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Topic: Mexican Revolution


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  Mexican Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mexican Revolution or Mexican Civil War, was a period of political, social and military conflict and turmoil that began with the call to arms made on 20 November 1910 by Francisco I. Madero.
The Mexican Revolution was a violent social and cultural movement which brought the beginning of changes in Mexico.
Mexican culture, such as cinema, music and literature, was also a driving factor in gaining support during the revolution.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mexican_Revolution   (4534 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The Mexican Revolution was a period of instability and civil war in Mexico which began with popular rejection of dictator Porfirio Díaz in 1910 and ended with the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in control of Mexico in the 1930s.
Newly elected President Madero enjoyed support from neither his former allies, who claimed the revolution's goals hadn't been met, nor the members of the old regime; in 1913, he was murdered along with his vice-president.
The PNM succeeded in convincing most of the remaining generals to dissolve their personal armies and create the Mexican Army, and so the creation of the party is considered by some to be the real end of the Mexican Revolution.
www.wikiwhat.com /encyclopedia/m/me/mexican_revolution.html   (363 words)

  
 Mexican Revolution - Voyager, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The Mexican Revolution, sometimes called the Mexican Revolution of 1910, was a violent social and cultural movement, colored by socialist, nationalist, and anarchist tendencies, that began with the popular rejection of dictator Porfirio Díaz Mori in 1910 and continued even after the promulgation of a new constitution seven years later.
Even after that, the idea that the Revolution was "ongoing" was reinforced in party doctrine and national thought with its notional division into an "armed phase" and an "institutional phase".
Farmers led by Zapata fought to reclaim their ancestral lands in the South, while the troops of the guerrilla Francisco "Pancho" Villa fought all the way up to and across the border of the United States as well as far south as Mexico City.
www.voyager.in /Mexican_Revolution   (1429 words)

  
 THE PEOPLE & HISTORY OF MEXICO - TIME-LINE OVERVIEW WITH MORE THAN 300 ARTICLES
Napoleon overthrows the King of Spain Fernando VII and places his brother Joseph on the throne (1808)
The Industrial Revolution in England (1760 - 1851)
Drugs, Revolution and the Militarization of Mexico (1994 -)
www.mexconnect.com /mex_/history.html   (714 words)

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