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Topic: Juan Ruiz de Apodaca


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In the News (Fri 17 Feb 12)

  
  Juan Ruiz de Apodaca - Encyclopedia.com
Feeling that Apodaca was not making sufficient effort to put down the revolution, a group in Mexico City, headed by the Masons, forced him to surrender his authority.
Martinez, Parlier Alexandria Mejia, McCabe, Mendota Juan Mejia, Kohn, Tulare Alexie Mendez, Garfield, Selma...
the plaintiffs, Manuela and Juan Zermeno, for a judgment that...
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-Apodaca.html   (767 words)

  
  Juan Ruiz de Apodaca - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Juan Ruiz de Apodaca (Cádiz, 1754 Madrid, 1835) was a colonial official in the last days of Spain's American empire.
He served as Governor of Cuba from 1812 to 1815 and, between 1816 and 1821, as the penultimate Viceroy of New Spain.
Apodaca in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico, is named after him.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Juan_Ruiz_de_Apodaca   (105 words)

  
 Microfilm Sequence
Traslado de una merced de unas casas que la ciudad de Tescoco hizo a Pedro de Andrada, Principal en ella, con unos títulos en Mexicano de diferentes pedazos de tierras.
Concierto hecho entre Juan de Pomar y los principales de Tescoco sobre casas y tierras que pretendían, y escritura otorgada a favor de Bartolomé de Trasmasapua de sus casas y tierras.
Communication from General Juan O'Donojou addressed to the Governor of Veracruz regarding the uselesness of engaging in military actions that would be detrimental for both Spain and Mexico.
www.wsulibs.wsu.edu /holland/masc/onlinebooks/regla/microfilm.htm   (3014 words)

  
 List of colonial governors in 1816 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Juan Ruíz de Apodaca, conde de Venadito, Viceroy of New Spain (1816-1821)
José de Gardoqui Jaraveita, Governor-General of the Philippines (1813-1816)
Mariano Fernández de Folgueras, Governor-General of the Philippines (1816-1822)
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_colonial_governors_in_1816   (884 words)

  
 Borderlands Book Store
Tomás Ruiz de Apodaca was born in the small town of Manurga in the province of Alava to a family of humble means.
Ruiz de Apodaca is not considered a "great personage" but his life reveals important parts of Basque history whose intrepid people ventured far and wide in their trading ventures.
Thus began what Jesuit historian Andrés Pérez de Ribas called "one of the greatest outbreaks of disorder, upheaval,and destruction that had been seen in New Spain...since the Conquest." Before it was finished, over 200 Spaniards, 10 missionaries and 4,000 Tepehuanes died with destruction to property valued at as much as a million pesos.
www.borderlandsbooks.com /ourbooks.asp?alphabetvar=G&catid=3&sortid=ItemAuthorLast   (691 words)

  
 Juan Ruiz de Apodaca - Encyclopedia.com
Juan Ruiz de Apodaca see Apodaca, Juan Ruiz de.
San Juan (1-2, 7-4) 5 15 15 9 - 44 North Sevier (3-1, 11-4) 18 19 14 13 - 64 San Juan - K. Meyer 2, Flannery 10, Christensen...
Tamaru, Nick Jasso (Cubs), Justin Ruiz, Michael Nunes Jr., Manuel Serrano...
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-X-RuizdeAp.html   (616 words)

  
 Ruiz
Adolfo Ruiz Cortines PRI Adolfo Ruiz Cortines was Mexico from 1952 to 1958.
Juan Ruiz de Alarcón Juan Ruiz de Alarcón (dramatist.
Nevado del Ruiz Nevado del Ruiz is a Colombia.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /topics/ruiz.html   (191 words)

  
 Mexican Independence
Juan de Aldama's account of the Grito was recorded only a few months after the event.
The subsequent Viceroy Juan Ruiz de Apodaca took a conciliatory stance offering amnesty to former rebels, which according to some historians was much more successful in pacification than the bloody reprisals of Calleja.
Newly-appointed and last Viceroy of New Spain, Juan de O’Donoju, arrived and assessing the situation agreed to meet and accept the Plan of Iguala which resulted in the Treaty of Cordova of 24 Aug 1821.
www.tamu.edu /ccbn/dewitt/mexicanrev.htm   (2577 words)

