Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many...

10
Struggle in Latin America Chapter #12 – Section #1

Transcript of Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many...

Page 1: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

Struggle in Latin America

Chapter #12 – Section #1

Page 2: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

“I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in the hills, their bones eaten by animals. I wasn’t afraid. Just the opposite, I was glad. It’s a beautiful thing to fight to realize an ideal.” - Zeferino Diego Ferreira, a peasant soldier

Fighting for an Ideal

Page 3: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

In the early 1900s, military dictators or small groups of wealthy landowners held the real power. This tiny ruling class kept the economic benefits of the booming export economy for themselves. The large growing middle class and lower classes-workers and peasants- had no say in their own government. In Mexico the situation led to an explosive revolution.

Page 4: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

By 1910, Mexican dictator Porfirio Diaz had ruled Mexico for almost 35 years.

On the surface, Mexico enjoyed peace and economic growth.

Underneath the surface, discontent rippled through Mexico.

The country’s prosperity benefited only a small group, while the majority of Mexican mestizos and Indian peasants lived in desperate poverty.

Most peasants lived on haciendas, or large plantations controlled by the landowning elite.

The Mexican Revolution

Page 5: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

The unrest boiled over in 1910 when Francisco Madero, a liberal reformer from an elite family, demanded free elections.

Faced with rebellion Porfirio Diaz resigned in 1911.

Soon a bloody and complex struggle engulfed Mexico.

The Mexican Revolution

Page 6: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

Key PlayersPorfirio Diaz Francisco Madero Victoriano

Huerta

See INFOGRAPIC pg. 388

Page 7: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

Pancho Villa Emiliano Zapata Venustiano Carranza

Peasant Leaders

Page 8: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

Diego Rivera

Page 9: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

Mexican Coat of Arms

Page 10: Chapter #12 – Section #1. “I am glad to have fought in the same cause with Zapata… and so many of my dear revolutionary friends who were let behind in.

Answer: pg. 392 (#1-6)

Assignment