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José María Morelos

José María Teclo Morelos Pérez y Pavón (Spanish: [xoˈse maˈɾi.a ˈteklo moˈɾelos ˈpeɾes i paˈβon] (listen)) (30 September 1765 – 22 December 1815[1]) was a Mexican Catholic priest, statesman and military leader who led the Mexican War of Independence movement, assuming its leadership after the execution of Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla in 1811.

José María Morelos
Depiction of Morelos by unknown Mixtec painter
President of the Supreme Mexican Government
In office
24 October 1814 – 5 November 1815
Preceded byPost established
Succeeded byIgnacio Alas
Chief of the Congress of Anáhuac
In office
15 September 1813 – 24 October 1814
Preceded byPost established
Succeeded byHimself as president under the Constitution of Apatzingan
Member of the Council of Zitacuaro
In office
19 August 1811 – 15 September 1813
Personal details
Born(1765-09-30)30 September 1765
Valladolid, Michoacán, New Spain
Died22 December 1815(1815-12-22) (aged 50)
San Cristóbal Ecatepec, State of México
Resting placeAngel of Independence, Mexico City
ChildrenJuan Nepomuceno Almonte
Alma materUniversidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo
ProfessionArriero, Priest, Military leader, Politician
Signature
Military service
AllegianceMexico
Branch/service Mexican Insurgency
Years of service1810–1815
RankGeneralissimo, Captain General, Colonel
Battles/warsMexican War of Independence

Born in Valladolid, Michoacán, Morelos studied at Colegio de San Nicolás and was appointed priest of Carácuaro in 1799. He joined Miguel Hidalgo's Cry of Dolores, soon becoming an insurgency leader. Aided by local peoples, along with revolutionary leaders Mariano Matamoros and Ignacio López Rayón, Morelos occupied territories in southern and central New Spain, leading the Siege of Cuautla and capturing Acapulco, New Spain's main port in the Pacific Ocean. His campaigns galvanized regional insurgencies against Spanish rule, which made him the royalist army's main rival.

In 1813, Morelos wrote Sentimientos de la Nación, a document influenced by the Constitution of Cádiz where he outlined his program for the Mexican nation. Under his leadership, the Congress of Anáhuac was installed in Chilpancingo, and on 6 November 1813 declared the independence of Mexico. On 22 October 1814, the Constitution of Apatzingán drafted by Congress declared that Mexico would be a Republic.

After a series of defeats, Morelos was captured by the royalist army in Temalaca, Puebla. He was tried by the Inquisition, defrocked as a cleric, and executed by civil authorities in San Cristóbal Ecatepec on 22 December 1815. Morelos is considered a national hero in Mexico, who despite not having a military background became a successful insurgency leader, credited with organizing and bolstering the War of Independence. The Mexican state of Morelos and city of Morelia are named after him.

Early life

 
Birthplace and house of Morelos in Morelia, today a museum.

Morelos was born in Valladolid, since renamed Morelia. Although often portrayed as being of "mixed" or "indigenous" descent, Morelos was classified as a Spaniard (español) in his baptismal register, a system in which the Catholic Church kept separate registers for ethnic affiliation. Although ethnic affiliation was fluid in colonial Spanish America, his family was considered as Spaniard according to the social categories of the time. His paternal family had both Spaniards and Mestizos whereas his maternal family was fully Spanish.[2]

His father was José Manuel Morelos y Robles, a carpenter originally from Zindurio, a village west of Valladolid. His mother was Juana María Guadalupe Pérez Pavón, originally from San Juan Bautista de Apaseo, also near Valladolid. Valladolid was the seat of a bishop and of the government of the colonial Intendency of Valladolid. It was known as the "Garden of the Viceroyalty of New Spain" because of its prosperity.[citation needed]

Through his paternal line, Morelos was related to Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla.[3] Both insurgents shared a common ancestor, Diego Ruiz de Cortés, who was a descendant of the conquistador Hernán Cortés.[3] Hidalgo was the descendant of Ruiz de Cortés through his mother, Ana María Gallaga.[3]

 
Exact birthplace of José María Morelos.

