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Ignacio Zaragoza

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Allegiance
  
Years of service
  
1853-1862


Name
  
Ignacio Zaragoza

Service/branch
  
Mexican Army

Ignacio Zaragoza FileGeneral Ignacio Zaragozajpg Wikimedia Commons

Born
  
March 24, 1829Nuestra Senora de Loreto de la Bahia,Coahuila y Texas,  Mexico (
1829-03-24
)

Buried at
  
Panteon de San FernandoMexico City [1]

Rank
  
GeneralSecretary of War

Battles/wars
  
Reform WarBattle of AcultzingoComonfort's RebellionBattle of GuadalajaraBattle of CalpulalpanBattle of Puebla

Died
  
September 8, 1862, Puebla, Mexico

Parents
  
Miguel G. Zaragoza, Maria de Jesus Seguin

Battles and wars
  
Reform War, Battle of Guadalajara, Battle of Puebla

Similar People
  
Charles de Lorencez, Maximilian I of Mexico, Benito Juarez, Porfirio Diaz, Miguel Miramon

Ignacio zaragoza


Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín ([iɣˈnasjo saɾaˈɣosa]; March 24, 1829 – September 8, 1862) was a Mexican general and politician. He led the Mexican Army that defeated invading French forces at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862 (now celebrated in both the United States and Mexico as Cinco de Mayo).

Contents

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Early life

Ignacio Zaragoza badassoftheweekcomzaragozajpg

Zaragoza was born in the early Mexican Texas village of Bahía del Espíritu Santo (now Goliad, Texas, in the United States) in what was then the Mexican state of Coahuila y Texas. He was the son of Miguel G. Zaragoza and María de Jesús Seguín, who was a niece of Erasmo Seguín and cousin of Juan Seguín. The Zaragoza family moved to Matamoros, Mexico, in 1834, and thence to Monterrey, Mexico, in 1844, where young Ignacio entered a seminary.

Military and political career

Ignacio Zaragoza Biografia de Ignacio Zaragoza

During the political unrest of the 1850s, Zaragoza joined the army supporting the cause of the Liberal Party, in opposition to dictator Antonio López de Santa Anna. Zaragoza rose to command an army of volunteers that in 1855 defeated Santa Anna and led to the re-establishment of a constitutional democratic government in Mexico.

Ignacio Zaragoza FileIgnacio Zaragozajpg Wikimedia Commons

Zaragoza served as Secretary of War from April through October 1861, in the cabinet of Benito Juárez. He resigned in order to lead the Army of the East (Ejército de Oriente) against the Europeans who, using the Mexican external debt as a pretext under the Treaty of London concluded earlier that year, had invaded Mexico.

Ignacio Zaragoza Galera Ignacio Zaragoza Jefe del Ejrcito de Oriente

When the forces of Napoleon III invaded in the French intervention in Mexico, Zaragoza's forces fought them at Acultzingo on April 28, 1862, where he was forced to withdraw. Zaragoza understood the favorable defensive positions outside of the city of Puebla, and with a force that was smaller and not as well equipped as his opponent, beat back repeated French assaults upon the Mexican positions at Forts Loreto and Guadalupe. The French were forced to retreat to Orizaba.

Ignacio Zaragoza Badass of the Week Ignacio Zaragoza

Shortly after his famous victory, Zaragoza was struck with typhoid fever, of which he died at the age of 33. He was buried in San Fernando Cemetery in Mexico City. He was later exhumed and transferred to Puebla, while his former tomb became a monument.

Legacy

His famous quotation, Las armas nacionales se han cubierto de gloria ("The national arms have been covered with glory"), is used to remember the battle, and comes from the single-line letter he wrote to his superior, President Juárez, informing him of the victory. It was included, along with Zaragoza's likeness, on Mexican 500-peso banknotes from 1995 to 2010 (Series D).

In Mexico City, Zaragoza is honored with a Metro station named for him on Line 1. In the film Cinco de Mayo La Batalla (2013), Zaragoza was portrayed by Kuno Becker.

References

Ignacio Zaragoza Wikipedia