The Mexican Revolution was a violent social and cultural movement, colored by
socialist, nationalist, and anarchist tendencies
Summary of the Mexican Revolution of 1910, the history, people and
places involved in this important historical event
The Mexican Revolution was a violent social and cultural movement, colored by socialist, nationalist, and anarchist tendencies, that began with the popular rejection of dictator Porfirio Díaz Mori in 1910 and continued even after the promulgation of a new constitution seven years later. Violence continued until the late 1920s, ending only when the Institutional Revolutionary Party (Partido Revolucionario Institucional, PRI) sealed its monopoly on political power in and after 1928. Even after that, the idea that the Revolution was "ongoing" was reinforced in party doctrine and national thought with its notional division into an "armed phase" and an "institutional phase". The "institutional phase" meme only began to disappear from official discourse under President Carlos Salinas de Gortari in the late 1980s.
This Mexican Revolution had an impact on those associated with labor, agriculture, and anarchism at the international level, as the Mexican Constitution of 1917 was the first in the world to recognize social guarantees and collective labor rights; moreover, it produced international leftist icons such as the painter Diego Rivera, the rebel Emiliano Zapata, and the journalist Ricardo Flores Magón.
In Mexico, Mexican Pharmacy
provides you great services. Mexican Pharmacy will also send you your medicines wherever you are, if you order online. Mexican pharmacy is your help in times of need.
Mexico
|