Mexican Empire
The
Mexican Empire was the name of
Mexico on two non-consecutive occasions in the
19th century when it was ruled by an
Emperor. (For the
Pre-Columbian empires of
Mesoamerica in the territory of modern-day Mexico, see
Aztec,
Toltec, and
Teotihuacan.)
First Mexican Empire
The First Mexican Empire was short lived, lasting only eight months from 21 July 1822 to
19 March 1823 and having only one
emperor,
Agustín de Iturbide.
When the Emperor
Napoleon of
France put his brother,
Joseph, on the
Spanish throne in
1808, ties between Spain and her
American colonies weakened and the movement for
Mexican independence grew stronger.

\nThe
Mexican War of Independence began in
1810 and continued until in
1821, when rebel troops entered
Mexico City and the
Treaty of Córdoba was signed, whereby Spain recognized Mexico's independence.
In that year, General Agustín de Iturbide, a Mexican-born
criollo \nwho originally fought for the pro-Spanish royalists but swapped his allegiance to the insurgents in the final phases of the war, was elected head of the provisional junta government and of the
regency that held the imperial power that Spain once had. On the night of the
18 May 1822, a mass
demonstration led by the Regiment of Celaya, who Iturbide had commanded during the
war, marched through the streets and demanded that their commander-in-chief accept the throne. On
19 May 1822, the Sovereign Congress named him the emperor and on
21 May 1822, issued a decree officially confirming this appointment, which was officially a temporary measure until a
European monarch could be found to rule Mexico.
Iturbide's official title was
By the Grace of God and the National Congress, First Constitutional Emperor of Mexico (
Spanish:
Por la Divina Providencia y por el Congreso de la Nación, Primer Emperador Constitucional de México). His
coronation took place on
21 July 1822, in Mexico City.
As factions in the Congress began to sharply criticise both Iturbide and his policies, the emperor decided on
31 October to dissolve it. This enraged the commander of the
garrison at
Veracruz,
Antonio López de Santa Anna, who would later distinguish himself in the
Mexican-American War. Santa Anna and his troops rose up against Iturbide and declared a
republic on the
1 December.
Fearing for his life as the rebellion grew stronger, the emperor ordered the dissolved Congress to reassemble on the
4 March 1823. He presented his
abdication to them at a night-time session on
19 March 1823. He fled to
Italy shortly after.
In
April 1824 the Congress, having already declared his
administration void, declared Iturbide a
traitor. When he returned to
Mexico in July 1824 he was arrested on arrival in
Tamaulipas and
executed.
Second Mexican Empire
\n
The Second Mexican Empire survived for longer than the First Empire, lasting for three years from 1864 to
1867. However, it still only ever had one emperor,
Maximilian von Habsburg, who was installed by
Napoleon III of France.
Emperor Maximilian was executed by
firing squad in
1867.
\n
Category:Independent Mexico