoming one of the longest lived imperialists, dying in the early 20th century and having written works defending the Empire and his role within it.
  • Joaquin Orihuela led one of the conservative revolts in the initial stages of the Reform War[43]
  • Refugio Tánori - Sonoran Opata chieftain who was a zealous supporter of the Second Mexican Empire. He was captured by liberal forces and executed, proclaiming his loyalty to Emperor Maximilian before the firing squad.
  • Antonio de Haro y Tamariz Conservative general who later led some of the early revolts against La Reforma.
  • Adrián Woll A Franco-Mexican and former Napoleonic soldier who fought for Mexican Independence as a mercenary and then remained in the country. He joined the Mexican military and served as governor of Tamaulipas. He fought on the side of the conservatives during the Reform War and he supported the Second Mexican Empire, being amongst the delegates who travelled to Miramare Castle in order to offer the crown of Mexico to Maximilian of Habsburg.
  • Juan Almonte Son of Independence War Hero Jose Maria Morelos, veteran of Mexico's many early conflicts including the Texas Revolution during which he was present at the Battle of the Alamo. He was initially staunchly opposed to monarchy when Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada published his monarchist essay in 1840, but later became one of the key figures in the establishment of the Second Mexican Empire.

Writers

 
José María Roa Bárcena
  • Lucas Alaman Writer, historian, scientist, businessman, and statesman, Alaman was the preeminent conservative Mexican intellectual up until his death in 1853. He served as a minister within multiple conservative administrations. He wrote a four volume history of Mexico and edited newspapers advocating for the establishment of a monarchy in Mexico.
  • Francisco de Paula Arrangoiz Leading monarchist and historian who played a role in the establishment of the Second Mexican Empire even serving as a foreign minister under it and later grew disillusioned with Emperor Maximilian's liberal views. Arrangoiz also wrote a history of Mexico which covered the period from the start of the Mexican War of Independence to the fall of the Second Mexican Empire.
  • Ignacio Aguilar y Marocho Conservative journalist who also formed a part of the commission which traveled to Miramare Castle to invite Maximilian to accept the Mexican throne.
  • Rafael Rafael He was one of the publishers of El Universal, a newspaper edited by Lucas Alaman in the 1850s advocating for the establishment of a monarchy in Mexico.
  • José Julián Tornel, brother of General José María Tornel, who wrote a pamphlet during La Reforma, defending the Catholic Church's management of property and finances against advocates of disestablishment, warning that the private market in both fields would be much less generous to the public.[44]
  • Faustino Galicia Chimalpopoca lawyer and Nahuatl scholar, who defended the importance of religion in Mexican life, litigated in favor of Mexico's indigenous communities against the liberal reform laws, and became one of Emperor Maximilian's inner circle, serving as his interpreter and tutor in the Nahuatl language.
  • Teodosio Lares Lawyer who played governing roles in Santa Anna's last dictatorship and during the Second Mexican Empire. He was a member of the Junta Superior which organized the Second Mexican Empire. He was also the Minister of Justice and President of the Council of Ministers during this time. As the Empire began to falter he voted against Maximilian's abdication during the council of Orizaba. He published books on pedagogy and psychology.
  • Alejandro Arango y Escandón Lawyer, poet, librarian and director of the Mexican Academy of Language. He was part of the Assembly of Notables which organized the Empire and later formed a part of the consultative committee on financial affairs for the Empire. Founded La Sociedad Católica a Catholic lay organization in 1868.
  • José María Roa Bárcena Poet, novelist, and historian who supported the Second Mexican Empire formed part of the Assembly of Notables and later grew disillusioned with Emperor Maximilian's liberal inclinations.
  • Francisco Manuel Sánchez de Tagle Poet and statesman who wrote for Lucas Alaman's first monarchist newspaper El Tiempo. During the constitutional convention that oversaw the transition of the nation to the Centralist Republic of Mexico he advocated the establishment of a fourth branch of government, the Supreme Moderating Power, an idea which eventually would be integrated into the Siete Leyes. He contributed to Lucas Alamán's first monarchist newspaper, El Tiempo.
  • Vicente Segura Arguelles Conservative journalist and editor who supporter the conservatives during the War of Reform and was executed by the triumphant liberal armies.
  • José Joaquín Pesado Writer, journalist, poet, and professor of philosophy.
  • Manuel Carpio Poet, philosopher, writer, physician who also served as a local deputy for the conservatives in the Vera Cruz legislature.