Morelos worked as a muleteer (arriero) in the area where he fought in the insurgency, on the ground experience of the terrain that would be valuable.[4] He is also said to have worked on a ranch rented by his uncle for nearly ten years.[5]

Morelos had ambitions for something more than working with his hands, and assiduously studied; his maternal grandfather was a school teacher.[6] In 1789, he enrolled in the Colegio de San Nicolás Obispo in Valladolid, where Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla was rector.[6] When he was ordained a priest, he, as with many others without connections, had no benefice to guarantee any income as a priest.[6] However, as a secular cleric, he took no vow of poverty and could freely pursue business activities to make a living.[6]

As a priest, he could not marry, but he did form a relationship with at least one woman, Brígida Almonte. He is known to have fathered three children: two sons and a daughter. His first born was Juan Nepomuceno Almonte, who played a significant role in Mexican military history.[7] Lucas Alamán, a fierce nineteenth-century opponent of the insurgency and after independence a conservative politician and historian, asserted that Morelos "fathered various children with anonymous women of the people."[8] This charge of promiscuity might simply be a slur without foundation on the insurgent-priest.[citation needed] At Morelos's trial, the Inquisition accused him of sending his son to the United States. He testified at his trial that "while he had not been completely pristine for a priest, he had not acted in a scandalous manner" and that he had sent his son away for education and for his safety, acknowledging his paternity.[9]

Insurrection against the Spanish monarchy

 
Hidalgo and Morelos, mural in Museo Casa de Morelos
 
José María Morelos by Petronilo Monroy, 1865.

The former rector of the Colegio de San Nicolás Obispo (where Morelos attended seminary), Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla was planning with others for the independence of New Spain from the Spanish empire. About 6:00 a.m. on 16 September 1810, Hidalgo, then the parish priest of Dolores, Guanajuato (since renamed Dolores Hidalgo in his honor), ordered the church bells to be rung, and gathered his congregation. Flanked by Ignacio Allende and Juan Aldama, Hidalgo addressed the people in front of his church, urging them to take up arms, with the Cry of Dolores (El Grito de Dolores, now celebrated every year on 15 September at 11:00 p.m.) that called for armed revolt after the Spanish colonial authorities had discovered the Conspiracy of Querétaro, a clandestine movement seeking Mexican independence. Like Allende and Aldama, Josefa Ortiz de Domínguez, popularly known as La Corregidora, was one of the famous initial supporters of the revolt. Miguel Hidalgo and his followers rose in open rebellion against the Spanish colonial authorities launching what became the Mexican War of Independence.[10]

With the imperial government taken by surprise, operatives took important cities of the Bajío region without an organized response. The insurgency proclaimed Hidalgo captain general of Mexico in Celaya on 21 September. Hidalgo y Costilla advanced to Guanajuato; and on 28 September, the rebels captured the Alhóndiga de Granaditas in battle, killing at least 400 Spaniards who had taken shelter.[11][page needed] Among the dead was the crown's highest official in Guanajuato, Intendant Juan Antonio Riaño, an old friend of Hidalgo y Costilla.[citation needed]

 
The Fort of San Diego in Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico. It was originally built between 1615 and 1617, but an earthquake destroyed it in 1776. It was rebuilt in 1783.

The bishop of Michoacán, Manuel Abad y Queipo, excommunicated the insurgents. Hidalgo y Costilla and his army marched on to Valladolid, where the locals feared that the slaughter of Guanajuato would be repeated, prompting many people to abandon the region, particularly elites. Valladolid was taken peacefully on 17 October 1810.[citation needed]

In Tacámbaro, Hidalgo y Costilla was proclaimed general, and Allende captain general. Hidalgo ordered a rest for his troops in Indaparapeo, where a few minutes before their departure, Morelos, who had read about his excommunication and his triumphs, found him. Morelos had heard of the revolt in October 1810 and determined to join it.[12] Hidalgo asked his former student to recruit troops in the south of the colony and capture the port of Acapulco, the west coast port for the Pacific trade to the Philippines, also a Spanish colony.[13] Unlike Hidalgo, who was a poor tactician leading a huge and undisciplined following, Morelos quickly demonstrated military skills, gathering and training a small core of fighters. He sought allies in the region, and obtained cannons and other war materiel.[13]

Morelos's objectives for the rebellion called for the creation of a republican government that "all Mexican people would participate, the abolition of slavery, and the elimination of divisions between races and ethnicities."[14]

Campaigns

 
Self-portrait of Morelos in 1813
 
Insurgent coinage: Mexico, Oaxaca, 8 Reales 1814, obverse.

Morelos soon showed himself to be a talented strategist, and became one of the greatest revolutionary military commanders of the war. In his first nine months, he won 22 victories, defeating the armies of three Spanish royalist leaders and capturing almost all of what is now the state of Guerrero. In December, he captured Acapulco for the first time, except for the Fort of San Diego. Spanish reinforcements forced him to raise the siege in January. By quick marches, he was able to capture most of the Spanish possessions on the Pacific coast of what are now Michoacán and Guerrero. On 24 May 1811, he occupied Chilpancingo and on 26 May he took Tixtla.

