Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The French Intervention in Mexico and the Empire of Maximilian and Carlota

View through CrossRef
In 1861, Spanish, British, and French forces all landed in Veracruz to collect the debts Mexico owed them. After two months, the Spanish and British representatives reached an agreement with the Mexican government, but the French troops remained with the objective of imposing a monarchy. This period of occupation, 1861 to 1867, is known as the French Intervention. France’s interference in Mexico was partly due to the efforts of a group of conservative Mexican politicians who believed that a monarchical rather than a republican system would solve Mexico’s problems. In 1863, with the French army occupying Mexico City, the provisional government offered the crown to the Austrian archduke Maximilian of Habsburg. After long negotiations between Maximilian and the French emperor, Napoleon III (who would lend military support and extend credit to the future emperor), Maximilian signed the Treaty of Miramar and accepted the crown. The empire faced the opposition of President Benito Juárez and his republicans, who rightfully claimed to be Mexico’s legitimate government. Furthermore, Maximilian, a liberal who believed in a secular society, clashed with both the clergy and his conservative supporters. A dismal financial situation, military opposition, and the emperor’s inability to reconcile the different political factions doomed his reign. The premature withdrawal of the French troops and Maximilian’s inability to form an effective army resulted in the empire’s demise. The last remnants of the imperial army were defeated in Querétaro on May 15, 1867, and Maximilian was executed. The monarchical experiment was a complete political and military failure for those who promoted it and for Napoleon III, who supported it. Nonetheless, the empire was not a complete failure. The monarchy did set important precedents for the administrative organization of the country: promoting nationalism, solidifying liberal reforms including the separation of church and state, and establishing the foundation for the modernization of Mexico.
Title: The French Intervention in Mexico and the Empire of Maximilian and Carlota
Description:
In 1861, Spanish, British, and French forces all landed in Veracruz to collect the debts Mexico owed them.
After two months, the Spanish and British representatives reached an agreement with the Mexican government, but the French troops remained with the objective of imposing a monarchy.
This period of occupation, 1861 to 1867, is known as the French Intervention.
France’s interference in Mexico was partly due to the efforts of a group of conservative Mexican politicians who believed that a monarchical rather than a republican system would solve Mexico’s problems.
In 1863, with the French army occupying Mexico City, the provisional government offered the crown to the Austrian archduke Maximilian of Habsburg.
After long negotiations between Maximilian and the French emperor, Napoleon III (who would lend military support and extend credit to the future emperor), Maximilian signed the Treaty of Miramar and accepted the crown.
The empire faced the opposition of President Benito Juárez and his republicans, who rightfully claimed to be Mexico’s legitimate government.
Furthermore, Maximilian, a liberal who believed in a secular society, clashed with both the clergy and his conservative supporters.
A dismal financial situation, military opposition, and the emperor’s inability to reconcile the different political factions doomed his reign.
The premature withdrawal of the French troops and Maximilian’s inability to form an effective army resulted in the empire’s demise.
The last remnants of the imperial army were defeated in Querétaro on May 15, 1867, and Maximilian was executed.
The monarchical experiment was a complete political and military failure for those who promoted it and for Napoleon III, who supported it.
Nonetheless, the empire was not a complete failure.
The monarchy did set important precedents for the administrative organization of the country: promoting nationalism, solidifying liberal reforms including the separation of church and state, and establishing the foundation for the modernization of Mexico.

Related Results

Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : characterisation and intervention outcomes
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : characterisation and intervention outcomes
<p dir="ltr">Most individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) experience changes in speech, voice or communication. Speech changes often manifest as hypokinetic dysarthria, a m...
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : characterisation and intervention outcomes
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : characterisation and intervention outcomes
<p dir="ltr">Most individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) experience changes in speech, voice or communication. Speech changes often manifest as hypokinetic dysarthria, a m...
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : Characterisation and intervention outcomes
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : Characterisation and intervention outcomes
<p dir="ltr">Most individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) experience changes in speech, voice or communication. Speech changes often manifest as hypokinetic dysarthria, a m...
Effects of a comprehensive intervention on hypertension control in Chinese employees working in universities based on mixed models
Effects of a comprehensive intervention on hypertension control in Chinese employees working in universities based on mixed models
AbstractWe conducted a comprehensive intensive intervention for hypertension patients working in universities or colleges. From July 2015 to March in 2016, 220 hypertension subject...
El indigenismo de Maximiliano en México (1864-1867)
El indigenismo de Maximiliano en México (1864-1867)
The aim of our study is to examine an interesting period of Mexican history: the empire of Maximilian I, born Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian Joseph of Austria. After a short introdu...
Benito Juárez and Liberalism
Benito Juárez and Liberalism
Benito Juárez was born on March 21, 1806, in San Pablo Guelatao, a Zapotec-speaking hamlet in Sierra de Ixtlán (renamed the Sierra de Juárez on July 30, 1857) in Mexico’s southeast...
Childhood and Empire
Childhood and Empire
Since at least the 1990s, scholarship within and beyond the disciplinary boundaries of history, cultural studies, and literary studies has systematically attended to the coming tog...

Back to Top