
A BRIEF HISTORY
9000 BC - Corn harvesting begins
in the Tehuacan valley in Puebla.
1800-200 BC - Pre-Classic Era.
First settlements of the Olmecs in the coastal region of the Gulf
of Mexico.
200 BC-900 AD - Classic Era.
Maximum development of pre-Hispanic civilizations. Splendor of Teotihuacan,
Monte Alban and Mitla (Zapotec), Uxmal, Palenque, El Tajin, Bonampak,
Yaxchilan; decline of Xochicalco and Cacaxtla. The Maya civilization
flourishes in what is now southern Mexico and northern Central America.
900-1400 AD - Post-Classic Era.
Development of the Toltec culture in Tula in central Mexico. Height
of Monte Albán and Mitla (Mixtec) in Oaxaca. Height of Chichén
Itzá.
1325 - The Aztecs found Tenochtitlan
on the site of present-day Mexico City. The city, built on an island
in central Mexico's Lake Texcoco, becomes the capital of the Aztec
empire.
1511 - Jerónimo de Aguilar,
first Spaniard on Mexican soil, is captured by the Maya in Yucatán
and later becomes interpreter for Cortés.
1519 - Mesoamerica's population
estimated at 25 million people. Hernán Cortés leaves
Cuba for an expedition to Mexico. Cortés founds Vera Cruz
and initiates the exploration of Mexico. By the end of the year
he meets with Moctezuma II, the Aztec emperor.
1521 - On August 13th Spain's
Hernán Cortés conquers Tenochtitlan with the help
of the Tlaxcaltecs and subdues the Aztecs. During the next 25 years,
most of central and southern Mexico is christened New Spain. Chiapas
forms part of Guatemala.
1535 - La Casa de Moneda, first
mint of the Americas, was established in Mexico City.
1539 - The first printing shop
in the Americas is established in Mexico City by Juan Pablos.
1553 - Inauguration of the Real
y Pontificia Universidad de Mexico (Royal and Pontifical University
of Mexico).
1781 - Establishment of La Real
Academia de Nobles Artes de San Carlos (The Royal Academy for the
Noble Arts of San Carlos).
1792 - The Real Seminario de
Mineria (Royal School of Mining) is established in Mexico City ushering
a new era in silver and gold mining.
1810 - On September 15th, in
the town of Dolores, father Miguel Hidalgo issues a cry for Mexico's
independence from Spain.
1820 - On December 23 Moses Austin
presents his proposal for a colony in San Antonio de Béxar
to the Congressional Committee on Colonization Questions. It was
the beginning of the settlement of Texas by Anglo-Americans.
1821 - On February 24th Agustin
de Iturbide, with Guadalupe Victoria and Vicente Guerrero, proclaims
the Plan de Iguala: the Mexican Declaration of Independence to free
Mexico from Spain. Finally, on September 28th Mexico becomes an
independent nation with Agustin de Iturbide as Head of State. Moses
Austin is given permission to settle part of Texas with 300 non-Mexican
families.
1822 - On May 18 Iturbide is
crowned emperor under the name of Agustin I, whose empire extends
from Oregon to Central America, including California, Arizona, New
Mexico, Texas, Colorado, parts of Wyoming and most of Central America.
1823 - On March 19 Iturbide abdicates
and leaves Mexico. U.S. President James Monroe declares the Monroe
Doctrine prohibiting the involvement of European powers in the American
continent. Stephen F. Austin's land grant in Texas is authorized.
1824 - On October 10th the Congress
elects Guadalupe Victoria as Mexico's first President and Nicolas
Bravo as Vice President. The Constitution divides Mexico into nineteen
states and five territories.
1833 - Antonio López de
Santa Anna becomes president of the Republic of Mexico.
1836 - On March 6 Santa Anna
attacks the Alamo. On April 22 Sam Houston defeats Santa Anna at
the battle of San Jacinto. Texas declares independence from Mexico.
1846 - The U.S. Congress declares
war on Mexico following a bloody skirmish between U.S. and Mexican
troops on the frontier with Texas. After U.S. Marines capture the
capital, Mexico sues for peace and, in a treaty signed in February
1848, cedes nearly half of its national territory to the United
States.
1857 - Mexico adopts a constitution
that secularizes education and forces the Roman Catholic Church
to sell its vast landholdings. The move sparks a civil war over
church power that lasts until 1861.
1862 - On May 5th, the Mexican
army defeats invading French troops at the Battle of Puebla.
1863 - The French army captures
Puebla, and on June 7 it enters Mexico City.