In his second campaign, Morelos divided his army into three groups. The most important engagement of this campaign was at Cuautla. On Christmas Eve 1811 the townspeople welcomed Morelos to the town. The next year his forces were besieged by the Spanish army under general Félix María Calleja del Rey. On 2 May 1812, after 58 days, Morelos broke through the siege, and started his third campaign.

Major victories on this third campaign were at Citlalli on 8 June 1812, Tehuacán on 10 August 1812, Orizaba, Oaxaca and Acapulco. Morelos arrived at Orizaba with 10,000 soldiers on 28 October 1812. The city was defended by 600 Spanish soldiers. Negotiation led to a surrender without bloodshed. He entered Oaxaca in triumph on 25 November 1812. Acapulco fell on 12 April 1813, forcing the Spanish army to take refuge in the Fort of San Diego.

Congress of Chilpancingo

 
A map of the military campaigns of Morelos.
 
Congress of Anahuac the day of the writing of Solemn Act of the Declaration of Independence of Northern America

In 1813, Morelos called the National Constituent Congress of Chilpancingo, composed of representatives of the provinces under his control, to consider a political and social program which he outlined in a document entitled Sentimientos de la Nación (Sentiments of the Nation). The Congress called itself the Congress of Anáhuac, in reference to the Aztecs.[15]

On 31 September 1813, the Congress, with Morelos present, endorsed Sentiments of the Nation. This document declared Mexican independence from Spain, established Catholicism as official religion and created the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government. It declared respect for property and confiscated the productions of the Spanish colonial government. It abolished slavery and racial categories in favor of the title "American" for all native-born individuals. Torture, colonial monopolies and the system of tributes were also abolished. Morelos was offered the title "Generalissimo" with the style of address "Your Highness", but he refused these and asked to be called "Siervo de la Nación" (Servant of the Nation). On 6 November 1813, the Congress declared independence in the Solemn Act of the Declaration of Independence of Northern America.[16]

After several military defeats, the Congress organized a meeting in Apatzingán, and on 22 October promulgated the "Decreto Constitucional para la Libertad de la América Mexicana" (Constitution of Apatzingán).[17] This established a limited executive and a powerful legislature, the opposite of what Morelos had called for. He nevertheless conceded that it was the best he could hope for under the circumstances.

Capture and execution

 
Contemporary engraving depicting the defrocking and degradation of Morelos by church officials before released to civil authorities for execution
 
Execution of Morelos

Shortly thereafter, Morelos began his fourth military campaign, a series of defeats beginning at Valladolid in late 1813. While escorting the new insurgent Congress in November 1815, he was defeated in Temalaca by royalist forces. Morelos and his guard were surrounded; rather than have all taken prisoner, Morelos told his men to each save himself. This left Morelos to be captured alone.[18] As a Catholic priest, the church had jurisdiction for his imprisonment and trial; he was jailed in the Inquisition building in Mexico City.[19] Although Morelos was a huge prize for the royal government, the viceroy decided not to make a public spectacle of his journey of incarceration, but rather slipped him into the capital before dawn.[19]

The royal government had experience with the trial and execution of Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, which was done far from the capital and in rushed fashion; but Morelos's trial was conducted in the capital with the highest officials presiding, with the outcome of a guilty verdict and execution by civil officials. Inquisition officials drew up 23 charges against Morelos, and following proper procedure, Morelos had a defense attorney, José Quiles.[20] He was charged with treason, disloyalty to the crown, and transgressions in his personal life, namely, sending his natural sons to the United States for education.[21]

He was tried and sentenced to death for treason. Morelos was executed by firing squad on 22 December 1815, in San Cristóbal Ecatepec, north of Mexico City in order that his execution not provoke a dangerous public reaction. He was later judged to be reconciled to the church, lifting his excommunication, as he was seen praying on his way to his execution.[22] After his death, his lieutenant, Vicente Guerrero, continued the war for independence.