  
 Desert Documentary by Kieran McCarty - Chapter 20: Spanish Tucson's Last Roster
The first is authored by one of Tucson's last Spanish commanders, Manuel Ignacio de Arvizu, and relates little-known facts concerning Spanish Arizona's involvement in the royalist defense against Miguel Hidalgo and his Insurgents in the fight for Mexican Independence.
Manuel de León, lieutenant, on detachment to the Buenavista presidio.
Juan Morales, soldier, on guard duty with the king's cattle.
www.library.arizona.edu /exhibits/desertdoc/roster.htm   (1773 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Juan Ruiz de Apodaca (Latin American History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Juan Ruiz de Apodaca[hwAn rOOEth´ dA ApOthA´kA] Pronunciation Key, 1754–1835, Spanish viceroy and military leader.
He was sent to London by the Central Junta of Seville to gain English support against Napoleon.
After service as governor of Cuba (1812–15), Apodaca, as viceroy of New Spain (1816–21), devoted himself to repressing revolutionary movements.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/A/Apodaca.html   (244 words)

  
 Friars, Soldiers, and Reformers (Notes)
Ramírez de Arellano, Horcasitas, Oct. 31, 1782, and Monteagudo, Horcasitas, Oct. 27, 1782, Testimony in the cause of Gil de Bernabé.
Reyes to José de Gálvez, Sonora, Sept. 20, 1784, AGN, Misiones, 14.
Roque de Medina, Revistas de inspección, 1785-1786, AGI, Guad., 521.
www.nps.gov /history/history/online_books/kessell2/notes.htm   (14055 words)

  
 The Ultimate Mexican War of Independence - American History Information Guide and Reference
The plans were disclosed to the central government, and the conspirators were alerted — famously, by Josefa Ortiz de Domínguez, la Corregidora, the wife of a local official in Querétaro — that orders had been sent for their arrest.
In what was supposed to be the final government campaign against the insurgents, in December 1820, Viceroy Juan Ruiz de Apodaca sent a force led by a royalist criollo officer, Agustín de Iturbide, to defeat Guerrero's army in Oaxaca.
After convincing his troops to accept the principles, which were promulgated on February 24, 1821, as the Plan de Iguala, Iturbide persuaded Guerrero to join his forces in support of the new conservative manifestation of the independence movement.
www.historymania.com /american_history/Mexican_War_of_Independence   (1305 words)

  
 Howard Karno Books: MEXICAN MANUSCRIPTS: PROCLAMATION OF IGNACIO LOPEZ RAYON. () - Books about Latin America
Ignacio López Rayón, born in Tlalpujahua in 1793, was a lawyer from the Colegio de San Ildefonso, miner, and in October, 1810 joined the insurgency.
After the execution of Hidalgo was the principal leader of insurgency and was forced to Michoacán by Calleja; in 1811 he established the junta of government, and in 1813 sent Francisco Antonio Peredo to the U.S. to seek aid and recognition.
In 1817 he was captured and in 1818 sentenced to death, but the sentence was suspended by viceroy Juan Ruiz de Apodaca.
www.karnobooks.com /cgi-bin/karno/72909.html   (199 words)

  
 flag of Mexico - Army of the Three-Guarantees (1821-1823) flags, Fahnen, Flaggen, FOTW bei Nationalflaggen.de
This "Army" was born because of the signing of the "Plan de Iguala" by Generals Agustín de Iturbide and Vicente Guerrero in the town of Iguala (then México, present-day Guerrero), on February 24, 1821.
Viceroy Juan Ruiz de Apodaca, Count of Venadito, was known about this plan on Feb. 27, and condemned it on March 23, while Iturbide was put out of the law on 17, same month.
When the Plan de Iguala was proclaimed on February 24th, 1821, the first National Flag was used, made by the tailor Jose Magdaleno Ocampo at the request of Agustin de Iturbide with the following specifications: three diagonal stripes, red with a white star, green with a red star and white with a green star.
www.nationalflaggen.de /flags-of-the-world/flags/mx^tri.html   (1219 words)

