Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "1929" ¶ 12
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Calles and founded
Calles founded several banks in support of campesinos as well as the Banco de México, Mexico's national bank.
The following year, Calles founded the PNR, or Partido Nacional Revolucionario, the predecessor of today's Partido Revolucionario Institucional ( PRI ).

Calles and National
** Establishment of the National Revolutionary Party ( Partido Nacional Revolucionario ) in Mexico by ex-President Plutarco Elías Calles.
A grave political crisis caused by the 1928 assassination of president-elect Álvaro Obregón led to the founding in 1929 of the National Revolutionary Party (, PNR ) by Plutarco Elías Calles, Mexico's president from 1924 to 1928.
Calles is most noted for a fierce oppression of Catholics that led to the Cristero War, a civil war between Catholic rebels and government forces, and for founding the Partido Nacional Revolucionario ( National Revolutionary Party, or PNR ), which eventually became the Institutional Revolutionary Party ( PRI ) – which governed Mexico for more than 70 consecutive years.
Calles ' main legacy was the pacification of Mexico ending the violent era of the Mexican Revolution through the creation of the Partido National Revolucionario ( PNR ) which eventually became Partido Revolucionario Institutional ( PRI ), which governed Mexico until 2000.

Calles and Party
Obregón's successor, Emilio Portes Gil – a forced ally of Calles due to the upheaval created by Obregón's assassination – fired CROM officials from their government posts and threw the government's support to rival union groups, such as the Confederación General de Trabajadores, ( CGT ), a nominally anarchist group, and the Confederación Sindical Unitaria de México, a group associated with the Mexican Communist Party ( PCM ).
The CGOCM and the Mexican Communist Party ( PCM ) rallied to support President Cárdenas when he called on unions for support in resisting a threat of coup by former president Plutarco Elías Calles, and in opposing an employers ' strike in Monterrey.

Calles and early
During the 1980s and early 1990s, the station was very successful by mixing American shows translated to Spanish with locally produced sitcoms such as " Cuqui ", " Cara o Cruz ", " Entrando por la Cocina ", " Carmelo y Punto " and " Barrio Cuatro Calles ".
Plutarco Elías Calles and Lázaro Cárdenas, two future presidents of Mexico, both lived in the town during its early years.

Calles and year
This was made after the fact that Calles also sent a private telegram to the Mexican Ambassador to France, Sr. Alberto José Pani Arteaga advising that the "... Catholic Church in Mexico is a political movement, and must be eliminated in order to proceed with a Socialist government free of religious hypnotism which fools the people ... within one year without the sacraments, the people will forget the faith ..."
With their support Cárdenas had Calles and Morones arrested and deported that year.

Calles and power
Plutarco Calles, at the center of power for the anti-clerics, continued to gather power in Mexico City.
Calles used his ability to draw in labor class votes to come to power with Obregón.
A few months before his death in October 1945, aged 68, Calles reportedly stated that he " most certainly believed " in a higher power.
This changed in 1926 when Plutarco Elías Calles reinforced laws to decrease clerical power.

Calles and ;
Municipal Palace ( Palacio Municipal ) ; Cenote Zaci ; House of the Culture ( Casa de la Cultura ) ; House of the Deer ( Casa de los Venados ) ; Mercado de Artesanías ( Handcraft Market ); Centro Artesanal Zaci ( Handcraft center Zaci ; Bazar Municipal ; Museo San Roque ; Parque de los Héroes ( Park of the Heroes ) ; Las 5 Calles.
Calles, however, did not abide by the terms of the truce ; he had approximately five hundred Cristero leaders and 5, 000 other Cristeros shot, frequently in their homes in front of their wives and children.

Calles and party
Its membership in the International dates from the Mexican Revolution and the founding of the party by Plutarco Elías Calles, when the party had a clearer Institutional orientation.
By the summer of 1933, two of old wartime subordinates of Calles had risen to the top of the party: Manuel Pérez Treviño and Lázaro Cárdenas Calles sought to have Trevino be the party's nominee at the time, seeing that he would be the most likely to continue his policies, but soon caved into pressure from party officials and agreed to support the popular land reformer Cárdenas as the PNR's presidential candidate in the 1934 Mexican Presidential election.