Legacy

Morelos is considered a national hero of Mexico; the state of Morelos and city of Morelia are named after him. Morelos has been portrayed on the 50-peso note since 1997, and on 1-peso coins during the 1940s, 1970s and 1980s. The Estadio Morelos in Morelia, Puerto Morelos in the state of Quintana Roo, the Morelos Station on the Mexico City Metro, the city of Ecatepec de Morelos in Mexico State where he was executed, Insurgente José María Morelos y Pavón National Park in Michoacán, and the Morelos Satellite from the Communications company Satmex are also named after him. His remains were transferred to the Monument to Independence El Ángel in Mexico City, along with those of other heroes of the insurgency. The Presidential aircraft Boeing 787 TP-01 was named José María Morelos y Pavón.

See also

References

  1. ^ Dates and other biographical information in this article are drawn from Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography 1887–89.
  2. ^ Herrekon, Carlos (19 April 2019). Morelos, Revelaciones y Enigmas. El Colegio de Michooacan. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Castro, Jesús. . vanguardia.com.mx. Archived from the original on 14 February 2013. Retrieved 15 June 2012.
  4. ^ Guedea, "José María Morelos", p. 948
  5. ^ Krauze, Enrique Mexico: Biography of Power. New York: HarperCollins 1997, p. 103.
  6. ^ a b c d Krauze, Mexico: Biography of Power, p. 105.
  7. ^ Guedea, Virginia. "José María Morelos" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997, p. 948.
  8. ^ Krauze, Enrique (1997). Mexico, Biography of Power: A History of Mexico, 1810–1996. New York: HarperCollins. p. 106. ISBN 0-06-016325-9. OCLC 35128211.
  9. ^ Archer, Christon I. "Death's Patriots", p. 78.
  10. ^ Guedea, Virginia (2017), "The Process of Mexican Independence", Revolutions in the Western World 1775–1825, pp. 549–563, doi:10.4324/9781315244174-23, ISBN 978-1315244174, retrieved 8 July 2022
  11. ^ Kirkwood, Burton (2000). History of Mexico. Westport, Connecticut, U.S.: Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-313-30351-7.
  12. ^ Guedea, "José María Morelos" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, 948.
  13. ^ a b Guedea, José María Morelos, p. 948.
  14. ^ Meade, Teresa A. (2010). A History of Modern Latin America: 1800 to the present. Chichester, West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, p. 72.[ISBN missing]
  15. ^ Chang, Arturo (4 September 2021). "Restoring Anáhuac: Indigenous Genealogies and Hemispheric Republicanism in Postcolonial Mexico". American Journal of Political Science: ajps.12660. doi:10.1111/ajps.12660. ISSN 0092-5853. S2CID 239636072.
  16. ^ . 15 March 2008. Archived from the original on 15 March 2008. Retrieved 8 July 2022.
  17. ^ Hamill, Hugh M. Jr. (1 February 1981). "La Constitución de Apatzingán y los creadores del estado mexicano". Hispanic American Historical Review. 61 (1): 186. doi:10.1215/00182168-61.1.186. ISSN 0018-2168.
  18. ^ Christon I. Archer, "Death's Patriots – Celebration, Denunciation, and Memories of Mexico's Independence Heroes: Miguel de Hidalgo, José María Morelos, and Agustín de Iturbide" in Death, Dismemberment, and Memory in Latin America, Lyman L. Johnson, ed. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 2004, p. 76.
  19. ^ a b Archer, "Death's Patriots", p. 76.
  20. ^ Archer, "Death's Patriots", p. 78.
  21. ^ Archer, "Death's Patriots" p. 78.
  22. ^ Gustavo Watson Marron, director of the historical archive of the archdiocese, cited in El Universal, 31 August 2009.

Further reading

  • Archer, Christon I. "Death's Patriots – Celebration, Denunciation, and Memories of Mexico's Independence Heroes: Miguel de Hidalgo, José María Morelos, and Agustín de Iturbide" in Death, Dismemberment, and Memory in Latin America, Lyman L. Johnson, ed. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 2004 pp. 63–104.
  • Guedea, Virginia. "José María Morelos" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997, pp. 948–950.
  • Hamnett, Brian R. Roots of Insurgency: Mexican Regions, 1750–1824. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1986.
  • Lemoine Villacaña, Ernesto. Morelos, su vida revolucionaria a través de sus escritos y de otros testimonios de la época. Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México 1965.
  • Timmons, Wilbert H. Morelos: Priest, Soldier, Statesman of Mexico, revised edition. El Paso: Texas Western College Press 1970.