  • José María Gutiérrez de Estrada A Yucatecan landowner who in 1840 after the Federalist Revolt of 1840 led to devastating fighting at the capital, published an essay arguing that after two decades of chaos, the Republic had failed and that Mexico ought to seek to invite a European prince to found a Mexican monarchy. He was among the delegates who travelled to Miramare Castle in order to offer the crown of Mexico to Maximilian of Habsburg in 1864.
  • José Miguel Guridi y Alcocer Philosopher, theologian, poet, and writer who was also a Bourbonist, a monarchist during the initial stages of Mexican Independence, who advocated for a member of the Spanish Royal Family to assume a newly established Mexican throne. Later he became an advocate of centralism.
  • José Dolores Ulibarri one of the editors of Lucas Alamán's first monarchist newspaper, El Tiempo.

See also

References

  1. ^ Fehrenbach, T.R. (1995). Fire and Blood: A History of Mexico. Da Capo Press. p. 229. ISBN 9781497609730.
  2. ^ Sanders, Frank Joseph (1967). Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico. University of Arizona. p. 282.
  3. ^ Figueroa Esquer Raúl; "El tiempo eje de México, 1855–1867." En Estudios. Filosofía, historia, letras, México ITAM, 2012. pp 23-49
  4. ^ Priestly, Joseph (1864). The Mexican Nation: A History. p. 261.
  5. ^ Priestly, Joseph (1864). The Mexican Nation: A History. p. 263.
  6. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1879). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 145.
  7. ^ Noll, Arthur Howard (1903). From Empire to Republic. A.C. Mclurg & Company. p. 143.
  8. ^ Meyer, Michael (1979). The Course of Mexican History. Oxford University Press. p. 327.
  9. ^ Zamacois, Niceto (1880). Historia de Mexico Tomo XII (in Spanish). JF Parres. p. 39.
  10. ^ Zamacois, Niceto (1880). Historia de Mexico Tomo XII (in Spanish). JF Parres. pp. 554–555.
  11. ^ Zamacois, Niceto (1880). Historia de Mexico Tomo XII (in Spanish). JF Parres. pp. 565–566.
  12. ^ Zamacois, Niceto (1880). Historia de Mexico:Tomo XV. J.F. Parres y Comp. pp. 279–281.
  13. ^ Fehrenbach, T.R. (1995). Fire and Blood: A History of Mexico. Da Capo Press. p. 415.
  14. ^ Fowler, Will (1996). Military Political Identity and Reformism in Independent Mexico An analysis of the Memorias de Guerra (1821-1855). London: University of London Institute of Latin American Studies. p. 21.
  15. ^ Fowler, Will (1996). Military Political Identity and Reformism in Independent Mexico An analysis of the Memorias de Guerra (1821-1855). London: University of London Institute of Latin American Studies. p. 21.
  16. ^ Fowler, Will (1996). Military Political Identity and Reformism in Independent Mexico An analysis of the Memorias de Guerra (1821-1855). London: University of London Institute of Latin American Studies. p. 22.
  17. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1879). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 256.
  18. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1879). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 295.
  19. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 224.
  20. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 292.
  21. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. pp. 295–296.
  22. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 296.
  23. ^ Zamacois, Niceto (1880). Historia de Mexico Tomo XIII (PDF) (in Spanish). JF Parres. p. 672.
  24. ^ Sanders, Frank Joseph (1967). Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico. University of Arizona. pp. 229–233.
  25. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1888). History of Mexico Volume VI 1861-1887. pp. 94–95.
  26. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1888). History of Mexico Volume VI 1861-1887. pp. 93–94.
  27. ^ Sanders, Frank Joseph (1967). Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico. University of Arizona. p. 279.
  28. ^ Sanders, Frank Joseph (1967). Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico. University of Arizona. p. 278.
  29. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1888). History of Mexico Volume VI 1861-1887. pp. 93–94.
  30. ^ Sanders, Frank Joseph (1967). Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico. University of Arizona. pp. 278–279.
  31. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1888). History of Mexico Volume VI 1861 1887. p. 93.
  32. ^ Sanders, Frank Joseph (1967). Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico. University of Arizona. p. 280.
  33. ^ Bulnes, Francisco (1904). El Verdadero Juarez y la Verdad Sobre La Intervencion Y El Imperio (in Spanish). p. 17.
  34. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1879). History of Mexico. Vol. V: 1824–1861. p. 102.
  35. ^ Rivera Cambas, Manuel (1873). Los Gobernantes de Mexico: Tomo II (in Spanish). J.M. Aguilar Cruz. p. 239.
  36. ^ Costeloe, Michael P. "Mariano Paredes y Arrillaga" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture. Vol. 4, p. 312. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  37. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1879). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 700.
