Hapsburgs on the Rio Grande: The Rise and Fall of the Second Mexican Empire, Jonas - B +
This superb history views the Second Mexican Empire as "a unique position from which to understand the globally destabilizing effect of US encroachment under the guise of Manifest Destiny." The story is rooted in "European astonishment at unrelenting US expansion." When the Civil War broke out, European powers led by France declared Mexico's loans in default and invaded. They proclaimed they were protecting Latin America from the predatory US.
When the Louisiana Purchase was followed by the mid-century annexation of Texas and the taking of the western half of the continent from Mexico, Europeans were alarmed at the growth and ambition of America. Catholic France was perceived to be the bastion to protect "Latin peoples against Anglo-Saxon aggression." France invaded in late 1861 intending to establish a monarchy. The fact that no one other than a handful of Mexican elites wanted a change in government did not faze the French. At the first battle, Puebla, Mexico handily defeated the invaders. France sent over close to 40,000 reinforcements in the next year. Puebla fell in the spring of 1863. The Juarez government fled Mexico City before the French occupation. As the French extended their power north, the Archduke Maximilian was offered the throne.
Napoleon III left nothing to chance, honoring and flattering Maximilian and his wife Charlotte in Paris for a week. "Paris was the apogee of the Mexican Empire." There was no enthusiasm for the venture in London or Vienna, and the US House passed a resolution opposing the monarchy. Nonetheless, the royal couple arrived in Veracruz on May 28, 1864 with a 400 page draft of protocols for managing their court. They were warmly received in the capital and for a time "things went their way." Maximilian's first major challenge was the Catholic Church's insistence on a restoration of its property and a reinstatement of its primacy in Mexico. He refused to succumb to their demands. In the summer of 1866, imperial forces began to lose skirmishes, then battles, then entire regions in the north of the country to resurgent republican troops. The French began to evacuate. US diplomacy made it clear that it was totally opposed to the monarchy. Charlotte went to Paris to plead for more French assistance, but was rebuffed by Napoleon III. A visit to the pope was also to no avail. She returned to her palace near Trieste in declining health.
That fall, Maximilian began to consider abdication. Instead, he proclaimed his desire to stay and transform the empire to a purely Mexican entity after the French left. The emperor went north to the city of Quereatro to join his army, but was surrounded and besieged by republican forces. It was soon over and the emperor was a prisoner. Maximilian and two of his generals were tried and sentenced to death. On June 19th, they faced a firing squad.
Maximilian's remains were embalmed and returned to Vienna. A memorial chapel in his honor was dedicated in Quereatro in 1904. "In death, Maximilian lent himself to the purposes of others just as he did in life. Time, architecture, and memorial masses celebrated every year on the anniversary of the execution reinvented the empire. Chapel and ritual elevated the empire of vanity to a sacred plane where it became a redemptive sacrifice and a triumph over death." This is a very wellwritten and wondrously short history that has taught me about something that I knew virtually nothing about.
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