External links

  Media related to José María Morelos at Wikimedia Commons

josé, maría, morelos, confused, with, josé, maría, morales, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, morelos, second, maternal, family, name, pavón, josé, maría, teclo, morelos, pérez, pavón, spanish, xoˈse, maˈɾi, ˈteklo, moˈɾelos, ˈpeɾes, paˈβon, liste. Not to be confused with Jose Maria Morales In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Morelos and the second or maternal family name is Pavon Jose Maria Teclo Morelos Perez y Pavon Spanish xoˈse maˈɾi a ˈteklo moˈɾelos ˈpeɾes i paˈbon listen 30 September 1765 22 December 1815 1 was a Mexican Catholic priest statesman and military leader who led the Mexican War of Independence movement assuming its leadership after the execution of Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla in 1811 Jose Maria MorelosDepiction of Morelos by unknown Mixtec painterPresident of the Supreme Mexican GovernmentIn office 24 October 1814 5 November 1815Preceded byPost establishedSucceeded byIgnacio AlasChief of the Congress of AnahuacIn office 15 September 1813 24 October 1814Preceded byPost establishedSucceeded byHimself as president under the Constitution of ApatzinganMember of the Council of ZitacuaroIn office 19 August 1811 15 September 1813Personal detailsBorn 1765 09 30 30 September 1765Valladolid Michoacan New SpainDied22 December 1815 1815 12 22 aged 50 San Cristobal Ecatepec State of MexicoResting placeAngel of Independence Mexico CityChildrenJuan Nepomuceno AlmonteAlma materUniversidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de HidalgoProfessionArriero Priest Military leader PoliticianSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceMexicoBranch serviceMexican InsurgencyYears of service1810 1815RankGeneralissimo Captain General ColonelBattles warsMexican War of Independence Battle of El Veladero Battle of Tenancingo Siege of Cuautla Siege of Huajuapan de Leon Battle of Escamela Battle of Zitlala Capture of Orizaba Capture of Oaxaca Siege of Acapulco Battle of Lomas de Santa Maria Battle of TemalacaBorn in Valladolid Michoacan Morelos studied at Colegio de San Nicolas and was appointed priest of Caracuaro in 1799 He joined Miguel Hidalgo s Cry of Dolores soon becoming an insurgency leader Aided by local peoples along with revolutionary leaders Mariano Matamoros and Ignacio Lopez Rayon Morelos occupied territories in southern and central New Spain leading the Siege of Cuautla and capturing Acapulco New Spain s main port in the Pacific Ocean His campaigns galvanized regional insurgencies against Spanish rule which made him the royalist army s main rival In 1813 Morelos wrote Sentimientos de la Nacion a document influenced by the Constitution of Cadiz where he outlined his program for the Mexican nation Under his leadership the Congress of Anahuac was installed in Chilpancingo and on 6 November 1813 declared the independence of Mexico On 22 October 1814 the Constitution of Apatzingan drafted by Congress declared that Mexico would be a Republic After a series of defeats Morelos was captured by the royalist army in Temalaca Puebla He was tried by the Inquisition defrocked as a cleric and executed by civil authorities in San Cristobal Ecatepec on 22 December 1815 Morelos is considered a national hero in Mexico who despite not having a military background became a successful insurgency leader credited with organizing and bolstering the War of Independence The Mexican state of Morelos and city of Morelia are named after him Contents 1 Early life 2 Insurrection against the Spanish monarchy 2 1 Campaigns 2 2 Congress of Chilpancingo 2 3 Capture and execution 3 Legacy 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEarly life Edit Birthplace and house of Morelos in Morelia today a museum Morelos was born in Valladolid since renamed Morelia Although often portrayed as being of mixed or indigenous descent Morelos was classified as a Spaniard espanol in his baptismal register a system in which the Catholic Church kept separate registers for ethnic affiliation Although ethnic affiliation was fluid in colonial Spanish America his family was considered as Spaniard according to the social categories of the time His paternal family had both Spaniards and Mestizos whereas his maternal family was fully Spanish 2 His father was Jose Manuel Morelos y Robles a carpenter originally from Zindurio a village west of Valladolid His mother was Juana Maria Guadalupe Perez Pavon originally from San Juan Bautista de Apaseo also near Valladolid Valladolid was the seat of a bishop and of the government of the colonial Intendency of Valladolid It was known as the Garden of the Viceroyalty of New Spain because of its prosperity citation needed Through his paternal line Morelos was related to Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla 3 Both insurgents shared a common ancestor Diego Ruiz de Cortes who was a descendant of the conquistador Hernan Cortes 3 Hidalgo was the descendant of Ruiz de Cortes through his mother Ana Maria Gallaga 3 Exact birthplace of Jose Maria Morelos Morelos worked as a muleteer arriero in the area