  
 VIRGINIA GUEDEA | The Process of Mexican Independence | The American Historical Review, 105.1 | The History Cooperative
Viceroy José de Iturrigaray, who saw an opportunity to buttress his authority, undermined by the collapse of the monarchy in the Peninsula, convened a series of meetings to discuss the Ayuntamiento's proposal to establish a governing junta for New Spain.
It received added impetus with the arrival in 1821 of a distinguished Freemason, Juan O'Donojú, to be the last superior political chief (the office that replaced the viceroy under the constitution) of New Spain.
Although Viceroy Apodaca had ordered him in November 1820 to crush the remnants of the insurgency in the south, Iturbide entered into talks with its leaders early in 1821 to persuade them to declare independence.
www.historycooperative.org /journals/ahr/105.1/ah000116.html   (6477 words)

  
 Mexico - Army of the Three-Guarantees (1821-1823)
This "Army" was born because of the signing of the "Plan de Iguala" by Generals Agustín de Iturbide and Vicente Guerrero in the town of Iguala (then México, present-day Guerrero), on February 24, 1821.
Viceroy Juan Ruiz de Apodaca, Count of Venadito, was known about this plan on Feb. 27, and condemned it on March 23, while Iturbide was put out of the law on 17, same month.
When the Plan de Iguala was proclaimed on February 24th, 1821, the first National Flag was used, made by the tailor Jose Magdaleno Ocampo at the request of Agustin de Iturbide with the following specifications: three diagonal stripes, red with a white star, green with a red star and white with a green star.
www.crwflags.com /fotw/flags/mx^tri.html   (1194 words)

  
 PORT DE TARRAGONA
Captain Apodaca’s report argued favourably for the Tarragona project and the suitability for the works to be completed.
At the beginning of the 20th century, building activity was relegated to second place as equipping the already existing zones, the purchase of cranes and machinery in general, and also the works to infrastructure such as sheds, warehouses and silos became of prime importance.
The Port of Tarragona also intervened in the building of the ports in Cambrils, l'Ametlla de Mar and Salou, thanks to a decree of 1928 which meant that Tarragona was in charge of administrating and carrying out works in those ports which would then be added to the one in Tarragona.
www.porttarragona.es /english/elport_historia.htm   (1288 words)

  
 Juan E. Hernández y Dávalos Manuscript Collection Part I: 1692-1814
Endorsed: Juan José Lazcano and Juan de Acev[e]do y Calero; Francisco Antonio del Carmen, Mexico, November 14, 1798, witnessed by Manuel López de Oquendo; Joaquín de los Dolores, Mexico, November 14, 1798, witnessed: Juan Calera, José Ignacio de Salamanca, and Antonio de Zepeda; Gerónimo Pulgar, Mexico, November 27, 1798.
Appointment of Fray Juan de San Francisco of Guanajuato by Fray Francisco Antonio del Carmen, Mexico, November 14, 1798; witnessed: José de Santa Eulalia, José Ignacio Salamanca, and Antonio Zepeda, notarized by Manuel López de Oquendo.
Juan María [Ibáñez de Corvera y Galán] para que promueva su asenso al deanato.
www.lib.utexas.edu /taro/utlac/00067/lac-00067p1.html   (7928 words)

  
 Colonial Period
The Dominican friar Bartolomé de Las Casas, who rose to become Bishop of Chiapas, was nicknamed "Father of the Indians" for his staunch defense of the Indians' legal rights.
The first archbishop of Mexico, Fray Juan de Zumárraga, was another steadfast advocate for the indigenous people who, in conjunction with Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza, established the renowned Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco school for the sons of Indian nobles.
While the Ciudad de Mexico was being erected on the ruins of the old Aztec capital, the remainder of the conquered territory was gradually divvied up into grants for huge estates, known as encomiendas, operated under a feudal system by some 500 Spanish landlords.
www.poblar.com /HistoryMexico/ColonialPeriod.htm   (4421 words)

  
 Spanish and Portuguese Colonial Possessions
New Granada (1739) and the Río de la Plata (1776) were later detached from it.
The population at independence of the Río de la Plata was 320,000 peninsulars and creoles, 742,000 mestizos, and 1,200,000 Indians.
De Sosa's visit came to nothing, but plans were already in the works for an official Spanish occupation of the country.
www.friesian.com /newspain.htm   (11547 words)

  
 San Antonians get back guns 5 years after 1813 revolution
Arms taken from the residents of San Fernando de Bexar (San Antonio) following the revolution of 1813 were restored to them five years later, the translation of the minutes of the city council to 1818 reveals.
don Juan Manuel Sanbrano asking that permission of the authorities be given for the city to take steps to find a supply of meat, lard, candles and soap.
The council minutes then put into use for the first time officially the word "maverick." The minutes says the councilmen agreed the only practical plan to meet the emergency was to have a roundup and get all the beef cattle needed and supply itself with the other commodities.
www.tamu.edu /ccbn/ccbn/dewitt/adp/archives/newsarch/1818guns.html   (680 words)

