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  1. In summary, Benito Juárez's life and legacy reflect the profound struggles inherent in Mexico’s journey toward liberal reform. His leadership during the Reform movement, a time of unprecedented change and conflict, transformed not only the political landscape of Mexico but also the social fabric.

  2. Following the defeat of the Second Empire, which culminated in the execution of Maximilian alongside the principal Conservative generals at Querétaro on June 19, 1867, Juárez returned to the national capital wearing the twin laurels of Liberal law giver and savior of the nation.

    • Overview
    • Early career
    • Presidency
    • Legacy

    Benito Juárez was born of Mesoamerican Indian parents, both of whom died when he was three years old. When he was 12, he left the uncle who was caring for him and joined his sister in the city of Oaxaca, where he began his formal education.

    Where did Benito Juárez get his education?

    Benito Juárez began his formal education in 1821 at a church school in Oaxaca. He originally studied for the priesthood, but in 1829 he entered the Oaxaca Institute of Arts and Sciences (now Benito Juárez Autonomous University of Oaxaca) to study law and science. In 1831 he received a law degree.

    What did Benito Juárez believe in?

    As a young politician, Benito Juárez believed that the road to economic health for Mexico lay in replacing the stifling economic monopoly held by the Roman Catholic Church and the landed aristocracy with capitalism. He thought that political stability could be achieved only by adopting a constitutional form of government based on a federal system.

    Why was Benito Juárez significant?

    Juárez was born of Mesoamerican Indian parents, both of whom died when he was three years old. When he was 12, he left the uncle who was caring for him and joined his sister in the city of Oaxaca, where he began his formal education.

    He originally studied for the priesthood, but in 1829 he entered the Oaxaca Institute of Arts and Sciences (1827; now Benito Juárez Autonomous University of Oaxaca) to study law and science. In 1831 he received a law degree and won his first public office, a seat on the municipal council. Impeccably honest, he never used public office for personal gain, and his modest way of life reflected his simple tastes, even after his marriage in 1843 to Margarita Maza, a Oaxacan woman 17 years his junior. Politics soon became his life’s work: he was a member of both the state and national legislatures, he became a judge in 1841, and he served as governor of his state, a post that brought him into national prominence.

    During his early years in politics, Juárez began to formulate liberal solutions for his country’s many problems. The road to economic health, he concluded, lay in substituting capitalism for the stifling economic monopoly held by the Roman Catholic Church and the landed aristocracy. He also believed that political stability could be achieved only through the adoption of a constitutional form of government based on a federal system.

    The conservatives’ return to power in the elections of 1853, however, doomed any reform in the near term in Mexico. Many prominent liberals were exiled, including Juárez. From December 1853 until June 1855 he lived in New Orleans in semipoverty, occupying himself by exchanging ideas with other Mexicans and laying plans to return home. The opportunity to put his ideas into action finally came in 1855, when the liberals took control of the national government, and Juárez left the United States to join the new administration of Juan Álvarez as minister of justice and public instruction.

    The liberals carried out three major reforms, all supported by Juárez. As minister of justice, he was responsible for the law bearing his name that abolished special courts for the clergy and military, for he felt that juridical equality would help promote social equality. In June 1856 the government published the Ley Lerdo (“Lerdo Law,” named for the minister of finance). Although it forced the church to sell its property, it contained no threat of confiscation. By breaking up large landed estates, the government hoped that many Mexicans would be able to acquire property and thus create the middle class that it believed was essential for a strong and stable Mexico. The climax of the reform was the liberal constitution promulgated in February 1857.

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    By late 1860 the conservatives were faltering, and in January 1861 Juárez was able to return to Mexico City and was constitutionally elected president. He was, however, faced with many serious problems: the opposition’s forces still remained intact, the new Congress distrusted its president, and the treasury was virtually empty. As a solution to the latter problem, Juárez decided in July 1861 to suspend payment on all foreign debts for two years. England, Spain, and France decided to intervene to safeguard their investments, and by January 1862 the three countries had landed troops at Veracruz. However, when Britain and Spain realized that Napoleon III intended to conquer Mexico and control it through a puppet, Archduke Maximilian of Austria, they withdrew their forces. The French suffered a major defeat at Puebla on May 5, 1862, but with reinforcements they were able to occupy Mexico City in June 1863, and Maximilian soon arrived to take control of the government.

    Forced to leave the capital again, Juárez kept himself and his government alive by a long series of retreats that ended only at El Paso del Norte (later named Juárez) at the Mexican-U.S. border. Early in 1867, as a result of continued Mexican resistance, increased U.S. pressure, and criticism at home, Napoleon decided to withdraw his troops. Soon afterward Mexican forces captured Maximilian and executed him.

    Juárez then made the greatest mistake of his political career. In August 1867, shortly after his return to Mexico City, he issued a call for national elections and for a referendum on whether Congress should make five amendments to the constitution. Public opinion did not object to the president’s running for reelection, but the constitutional changes aroused immediate and violent reaction in many quarters, including those sympathetic to Juárez. His proposed changes came under fire because amendments enacted by Congress alone were unconstitutional, and the changes would strengthen the executive power. Juárez was reelected, but the controversy had created such a crisis of confidence that the administration did not even bother to count the votes on the amendments.

    Despite illness and personal loss—in October 1870 Juárez suffered a stroke, and three months later his wife died—he decided to run again in 1871. After a bitter campaign he was reelected, but many of his countrymen, refusing to accept the result as final, took up arms against him. Juárez spent the last few months of his life trying to restore peace. He died of a heart attack in 1872 and was buried in the Pantheon of San Fernando in Mexico City.

    Juárez’s political rise was a continual struggle to transform his liberal ideas into a permanent political reality and to overcome the prevalent social attitudes toward his Indian background. The prejudices of the 19th century serve to emphasize and enhance Juárez’s extraordinary qualities and achievements. His domestic reforms set the stage for Me...

  3. www.biography.com › political-figures › benito-juarezBenito Juárez - Biography

    Apr 2, 2014 · Benito Juárez initially avoided entering politics, but soon believed the landed aristocracys monopoly on the economy was the root cause Mexicos poor living conditions. Making...

  4. Juárez recognized that true reform was impossible without addressing the issue of clerical power. One of the landmark moments in Juárez's fight for secularism came with the passage of the Reform Laws, a series of legislative measures initiated in the 1850s.

  5. Juárez, Mexico’s greatest symbol of the defense of national sovereignty was popularly and officially celebrated when US troops evacuated Veracruz (after several months of intervention) in November 1914. The same took place upon the expropriation of the foreign oil companies by the Mexican government in 1938.

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  7. Aug 1, 2024 · In the mid-nineteenth century—even as many European liberals took a “turn to empire”—Mexican President Benito Juárez and his supporters enunciated an anti-imperial, liberal vision for international politics.