where he fought in the insurgency on the ground experience of the terrain that would be valuable 4 He is also said to have worked on a ranch rented by his uncle for nearly ten years 5 Morelos had ambitions for something more than working with his hands and assiduously studied his maternal grandfather was a school teacher 6 In 1789 he enrolled in the Colegio de San Nicolas Obispo in Valladolid where Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla was rector 6 When he was ordained a priest he as with many others without connections had no benefice to guarantee any income as a priest 6 However as a secular cleric he took no vow of poverty and could freely pursue business activities to make a living 6 As a priest he could not marry but he did form a relationship with at least one woman Brigida Almonte He is known to have fathered three children two sons and a daughter His first born was Juan Nepomuceno Almonte who played a significant role in Mexican military history 7 Lucas Alaman a fierce nineteenth century opponent of the insurgency and after independence a conservative politician and historian asserted that Morelos fathered various children with anonymous women of the people 8 This charge of promiscuity might simply be a slur without foundation on the insurgent priest citation needed At Morelos s trial the Inquisition accused him of sending his son to the United States He testified at his trial that while he had not been completely pristine for a priest he had not acted in a scandalous manner and that he had sent his son away for education and for his safety acknowledging his paternity 9 Insurrection against the Spanish monarchy EditMain article Mexican War of Independence Hidalgo and Morelos mural in Museo Casa de Morelos Jose Maria Morelos by Petronilo Monroy 1865 The former rector of the Colegio de San Nicolas Obispo where Morelos attended seminary Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla was planning with others for the independence of New Spain from the Spanish empire About 6 00 a m on 16 September 1810 Hidalgo then the parish priest of Dolores Guanajuato since renamed Dolores Hidalgo in his honor ordered the church bells to be rung and gathered his congregation Flanked by Ignacio Allende and Juan Aldama Hidalgo addressed the people in front of his church urging them to take up arms with the Cry of Dolores El Grito de Dolores now celebrated every year on 15 September at 11 00 p m that called for armed revolt after the Spanish colonial authorities had discovered the Conspiracy of Queretaro a clandestine movement seeking Mexican independence Like Allende and Aldama Josefa Ortiz de Dominguez popularly known as La Corregidora was one of the famous initial supporters of the revolt Miguel Hidalgo and his followers rose in open rebellion against the Spanish colonial authorities launching what became the Mexican War of Independence 10 With the imperial government taken by surprise operatives took important cities of the Bajio region without an organized response The insurgency proclaimed Hidalgo captain general of Mexico in Celaya on 21 September Hidalgo y Costilla advanced to Guanajuato and on 28 September the rebels captured the Alhondiga de Granaditas in battle killing at least 400 Spaniards who had taken shelter 11 page needed Among the dead was the crown s highest official in Guanajuato Intendant Juan Antonio Riano an old friend of Hidalgo y Costilla citation needed The Fort of San Diego in Acapulco Guerrero Mexico It was originally built between 1615 and 1617 but an earthquake destroyed it in 1776 It was rebuilt in 1783 The bishop of Michoacan Manuel Abad y Queipo excommunicated the insurgents Hidalgo y Costilla and his army marched on to Valladolid where the locals feared that the slaughter of Guanajuato would be repeated prompting many people to abandon the region particularly elites Valladolid was taken peacefully on 17 October 1810 citation needed In Tacambaro Hidalgo y Costilla was proclaimed general and Allende captain general Hidalgo ordered a rest for his troops in Indaparapeo where a few minutes before their departure Morelos who had read about his excommunication and his triumphs found him Morelos had heard of the revolt in October 1810 and determined to join it 12 Hidalgo asked his former student to recruit troops in the south of the colony and capture the port of Acapulco the west coast port for the Pacific trade to the Philippines also a Spanish colony 13 Unlike Hidalgo who was a poor tactician leading a huge and undisciplined following Morelos quickly demonstrated military skills gathering and training a small core of fighters He sought allies in the region and obtained cannons and other war materiel 13 Morelos s objectives for the rebellion called for the creation of a republican government that all Mexican people would participate the abolition of slavery and the elimination of divisions between races and ethnicities 14 Campaigns Edit Self portrait of Morelos in 1813 Insurgent coinage Mexico Oaxaca 8 Reales 1814 obverse Morelos soon showed himself to be a talented strategist and became one of the greatest revolutionary military