  38. ^ Antología de Poetas Hispano-americanos Tomo I: MÉXICO Y AMÉRICA CENTRAL. Real Academia Española. 1893. p. 390.
  39. ^ Perales Ojeda, Alicia (29 October 2000). "Asociaciones de la corriente literaria del romanticismo". Enciclopedia de la literatura en Mexico (in Spanish). Fundación para las Letras Mexicanas.
  40. ^ Noriega, Alfonso (1972). El pensamiento conservador y el conservadurismo mexicano: Tomo I. p. 90.
  41. ^ Ludlow, Leonor (2002). Los secretarios de hacienda y sus proyectos, 1821-1933: I. p. 318.
  42. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1879). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 295.
  43. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1879). History of Mexico volume V: 1824-1861. p. 700.
  44. ^ Zamacois, Niceto (1880). Historia de Mexico:Tomo XV. J.F. Parres y Comp. pp. 279–281.

conservative, party, mexico, conservative, party, spanish, partido, conservador, major, factions, mexican, political, thought, that, emerged, years, after, independence, other, being, liberals, conservative, party, partido, conservadorfounderlucas, alamánfound. The Conservative Party Spanish Partido Conservador was one of two major factions in Mexican political thought that emerged in the years after independence the other being the Liberals Conservative Party Partido ConservadorFounderLucas AlamanFounded1849 1849 Dissolved1867 1867 HeadquartersMexico CityIdeologyClericalismMonarchismIntegralismCentralismNobilityCorporatismPolitical positionRight wingReligionRoman CatholicismColors BluePolitics of MexicoPolitical partiesElectionsAt various times and under different circumstances they were known as escoceses centralists royalists imperialists or conservatives but they tended to be united by the theme of preserving colonial Spanish values while not being opposed to the economic development and modernization of the nation Their base of support was the army the hacendados and the Catholic Church 1 In the constitutional history of Mexico they supported the movement to have a centralized republic as opposed to a federal republic and produced the Constitution of 1836 and the Constitution of 1838 Certain Conservative intellectuals supported a monarchy for Mexico but between the First Mexican Empire and the Second Mexican Empire such ideas were reduced to a fringe movement 2 By the time the French launched their invasion of Mexico in 1862 monarchism was insignificant and the French at first struggled to find supporters among the Conservatives in their aims to establish a monarchical client state Many Conservatives were eventually won over only to be disillusioned with the liberal inclinations of Emperor Maximilian With the fall of the Second Mexican Empire the conservatives suffered a decisive defeat and the party ceased to exist 3 Contents 1 History 2 Ideology 2 1 Centralism 2 2 Clericalism 2 3 The Military Fuero 2 4 Corporatism 2 5 Monarchism 3 Conservatives 3 1 Presidents 3 2 Clergy 3 3 Statesmen 3 4 Military 3 5 Writers 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory EditThe Plan of Iguala was a triumph for conservative principles and in fact a reaction against the Trienio liberal in Spain but monarchism was largely discredited after the First Mexican Empire s fall in 1823 The conservatives suffered another setback with the triumph of federalism during the debates over the drafting of the Constitution of 1824 Their first candidate to reach the presidency was Anastasio Bustamante in 1830 but he both gained and lost the presidency through a coup as most other presidents did during the tumultuous era of the First Mexican Republic A decade of conservative rule would be inaugurated in 1835 through the establishment of the Centralist Republic of Mexico but the federalist constitution would be restored in 1846 after the start of the Mexican American War La Reforma and the establishment of the Constitution of 1857 proved to be another triumph for liberal principles especially anti clericalism and conservatives lost the War of Reform attempting to abolish the new constitution During the Second French Intervention the conservatives would invite Maximilian of Habsburg to assume the Mexican throne but the Emperor proved to be a liberal disillusioning many of his conservative supporters Ideology EditCentralism Edit The liberal and conservative parties had not entirely coalesced at the time of the drafting of the Constitution of 1824 and yet the eventual Conservative cause of centralism was at the center of the debates Ironically a liberal Father Mier would lay out the centralist arguments that would eventually form one of the core Conservative principles Mier argued that the nation needed a strong centralized government to guard against Spanish attempts to reconquer her former colony and that a federation rather suited a situation in which previously sovereign states were attempting to unite as had happened with the United States New Spain had never been made up of autonomous provinces Federation for Mexico according to Mier would then be an act of separation rather than unification and only lead to internal conflict 4 The arguments for federation prevailed however motivated by the long struggle for independence to seek as much autonomy as possible and an eagerness to reap the salaries that would accompany local bureaucracies 5 Conservatives would finally be able to discard the Constitution of 1824 after the overthrow of the liberal presidency of Valentin Gomez Farias in 1832 A newly elected conservative congress began work on a new constitution that would eventually come to be known as the Siete Leyes