Traditional Muzzleloading Association
The Center of Camp => People of the Times => Topic started by: Craig Tx on August 24, 2025, 07:54:05 PM
-
On this day in 1821, Juan O'Donoju met Agust?n de Iturbide in C?rdoba and signed a treaty granting Mexico independence from Spain.
The treaty ended the Mexican War of Independence, which grew out of political turmoil in Spain and Mexico in the early nineteenth century. Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla formally began the rebellion with his famous grito on September 16, 1810, from the steps of his parish church in Dolores, a small-town east of Guanajuato. Only in Texas, however, which in the summer of 1812 suffered an invasion from the United States under the leadership of Jos? Bernardo Guti?rrez de Lara and Augustus Magee, was royal authority seriously threatened. In August 1813, Gen. Joaqu?n de Arredondo defeated the rebels at the battle of Medina and secured Texas for the Spanish crown. The struggle for independence broke down into a series of local revolts and guerrilla actions that did not seriously threaten royal authority in Mexico until 1820, when the formerly royalist officer Iturbide came to terms with insurgent leader Vicente R. Guerrero. By July 1821, when O'Donoju arrived to take over the colonial government, the royalists controlled only Mexico City and Veracruz.
-
I sure do like that Irish name, O'Donoju! Considering that the Spanish "j" is pronounced like an "h" it makes perfect sense! :toast
~Kees~