commanders of the war In his first nine months he won 22 victories defeating the armies of three Spanish royalist leaders and capturing almost all of what is now the state of Guerrero In December he captured Acapulco for the first time except for the Fort of San Diego Spanish reinforcements forced him to raise the siege in January By quick marches he was able to capture most of the Spanish possessions on the Pacific coast of what are now Michoacan and Guerrero On 24 May 1811 he occupied Chilpancingo and on 26 May he took Tixtla In his second campaign Morelos divided his army into three groups The most important engagement of this campaign was at Cuautla On Christmas Eve 1811 the townspeople welcomed Morelos to the town The next year his forces were besieged by the Spanish army under general Felix Maria Calleja del Rey On 2 May 1812 after 58 days Morelos broke through the siege and started his third campaign Major victories on this third campaign were at Citlalli on 8 June 1812 Tehuacan on 10 August 1812 Orizaba Oaxaca and Acapulco Morelos arrived at Orizaba with 10 000 soldiers on 28 October 1812 The city was defended by 600 Spanish soldiers Negotiation led to a surrender without bloodshed He entered Oaxaca in triumph on 25 November 1812 Acapulco fell on 12 April 1813 forcing the Spanish army to take refuge in the Fort of San Diego Congress of Chilpancingo Edit Main article Congress of Chilpancingo A map of the military campaigns of Morelos Congress of Anahuac the day of the writing of Solemn Act of the Declaration of Independence of Northern AmericaIn 1813 Morelos called the National Constituent Congress of Chilpancingo composed of representatives of the provinces under his control to consider a political and social program which he outlined in a document entitled Sentimientos de la Nacion Sentiments of the Nation The Congress called itself the Congress of Anahuac in reference to the Aztecs 15 On 31 September 1813 the Congress with Morelos present endorsed Sentiments of the Nation This document declared Mexican independence from Spain established Catholicism as official religion and created the legislative executive and judicial branches of government It declared respect for property and confiscated the productions of the Spanish colonial government It abolished slavery and racial categories in favor of the title American for all native born individuals Torture colonial monopolies and the system of tributes were also abolished Morelos was offered the title Generalissimo with the style of address Your Highness but he refused these and asked to be called Siervo de la Nacion Servant of the Nation On 6 November 1813 the Congress declared independence in the Solemn Act of the Declaration of Independence of Northern America 16 After several military defeats the Congress organized a meeting in Apatzingan and on 22 October promulgated the Decreto Constitucional para la Libertad de la America Mexicana Constitution of Apatzingan 17 This established a limited executive and a powerful legislature the opposite of what Morelos had called for He nevertheless conceded that it was the best he could hope for under the circumstances Capture and execution Edit Contemporary engraving depicting the defrocking and degradation of Morelos by church officials before released to civil authorities for execution Execution of MorelosShortly thereafter Morelos began his fourth military campaign a series of defeats beginning at Valladolid in late 1813 While escorting the new insurgent Congress in November 1815 he was defeated in Temalaca by royalist forces Morelos and his guard were surrounded rather than have all taken prisoner Morelos told his men to each save himself This left Morelos to be captured alone 18 As a Catholic priest the church had jurisdiction for his imprisonment and trial he was jailed in the Inquisition building in Mexico City 19 Although Morelos was a huge prize for the royal government the viceroy decided not to make a public spectacle of his journey of incarceration but rather slipped him into the capital before dawn 19 The royal government had experience with the trial and execution of Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla which was done far from the capital and in rushed fashion but Morelos s trial was conducted in the capital with the highest officials presiding with the outcome of a guilty verdict and execution by civil officials Inquisition officials drew up 23 charges against Morelos and following proper procedure Morelos had a defense attorney Jose Quiles 20 He was charged with treason disloyalty to the crown and transgressions in his personal life namely sending his natural sons to the United States for education 21 He was tried and sentenced to death for treason Morelos was executed by firing squad on 22 December 1815 in San Cristobal Ecatepec north of Mexico City in order that his execution not provoke a dangerous public reaction He was later judged to be reconciled to the church lifting his excommunication as he was seen praying on his way to his execution 22 After his death his lieutenant Vicente Guerrero continued the war for independence Legacy