which replaced the Mexican states with departments inaugurating the Centralist Republic of Mexico The governors of the departments were to be appointed by the central government from among candidates nominated by departmental assemblies 6 Another Conservative constitution would be inaugurated in 1843 through the Bases Organicas which continued the departmental system The departmental governors were once again appointed by the central government from nominees submitted by the departmental assemblies 7 Clericalism Edit Mexico through the Plan of Iguala gained its independence as a Catholic confessional state and even the liberal Constitution of 1824 declared the Roman Catholic religion the sole legally permitted religion The liberal presidency of Valentin Gomez Farias began a series of anti clerical measures as early as 1834 The government shut down church schools assumed the right to make clerical appointments to the church and shut down monasteries 8 It was at this point that the government began proposing the nationalization of church lands as well 9 Conservative backlash led to the fall of the Gomez Farias administration The issue of nationalizing church lands was brought up again by Gomez Farias once more who had once again found himself in the presidency during the Mexican American War This time Gomez Farias urged the nationalization of church lands as a means of funding the war effort but the efficacy and prudence of such a measure was questioned by Conservatives even by moderate liberals 10 There were clashes in the cabinet over the matter 11 and another Conservative revolt known as the Revolt of the Polkos once again toppled Gomez Farias A final and ill fated Conservative effort to fight back against the anti clerical measures of the Liberal Party took place during the pivotal La Reforma period which was inaugurated by the Plan of Ayutla that brought the liberal Juan Alvarez to power This time it was not only the nationalization of church lands but the question of religious freedom and thejurisdiction of canon law over clergy that was brought to fore during the discussions regarding the drafting of the Constitution of 1857 Jose Julian Tornel wrote a pamphlet defending the Catholic Church s management of property and finances against advocates of disestablishment warning that the private market in both fields would be much less generous to the public 12 Opponents of religious freedom argued that it would undermine national cohesion 13 In the end however the liberal measures triumphed church properties not related to religious functions were nationalized priests remained under the jurisdiction of canon law only in non civil cases and for the first time a Mexican Constitution did not declare Catholicism as the state religion Conservative backlash would trigger the Reform War and it was during the war that the liberal president Benito Juarez went much further than the earlier reform measures by nationalizing all the remaining church properties in order to fund the war effort The Conservatives would eventually lose the war in 1860 and the liberal separation of church and state remained entrenched The Military Fuero Edit In the Hispanic legal tradition a fuero is a legal privilege in general and even in contemporary times it is still the term used to refer to legal immunity enjoyed by legislators and other statesmen The fuero of the Conservative slogan religion y fueros referred to a specific legal military privelage that amounted to a separate legal system for Mexican soldiers The fuero system in Mexico dated back to the colonial era and historian Lyle McAlister writes that the fuero rendered the army virtually immune from civil authority 14 The efforts of the liberal president Valentin Gomez Farias to abolish the fuero a system contributed to the uprisings against his government 15 In 1852 under the Conservative presidency of Santa Anna there were some efforts to moderately reform the fuero system Under Minister of War and future Conservative president of Mexico Manuel Robles Pezuela there were discussions to confine the fuero to military related criminal matters 16 Liberal efforts to abolish the fuero system through the Ley Juarez later integrated into the Constitution of 1857 further inflamed Conservative opposition and eventually helped trigger the Reform War which the Conservatives ended up losing effectively putting the matter to rest Corporatism Edit Corporatism is the principle that the legislative power of a nation ought to include representatives from bodies or corporations of various segments or classes in society The Constitution of 1843 formally known as the Bases Organicas took into account such principles because while it established a chamber of deputies representing geographic districts it also established a senate composed of 63 members one third from the industrial classes including merchants 17 When the Conservative Mariano Paredes overthrew the liberal president Jose Joaquin Herrera at the end of 1845 he arranged for a new congress to be elected also taking into account corporatist principles Congress was to be composed of 160 deputies representing the following nine classes namely real estate owners and agriculturists merchants miners manufacturers literary professions magistracy public functionaries clergy and the army 18 Monarchism Edit Certain conservative intellectuals would support the establishment of a monarchy and the Conservative Party would eventually collaborate with the French to establish the Second Mexican Empire However after the fall of the First Mexican Empire Mexican monarchism was