  
 SHQ Online :: Volume 44 Number 1 :: Documents Relating to Pierre LaFfite's Entrance into the Service of Spain
De Sedella and Picornell promised that Pierre's re-
Antonio de Sedella to Juan Ruiz de Apodaca, New
De Onís to Picornell, Philadelphia, August 8, 1815, ibid.
www.tsha.utexas.edu /publications/journals/shq/online/v044/n1/contrib_DIVL1199.html   (4140 words)

  
 Elections: Latin American Studies: Collections: SSHL
Merrill 1997: "(I)n December 1820, Viceroy Juan Ruiz de Apodaca sent a force led by a royalist criollo officer, Agustín de Iturbide, to defeat Guerrero’s army in Oaxaca...After an initial clash with Guerrero’s forces, Iturbide switched allegiances and invited the rebel leader to meet and discuss principles of a renewed independence struggle" (page 18).
Taplin 1972: The Plan of Iguala is announced by Agustín de Iturbide on February 24, 1821, and calls for an independent, constitutional monarchy headed by an emperor.
Taplin 1972: On October 4, 1824 the constitution of the "Estados Unidos Mexicanos" is published, calling for a republic to be led by a president and vice president elected for a four-year term.
sshl.ucsd.edu /collections/las/mexico/1810.html   (3125 words)

  
 LATIN AMERICAN MSS.--MEXICO II
The Coleccion de notas del Coronel D. Francisco Castaneda y otros is a bound volume containing correspondence and other documents addressed principally to various officials of the government of the Valle de Santa Rosa (later Muzquiz) in Coahuila, covering the years 1802 to 1860.
Provincia de la Ymmaculada concepcion de Franciscos Descalzos, en Castilla la Nueva, on the last leaf of which is what appears to be the autograph of Maximilian, emperor of Mexico.
It is followed by a Discurso en la camara de Diputados and then a Diario exacto de Zacatecas remitido por un curioso a un amigo de esta capital for the days May 8-30 of 1835.
www.indiana.edu /~liblilly/lilly/mss/html/latinammex2.html   (1658 words)

  
 Juan Carlos Alarcn Supersite   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The area is frequented by numerous Concepcin de Acua, San Juan Capistrano, and San Francisco de Second Company of San Carlos de Parras from the vicinity of.
Juan * A Sor Juana Anthology - otro y de uno.
Themes de el chavo del. De juan ruiz de alarcn.
auctions.dunningadvertising.com /listings/juan-carlos-alarcn.htm   (388 words)

  
 History of Cuba Timetable: 1776 thru 1867
Cuba's romantic poet José María Heredia is born in Santiago de Cuba.
Carlos Manuel de Céspedes is born in Bayamo.
A Junta de Información (Board of Information) is to discuss three particular issues: 1) special laws already promised and how they are to be founded, 2) how to regulate the work of Blacks and Asians and the encouragement of white immigration, 3) commercial treaties and related tax reforms.
www.historyofcuba.com /history/time/timetbl2.htm   (2996 words)

  
 Hispanic Heritage Hispanic Times Magazine - Find Articles
Don Juan Ruiz de Apodaca became Viceroy and Supreme Commander of La Nueva Espana on September 19, 1918.
It was during Viceroy Apodaca's administration that Spain granted Moses Austin the right to settle a colony of three hundred families in Texas.
Before his appointment as Viceroy, Apodaca had served as Chief of Staff of the Spanish military (navy and army), and he also held the highly entrusted position of ambassador to Great Britain.
findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m0FWK/is_4_23/ai_65068530   (503 words)

  
 Hispanic Times Magazine: Hispanic Heritage
Don Juan Ruiz de Apodaca became Viceroy and Supreme Commander of La Nueva Espana on September 19, 1918.
It was during Viceroy Apodaca's administration that Spain granted Moses Austin the right to settle a colony of three hundred families in Texas.
Before his appointment as Viceroy, Apodaca had served as Chief of Staff of the Spanish military (navy and army), and he also held the highly entrusted position of ambassador to Great Britain.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m0FWK/is_4_23/ai_65068530   (564 words)

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