EditMorelos is considered a national hero of Mexico the state of Morelos and city of Morelia are named after him Morelos has been portrayed on the 50 peso note since 1997 and on 1 peso coins during the 1940s 1970s and 1980s The Estadio Morelos in Morelia Puerto Morelos in the state of Quintana Roo the Morelos Station on the Mexico City Metro the city of Ecatepec de Morelos in Mexico State where he was executed Insurgente Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon National Park in Michoacan and the Morelos Satellite from the Communications company Satmex are also named after him His remains were transferred to the Monument to Independence El Angel in Mexico City along with those of other heroes of the insurgency The Presidential aircraft Boeing 787 TP 01 was named Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon The Angel of Independence in Mexico City where the remains of Morelos are entombed in the mausoleum at its base Statue at Janitzio Michoacan Monument to Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon in Lincoln Park Los Angeles California gift of Mexico President Jose Lopez Portillo Citadel Square Jose Maria Morelos Equestrian statue of Jose Maria Morelos GuadalajaraSee also Edit Mexico portal Biography portalEquestrian statue of Jose Maria Morelos Guadalajara Jalisco Mexico List of people from Morelos Mexico Reward offered for Morelos y Pavon s headReferences Edit Dates and other biographical information in this article are drawn from Appleton s Cyclopedia of American Biography 1887 89 Herrekon Carlos 19 April 2019 Morelos Revelaciones y Enigmas El Colegio de Michooacan Retrieved 2 April 2021 a b c Castro Jesus Con sangre sacerdotal heredo Hidalgo la sotana vanguardia com mx Archived from the original on 14 February 2013 Retrieved 15 June 2012 Guedea Jose Maria Morelos p 948 Krauze Enrique Mexico Biography of Power New York HarperCollins 1997 p 103 a b c d Krauze Mexico Biography of Power p 105 Guedea Virginia Jose Maria Morelos in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 p 948 Krauze Enrique 1997 Mexico Biography of Power A History of Mexico 1810 1996 New York HarperCollins p 106 ISBN 0 06 016325 9 OCLC 35128211 Archer Christon I Death s Patriots p 78 Guedea Virginia 2017 The Process of Mexican Independence Revolutions in the Western World 1775 1825 pp 549 563 doi 10 4324 9781315244174 23 ISBN 978 1315244174 retrieved 8 July 2022 Kirkwood Burton 2000 History of Mexico Westport Connecticut U S Greenwood Publishing Group Incorporated ISBN 978 0 313 30351 7 Guedea Jose Maria Morelos in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 948 a b Guedea Jose Maria Morelos p 948 Meade Teresa A 2010 A History of Modern Latin America 1800 to the present Chichester West Sussex UK Wiley Blackwell p 72 ISBN missing Chang Arturo 4 September 2021 Restoring Anahuac Indigenous Genealogies and Hemispheric Republicanism in Postcolonial Mexico American Journal of Political Science ajps 12660 doi 10 1111 ajps 12660 ISSN 0092 5853 S2CID 239636072 Museo Legislativo Camara de Diputados del H Congreso de la Union 15 March 2008 Archived from the original on 15 March 2008 Retrieved 8 July 2022 Hamill Hugh M Jr 1 February 1981 La Constitucion de Apatzingan y los creadores del estado mexicano Hispanic American Historical Review 61 1 186 doi 10 1215 00182168 61 1 186 ISSN 0018 2168 Christon I Archer Death s Patriots Celebration Denunciation and Memories of Mexico s Independence Heroes Miguel de Hidalgo Jose Maria Morelos and Agustin de Iturbide in Death Dismemberment and Memory in Latin America Lyman L Johnson ed Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2004 p 76 a b Archer Death s Patriots p 76 Archer Death s Patriots p 78 Archer Death s Patriots p 78 Gustavo Watson Marron director of the historical archive of the archdiocese cited in El Universal 31 August 2009 Further reading Edit Spanish Wikisource has original text related to this article Sentimientos de la Nacion Archer Christon I Death s Patriots Celebration Denunciation and Memories of Mexico s Independence Heroes Miguel de Hidalgo Jose Maria Morelos and Agustin de Iturbide in Death Dismemberment and Memory in Latin America Lyman L Johnson ed Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2004 pp 63 104 Guedea Virginia Jose Maria Morelos in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 948 950 Hamnett Brian R Roots of Insurgency Mexican Regions 1750 1824 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1986 Lemoine Villacana Ernesto Morelos su vida revolucionaria a traves de sus escritos y de otros testimonios de la epoca Mexico City Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico 1965 Timmons Wilbert H Morelos Priest Soldier Statesman of Mexico revised edition El Paso Texas Western College Press 1970 External links Edit Media related to Jose Maria Morelos at Wikimedia Commons Wallace L McKeehan Jose Maria Morelos Man of God Warrior amp Patriot Mexico Builds Her Own Statue Of Liberty Popular Science Monthly February 1936 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jose Maria Morelos amp oldid 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