reduced to a fringe movement A Conservative government was in power when Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada published his monarchist essay in 1840 indeed it was directly addressed to President Anastasio Bustamante but in response to its publication Estrada found himself facing backlash from both Conservative and Liberal parties accusations of sedition and was forced to flee the nation 19 In December 1845 the Conservative general Mariano Paredes published a pronunciamiento against the liberal government of the liberal president Jose Joaquin Herrera ostensibly because the president intended to recognize the independence of Texas but the pronunciamiento was also publicly perceived as containing monarchist sympathies 20 Herrera was overthrown and Paredes became president As the new government announced a plan for constitutional reform the press began to attack monarchism 21 and meanwhile the Mexican American War broke out Paredes would eventually later declare his loyalty to the republican system for the time being and shifted his focus to the war effort 22 The overthrow of the liberal president Mariano Arista in 1850 brought the monarchist statesman Lucas Alaman to the position of Foreign Minister serving under the Conservative presidency of a restored Santa Anna The Mexican government now began official efforts at seeking a European candidate for a Mexican throne Alaman kept his efforts secret from the public and from most of his fellow ministers 23 The project was completely ended when Santa Anna was overthrown by the liberal Plan of Ayutla in 1855 24 The monarchical project had been dealt an earlier blow when Alaman himself had died in 1853 When the French began their invasion of Mexico in 1862 at the behest of certain Mexican monarchist exiles they found that monarchism no longer existed even among the Conservatives Most of the Mexicans lobbying for the establishment of a monarchy had been living in Paris for a significant amount of time and lacked awareness of true state of Mexican affairs 25 After the French invasion began leading Conservative Jose Maria Cobos published a manifesto arguing that no one supported a foreign monarchy 26 27 Conservative ex president Miguel Miramon also opined that that there was no monarchical party in Mexico 28 During this time the official Conservative Party newspaper also endorsed republicanism 29 The Spanish commander Juan Prim who had already backed out of France s intervention noted the Mexican opposition faced by the French arguing that if the reactionary party wants to fight the French who intend to come to their country with the flag of monarchy who remains in Mexico with monarchical ideas 30 Some Conservatives had sought French intervention but only to provide military aid in the aftermath of losing the Reform War without any attempt to replace the Mexican Republic with a monarchy Historian Hubert Howe Bancroft writes that at first they only hoped for aid to restore their strength without any thought of the European powers entertaining the idea of a monarchy in Mexico The thought was most probably put into their heads by Napoleon III 31 Mexican minister to the United States at the time Matias Romero opined that the Conservatives never would have considered a monarchy if they had not received directly or indirectly the indication of proposing it from the French government 32 Mexican historian Francisco Bulnes has concluded that Napoleon made military intervention in favor of the Conservatives conditional upon accepting monarchy 33 Eventually Conservatives would begin to join the French and the aforementioned ex president Miramon would even die alongside Emperor Maximilian when he was executed after the fall of the Second Mexican Empire Conservatives EditPresidents Edit Mariano Paredes Anastasio Bustamante He was the first conservative president of Mexico 34 and the leading minister of his first administration was the conservative intellectual Lucas Alaman During his later rule in the Centralist Republic he nonetheless rejected Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada s pleas in 1840 to establish a monarchical government and also wavered a bit from conservative principles when during a coup attempt in 1842 he offered to restore the federal system Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna While known for repeatedly switching sides he did have his periods of conservative rule His overthrow of the liberal Valentin Gomez Farias led to the end of the First Mexican Republic and the establishment of the Centralist Republic of Mexico His last dictatorship from 1852 to 1853 was also conservative and included official efforts led by Lucas Alaman to seek a foreign monarch for Mexico Jose Justo Corro He oversaw the publication of the Siete Leyes and was a devout Catholic who succeeded in establishing diplomatic relations with the Holy See Nicolas Bravo He tried to overthrow the liberal administration of Vicente Guerrero and then served as interim president at times during the Centralist Republic Francisco Javier Echeverria He came from a business background and believed in centralism as making for more effective fiscal policy 35 Jose Mariano Salas Overthrew the conservative administration of Mariano Paredes and reestablished the federalist constitution of 1824 yet nonetheless sided with the conservatives during the Reform War and was elected regent during the Second Mexican Empire Mariano Paredes A military man with aristocratic views 36 he was one of the very few Mexican presidents to ever express official interest in setting up a monarchy in the country