1864 - On June 12 Maximilian
and Charlotte enter Mexico City installing the second empire with
an Austrian archduke as "emperor" of Mexico.
1867 - After Napoleon III withdraws
French troops, Maximilian is captured and executed by a firing squad.
The Mexican republic is restored with Benito Juarez as president.
1876 - Porfirio Diaz leads a
revolt against the government of President Sebastian Lerdo, then
assumes the presidency. Except for a four-year period when a subordinate
serves as president, Diaz rules Mexico until 1911.
1910 - On November 20th Francisco
Madero calls for an armed revolt against Diaz and sparks the Mexican
Revolution, throwing the country into political upheaval that lasts
until 1917.
1917 - On February 5th a new
constitution benefiting groups involved in the revolution is approved.
The document guarantees a minimum wage and the right to strike.
It also outlines a plan for land reform and agrarian rights for
peasants.
1927 - Outraged by the new constitution's
restrictions on the church, Catholics in central Mexico launch a
rebellion. The conflict ends with government concessions three years
later.
1929 - A year after leaving office,
former President Plutarco Calles founds the National Revolutionary
Party. Later rechristened the Institutional Revolutionary Party,
or PRI, the party wins the 1929 presidential election and enjoys
uninterrupted national rule for the next seven decades.
1938 - On March 18th President
Lazaro Cardenas nationalizes Mexico's oil industry as part of a
sweeping populist program that also strengthens labor unions and
redistributes millions of acres of land from the wealthy to small
farmers. The program enshrines Cardenas as the most beloved Mexican
president of the 20th century.
1939 - Manuel Gomez Morin founds
the National Action Party, or PAN. Anchored in an alliance between
business owners and the Catholic Church, the PAN struggles 50 years
before winning its first governorship.
1968 - On October 2nd soldiers
and police open fire on thousands of students protesting in Mexico
City's Plaza de Tlatelolco, giving birth to a new era in Mexican
politics.
1982 - On August 12th Mexico
suspends its international debt payments after falling oil prices
make it impossible for the government to repay foreign loans. The
debt crisis leads to currency devaluations and hyperinflation that
devastate the economy for most of the decade. In 1987, annual inflation
tops 159 percent.
1985 - On September 19th an earthquake
strikes Mexico City, causing an estimated $4 billion in damage.
The government puts the death toll at 7,000, but aid groups say
that as many as 30,000 people lost their lives.
1988 - The PRI's Carlos Salinas
de Gortari is elected president in a vote that many believe is marred
by fraud. Salinas ushers in electoral reforms, including the creation
of an independent institute to oversee balloting. The opposition
scores a series of election victories over the next decade.
1992 - The leaders of Mexico,
Canada and the United States sign the North American Free Trade
Agreement, or NAFTA. The agreement will erase most trading barriers
between the three countries by 2009.
1994 - On New Year's Day Maya
Indian rebellion erupts in the southernmost state of Chiapas. The
rebels, known as the Zapatistas, time their uprising to begin on
the day that NAFTA takes effect.
1994 - On March 23rd Luis Donoldo
Colosio, the PRI's presidential candidate, is assassinated while
campaigning in Tijuana, Baja California.
1994 - On December 21st the government
of President Zedillo devalues the peso, and foreign investment flees
the country, triggering one of the worst economic crises in Mexican
history.
1997 - On July 6th in midterm
elections, the PRI loses its majority in the lower house of Congress
for the first time since the party's founding. Cuauhtemoc Cardenas,
son of the revered former president and leader of the left-of-center
Democratic Revolution Party, is elected mayor of Mexico City by
a landslide.
1999 - On November 7th the PRI
holds its first presidential primary, ending a tradition that allowed
the sitting president to pick the party's candidate. Francisco Labastida,
widely believed to be Zedillo's choice as a successor, wins the
vote easily.
2000 - On July 2nd Vicente Fox,
the candidate of the National Action Party (PAN), wins the presidential
election in a stunning upset, breaking the PRI's 71-year hold on
the nation's top office. On December 1st Vicente Fox becomes the
first opposition president of Mexico since the Mexican Revolution
of 1910.
Sources:
A Compact History of Mexico, by El Colegio de México; Rise
of the Lone Star, by Andreas V. Reichstein; Encyclopedia Britannica;
Encarta Encyclopedia; Mexico, a Land of Volcanoes by Joseph H.L.
Schlarman; Distant Neighbors by Alan Riding; Bordering on Chaos
by Andres Oppenheimer; Mexico, Michelin Tourist Guide.
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