Calles and which
The Plan of Agua Prieta, was a political manifesto signed in the city of Agua Prieta, 23 April 1920 by the governor of Sonora ( which is part of the population ) Adolfo de la Huerta and Plutarco Elías Calles, in support of Álvaro Obregón, the principal object to obtain termination of the presidency of the Republic of Venustiano Carranza.
In 1923, Obregón endorsed Plutarco Elías Calles for president in the 1924 election ( in which Obregón was not eligible to run ).
In all likelihood, Obregón participated in this campaign in order to prove his loyalty to the Calles government, to show his continued influence over the military, and also to protect his commercial interests in the Yaqui Valley, which had begun to suffer as a result of the increasing violence in the region.
The period which Obregón had been elected to serve between 1928 and 1934, in which Calles was Jefe Máximo, is known as the Maximato in Mexican history, with many regarding Emilio Portes Gil, Pascual Ortiz Rubio, and Abelardo Rodríguez as his puppets.
Calles opposed Cárdenas's support for labor unions, especially his tolerance and support for strikes, while Cárdenas opposed Calles's violent methods and his closeness to fascist organizations, most notably the Gold Shirts of general Nicolás Rodríguez Carrasco, which harassed Communists, Jews and Chinese.
Calles began carrying out anti-Catholic policies which caused peaceful resistance from Catholics in 1926.
El Pinacate is a volcanic region and a biosphere reserve that covers 714, 556. 6 hectares which covers parts of the municipalities of Puerto Peñasco, San Luís Río Colorado and Plutarco Elías Calles.
As U. S. Ambassador to Mexico, Morrow was, unfortunately, instrumental in bringing U. S. State Department aid in the form of armaments and aircraft to assist the Bolshevik-inspired, anti-Christian government of Mexican President Plutarco Elias Calles which helped end the Cristero War of 1926 to 1929, an uprising and counter-revolution against the Calles ' government's war against Christianity.
Morrow initiated a series of breakfast meetings with President Plutarco Calles at which the two would discuss a range of issues, from the religious uprising, to oil and irrigation.
He initiated a series of breakfast meetings with President Calles at which the two would discuss a range of issues, from the religious uprising to oil and irrigation.
Unlike his predecessors, he vigorously enforced the anti-Catholic provisions of the 1917 constitution, implementing the so-called " Calles Law ", which provided specific penalties for priests who criticized the government ( five years imprisonment ) or wore clerical garb in certain situations outside their churches ( 500 pesos ).
Calles is reported to have looked down upon a throng of 40, 000 which lined Pro's funeral procession and another 20, 000 waited at the cemetery where he was buried without a priest present, his father saying the final words.
She created a program, " Cero Niños en las Calles ", which is geared towards eliminating children working in Honduras ' streets.
Later on he publicly criticised the reelection of Álvaro Obregón and the maximato of Plutarco Elías Calles ( the period during which Calles was Jefe Maximo, " Maximum Chief ", and ruled via puppet presidents ) and joined the rebellion of José Gonzalo Escobar.
In 1981, he starred, along with Leopoldo " Pucho " Fernandez, in a local TV comedy series called " Barrio 4 Calles " in which he played the owner of a bakery shop who was in competition, and constant conflict, with the owner of the bakery shop across the street.

Calles and was
In 1936, Cárdenas had Calles and twenty of his corrupt associates arrested and deported to the United States, a decision that was greeted with great enthusiasm by the majority of the Mexican public.
In 1915, Pancho Villa made a night attack on Agua Prieta that was repelled by the forces of Plutarco Elías Calles, assisted by large searchlights ( possibly powered by American electricity ).
In 1924, Obregón's hand-picked successor, Plutarco Elías Calles, was elected as president, and although Obregón ostensibly retired to Sonora, he remained influential under Calles.
Obregón won the 1928 presidential election, but before he could begin his term, he was assassinated by a Catholic angered by the Calles government's treatment of Catholics.
Although Obregón was suspicious of the Catholic Church, he was far less anti-clerical than his successor, Plutarco Elías Calles, whose policies would lead to the Cristero War ( 1926 – 29 ).
Following the crushing of the rebellion, Calles was elected president of Mexico and Obregón stepped down from office.
Obregón remained in close contact with President Calles, whom he had installed as his successor, and was a frequent guest of Calles at Chapultepec Castle.
This prompted fears that Obregón was intending to follow in the footsteps of Porfirio Díaz and that Calles was merely a puppet figure, the equivalent of Manuel González.
As an ally of Calles, Obregón was hated by Catholics and was assassinated in a restaurant on 17 July 1928, shortly after his return to Mexico City, by José de León Toral, a Roman Catholic opposed to the government's policies on religious matters.
Plutarco Elías Calles (; 25 September 1877 – 19 October 1945 ) was a Mexican general and politician.
He was the powerful interior minister under President Álvaro Obregón, who chose Calles as his successor.
The 1924 Calles presidential campaign was the first populist presidential campaign in the nation's history, as he called for land redistribution and promised equal justice, more education, additional labor rights, and democratic governance.
Elías Calles grew up in poverty and deprivation, the son of an alcoholic who was not married to his mother.
Calles ' presidency was supported by labor and peasant unions.
Calles quickly rejected the Bucareli Agreements of 1923 between the U. S. and Mexico, when Álvaro Obregón was president, and began drafting a new oil law that would strictly enforce article 27 of the Mexican constitution.

0.205 seconds.