Valentin Canalizo A puppet rule for Santa Anna during the Centralist Republic he later abandoned conservative principles when he served as Minister of War under the liberal President Valentin Gomez Farias and supported the administration s aims at nationalizing church property Felix Zuloaga Overthrew the progressive government of Ignacio Comonfort after the latter had overseen the ratification of the many measures of La Reforma which included a series of anti clerical laws He restored the previous legal rights that the church and the army enjoyed and promised to return the church lands that had been nationalized He then led the conservatives through the first year of the Reform War Manuel Robles Pezuela A moderate who overthrew the government of Felix Zuloaga in an attempt to end the war through diplomacy and compromise with the liberals Miguel Miramon A clerical general who played a role in the early revolts against La Reforma before winning a series of important victories during the first year of the Reform War During the war Miramon ascended to the presidency and would continue to lead the conservatives until they lost the war in 1860 He went into exile and returned to the country during the Second Mexican Empire but the liberal Emperor Maximilian sent him again out of the country to diffuse conservative opposition to his rule As the Empire began to fall Miramon returned to offer his services After the triumph of the liberals he was executed by firing squad next to the Emperor and his fellow conservative general Tomas Mejia Clergy Edit Father Francisco Javier Miranda Archbishop Antonio de Labastida the Archbishop of Mexico and a staunch opponent of La Reforma which sought to nationalize church properties He was a member of the Regency of the Mexican Empire during the Second Mexican Empire Father Francisco Javier Miranda one of the leaders of the reaction against La Reforma He found himself exiled during the liberal presidency of Juan Alvarez but came back disguised and became one of president Ignacio Comonfort s fiercest enemies Miranda led one of the conservative revolts in the initial stages of the Reform War 37 During the period of the Second Mexican Empire he would form part of the commission that travelled to Europe to offer the crown of Mexico the Maximilian of Habsburg Jose Sebastian Segura priest mining engineer translator poet 38 and conservative 39 writer Manuel de San Juan Crisostomo Najera 40 priest linguist of Mexico s native languages and educator who also contributed to Lucas Alaman s monarchist newspapers El Tiempo and El Universal After Najera s death Alaman would write a biographical essay on him Basilio Arrillaga 41 Jesuit priest deputy to the Spanish Cortes deputy to the Mexican congress and rector of the Colegio Carolino in Puebla He was a staunch opponent of anti clericalism Jose Mariano Davila y Arrillaga physician priest and historian of the Jesuits Statesmen Edit Rafael Martinez de la Torre Manuel Diez de Bonilla Was the Mexican minister plenipotentiary to the Holy See and to Colombia in the 1830s He contributed to Lucas Alaman s first monarchist newspaper El Tiempo 42 and supported the conservatives during the Reform War Jose Hidalgo Monarchist diplomat who along with Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada sought to find support in Europe for the establishment of a monarchy in Mexico He formed a part of the commission which traveled to Europe to invite Maximilian to accept the Mexican throne After the fall of the Second Mexican Empire he lived in Paris writing novels and a book reflecting on the Mexican monarchical experiment Rafael Martinez de la Torre conservative lawyer regidor of the Mexico City ayuntamiento and deputy to congress who defended Emperor Maximilian during his trial after the emperor was captured by the liberal government Jose Bernardo Couto congressional deputy member of the council of state and jurist who sided with the conservatives once the War of Reform broke out Joaquin Velazquez de Leon coming from a mining background de Leon was a minister under Santa Anna s last dictatorship and later became a supporter and minister of the Second Mexican Empire He was among the men who took part in the commission that travelled to Miramare Castle in order to offer the crown of Mexico to Maximilian of Habsburg Jose Hilario Elguero y Guisasola Was minister of government under President Felix Zuloaga as a member of the Junta Superior which organized the Second Mexican Empire Carlos Maria de Bustamante Activist for Mexican Independence who later became an advocate of centralism and served as a member in the Supremo Poder Conservador Nonetheless openly opposed monarchy in the wake of the publication of Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada s essay advocating for such a government in 1840 Jose Hipolito Odoardo A prosecutor for the Real Audiencia of Mexico under Spain who later served as president of the newly established Mexican congress He was also a Bourbonist a monarchist during the initial stages of Mexican Independence who advocated for a member of the Spanish Royal Family to assume a newly established Mexican throne Tomas Murphy y Alegria A Veracruz born merchant secretary of commerce and minister plenipotentiary to Austria who supported the conservatives and later the Second Mexican Empire and considered the liberals to be tools of the United States Crispiniano del Castillo Senator jurist and supporter of the Second Mexican Empire Military Edit Tomas Mejia Tomas Mejia Clerical general and a member of the Otomi people who supported the conservatives during the Reform War and later the Second Mexican Empire After the triumph of the liberals he was executed by firing squad next to the Emperor and his fellow conservative general Miguel Miramon Luis G Osollo A leading conservative general during the Reform War He died of typhoid fever before the war had ended Leonardo Marquez Supported the conservatives during the Reform War and remained at large even after the liberals had won the war He succeeded in assassinating the liberal statesman Melchor Ocampo and then killed the leading liberal general Santos Degollado who had been sent after Marquez in response He later supported the Second Mexican Empire and escaped when the Empire fell eventually becoming one of the longest lived imperialists dying in the early 20th century and having written works defending the Empire and his role within it Joaquin Orihuela led one of the conservative revolts in the initial stages of the Reform War 43 Refugio Tanori Sonoran Opata chieftain who was a zealous supporter of the Second Mexican Empire He was captured by liberal forces and executed proclaiming his loyalty to Emperor Maximilian before the firing squad Antonio de Haro y Tamariz Conservative general who later led some of the early revolts against La Reforma Adrian Woll A Franco Mexican and former Napoleonic soldier who fought for Mexican Independence as a mercenary and then remained in the country He joined the Mexican military and served as governor of Tamaulipas He fought on the side of the conservatives during the Reform War and he supported the Second Mexican Empire being amongst the delegates who travelled to Miramare Castle in order to offer the crown of Mexico to Maximilian of Habsburg Juan Almonte Son of Independence War Hero Jose Maria Morelos veteran of Mexico s many early conflicts including the Texas Revolution during which he was present at the Battle of the Alamo He was initially staunchly opposed to monarchy when Jose Maria Gutierrez Estrada published his monarchist essay in 1840 but later became one of the key figures in the establishment of the Second Mexican Empire Writers Edit Lucas Alaman Jose Maria Roa Barcena Lucas Alaman Writer historian scientist businessman and statesman Alaman was the preeminent conservative Mexican intellectual up until his death in 1853 He served as a minister within multiple conservative administrations He wrote a four volume history of Mexico and edited newspapers advocating for the establishment of a monarchy in Mexico Francisco de Paula Arrangoiz Leading monarchist and historian who played a role in the establishment of the Second Mexican Empire even serving as a foreign minister under it and later grew disillusioned with Emperor Maximilian s liberal views Arrangoiz also wrote a history of Mexico which covered the period from the start of the Mexican War of Independence to the fall of the Second Mexican Empire Ignacio Aguilar y Marocho Conservative journalist who also formed a part of the commission which traveled to Miramare Castle to invite Maximilian to accept the Mexican throne Rafael Rafael He was one of the publishers of El Universal a newspaper edited by Lucas Alaman in the 1850s advocating for the establishment of a monarchy in Mexico Jose Julian Tornel brother of General Jose Maria Tornel who wrote a pamphlet during La Reforma defending the Catholic Church s management of property and finances against advocates of disestablishment warning that the private market in both fields would be much less generous to the public 44 Faustino Galicia Chimalpopoca lawyer and Nahuatl scholar who defended the importance of religion in Mexican life litigated in favor of Mexico s indigenous communities against the liberal reform laws and became one of Emperor Maximilian s inner circle serving as his interpreter and tutor in the Nahuatl language Teodosio Lares Lawyer who played governing roles in Santa Anna s last dictatorship and during the Second Mexican Empire He was a member of the Junta Superior which organized the Second Mexican Empire He was also the Minister of Justice and President of the Council of Ministers during this time As the Empire began to falter he voted against Maximilian s abdication during the council of Orizaba He published books on pedagogy and psychology Alejandro Arango y Escandon Lawyer poet librarian and director of the Mexican Academy of Language He was part of the Assembly of Notables which organized the Empire and later formed a part of the consultative committee on financial affairs for the Empire Founded La Sociedad Catolica a Catholic lay organization in 1868 Jose Maria Roa Barcena Poet novelist and historian who supported the Second Mexican Empire formed part of the Assembly of Notables and later grew disillusioned with Emperor Maximilian s liberal inclinations Francisco Manuel Sanchez de Tagle Poet and statesman who wrote for Lucas Alaman s first monarchist newspaper El Tiempo During the constitutional convention that oversaw the transition of the nation to the Centralist Republic of Mexico he advocated the establishment of a fourth branch of government the Supreme Moderating Power an idea which eventually would be integrated into the Siete Leyes He contributed to Lucas Alaman s first monarchist newspaper El Tiempo Vicente Segura Arguelles Conservative journalist and editor who supporter the conservatives during the War of Reform and was executed by the triumphant liberal armies Jose Joaquin Pesado Writer journalist poet and professor of philosophy Manuel Carpio Poet philosopher writer physician who also served as a local deputy for the conservatives in the Vera Cruz legislature Jose Maria Gutierrez de Estrada A Yucatecan landowner who in 1840 after the Federalist Revolt of 1840 led to devastating fighting at the capital published an essay arguing that after two decades of chaos the Republic had failed and that Mexico ought to seek to invite a European prince to found a Mexican monarchy He was among the delegates who travelled to Miramare Castle in order to offer the crown of Mexico to Maximilian of Habsburg in 1864 Jose Miguel Guridi y Alcocer Philosopher theologian poet and writer who was also a Bourbonist a monarchist during the initial stages of Mexican Independence who advocated for a member of the Spanish Royal Family to assume a newly established Mexican throne Later he became an advocate of centralism Jose Dolores Ulibarri one of the editors of Lucas Alaman s first monarchist newspaper El Tiempo See also EditFirst Mexican Empire Second Mexican Empire National Action Party Mexico References Edit Fehrenbach T R 1995 Fire and Blood A History of Mexico Da Capo Press p 229 ISBN 9781497609730 Sanders Frank Joseph 1967 Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico University of Arizona p 282 Figueroa Esquer Raul El tiempo eje de Mexico 1855 1867 En Estudios Filosofia historia letras Mexico ITAM 2012 pp 23 49 Priestly Joseph 1864 The Mexican Nation A History p 261 Priestly Joseph 1864 The Mexican Nation A History p 263 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1879 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 145 Noll Arthur Howard 1903 From Empire to Republic A C Mclurg amp Company p 143 Meyer Michael 1979 The Course of Mexican History Oxford University Press p 327 Zamacois Niceto 1880 Historia de Mexico Tomo XII in Spanish JF Parres p 39 Zamacois Niceto 1880 Historia de Mexico Tomo XII in Spanish JF Parres pp 554 555 Zamacois Niceto 1880 Historia de Mexico Tomo XII in Spanish JF Parres pp 565 566 Zamacois Niceto 1880 Historia de Mexico Tomo XV J F Parres y Comp pp 279 281 Fehrenbach T R 1995 Fire and Blood A History of Mexico Da Capo Press p 415 Fowler Will 1996 Military Political Identity and Reformism in Independent Mexico An analysis of the Memorias de Guerra 1821 1855 London University of London Institute of Latin American Studies p 21 Fowler Will 1996 Military Political Identity and Reformism in Independent Mexico An analysis of the Memorias de Guerra 1821 1855 London University of London Institute of Latin American Studies p 21 Fowler Will 1996 Military Political Identity and Reformism in Independent Mexico An analysis of the Memorias de Guerra 1821 1855 London University of London Institute of Latin American Studies p 22 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1879 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 256 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1879 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 295 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 224 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 292 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 pp 295 296 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 296 Zamacois Niceto 1880 Historia de Mexico Tomo XIII PDF in Spanish JF Parres p 672 Sanders Frank Joseph 1967 Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico University of Arizona pp 229 233 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1888 History of Mexico Volume VI 1861 1887 pp 94 95 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1888 History of Mexico Volume VI 1861 1887 pp 93 94 Sanders Frank Joseph 1967 Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico University of Arizona p 279 Sanders Frank Joseph 1967 Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico University of Arizona p 278 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1888 History of Mexico Volume VI 1861 1887 pp 93 94 Sanders Frank Joseph 1967 Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico University of Arizona pp 278 279 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1888 History of Mexico Volume VI 1861 1887 p 93 Sanders Frank Joseph 1967 Proposals for Monarchy in Mexico University of Arizona p 280 Bulnes Francisco 1904 El Verdadero Juarez y la Verdad Sobre La Intervencion Y El Imperio in Spanish p 17 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1879 History of Mexico Vol V 1824 1861 p 102 Rivera Cambas Manuel 1873 Los Gobernantes de Mexico Tomo II in Spanish J M Aguilar Cruz p 239 Costeloe Michael P Mariano Paredes y Arrillaga in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture Vol 4 p 312 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1879 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 700 Antologia de Poetas Hispano americanos Tomo I MEXICO Y AMERICA CENTRAL Real Academia Espanola 1893 p 390 Perales Ojeda Alicia 29 October 2000 Asociaciones de la corriente literaria del romanticismo Enciclopedia de la literatura en Mexico in Spanish Fundacion para las Letras Mexicanas Noriega Alfonso 1972 El pensamiento conservador y el conservadurismo mexicano Tomo I p 90 Ludlow Leonor 2002 Los secretarios de hacienda y sus proyectos 1821 1933 I p 318 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1879 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 295 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1879 History of Mexico volume V 1824 1861 p 700 Zamacois Niceto 1880 Historia de Mexico Tomo XV J F Parres y Comp pp 279 281 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conservative Party Mexico amp oldid 1134754556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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