Each year from September 15 to October 15, Americans celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month. Begun in 1968 as Hispanic Heritage Week, this celebration of the histories, cultures, and contributions of Americans of Hispanic ancestry was expanded in 1988.这种不寻常的每月中旬启动具有划时代的意义,为拉美国家,包括哥斯达黎加,萨尔瓦多,危地马拉,洪都拉斯和尼加拉瓜日从西班牙的独立性,以1821年9月15日,与墨西哥和智利在其后不久,9月16日和18, 分别。然而,很多美国人没有意识到,但是,是引人入胜的方式,助长自己的独立战争的非常理想点燃,几乎200年前达到顶峰的那一天的火灾。
American schoolchildren have always been taught about the classical liberal ideals of our founders, but often remain ignorant about the profound impact those concepts had on the rest of the world. Principles such as limited, representative government, individual rights, and life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness lit fires in the minds of men and women across the globe. Soon the status quo was called into question, and with it things like the ossified social order, the divine right of kings, and the privileges of the traditional aristocracy.
十八世纪末,殖民America increasingly objected to Spanish rule. Awareness of the American Revolution and, among the educated, of liberal democratic political ideas of the Enlightenment, spurred questions about the colonies’ future.
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The place where the American Revolution had its most famous impact was wartime ally France, where Enlightenment thinkers, homegrown classical liberals, and veterans of the American experience helped to create a rising tide of feeling that, combined with economic hardship, culminated in the French Revolution. Sadly, warfare and the excesses of the Guillotine temporarily drowned liberty in France and eventuated in the revolutionary dictatorship of Napoleon. The ideals of freedom remained in the hearts of the people, however, as signified by the gift of the statueLiberty Enlightening the Worldby sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi generations later.
In her left hand, the statue clutches a tablet, on which is inscribed “1776”… the year in which the U.S. Declaration of Independence was signed, declaring that Britain’s colonies in North America intended to become an independent nation, based on the belief that “all men are created equal” and that when governments fail to uphold mankind’s natural rights to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” citizens have a natural right to overthrow that government and establish a new one.
In her other hand, Lady Liberty holds a torch, symbolizing the light that the United States holds up for the world, showing the ideal path to follow in politics… Finally, at her feet, lay broken shackles, representing the political repression of Europe from which the United States had broken free.
In 1871, Bartholdi wrote in a letter to Laboulaye: “I will try to glorify the Republic and Liberty over there, in the hope that someday I will find it again here [in France].”
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As Napoleon was building an empire from the remains of the French Republic, the ideals of the American Revolution were spreading throughout Mexico, the Caribbean, Latin America, and South America. In Mexico, discontent with Spanish rule was replaced by hatred of the French when Napoleon invaded Spain and claimed the Spanish throne, and with it sovereignty over its colonies
This rebellious mood was heightened in 1808, when Napoleon invaded Spain and replaced its ruling monarch, King Ferdinand VII (1784-1833), with his own brother, Joseph Bonaparte (1768-1844). Mexicans cheered when the Spanish revolted. Ferdinand would be returned to his throne six years later, but in the meantime, the spark of revolution had been lit in Mexico. Soon an on-again, off-again war for independence had begun there.
This rebellion started with an 1810 revolt led by a Catholic priest, Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla (1753-1811), who managed to gather an army of sixty thousand mestizos before he was captured and executed by the Spanish. Despite his fate, Hidalgo became a popular folk hero, and the first day of his revolt, September 16, is still celebrated as Mexico’s independence day, even though independence had not yet been achieved.
While the first leaders had been captured and put to death, the Mexican people had embarked on the same road that the Americans had at Lexington and Concord. The ideals of 1776 had launched revolutions on different continents, and the very forces that extinguished the torch of liberty in France had set it blazing in Mexico.
回来检查下周五,10月3日第2部分,我们将研究对西班牙帝国的斗争,在国家西班牙遗产月承认国家的其余部分的独立性。
References:
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地图西班牙主要的(西班牙语学校版画,十八世纪)。世界学者:拉丁美洲和加勒比地区。Gale, Cengage Learning, 2010.世界学者:拉丁美洲和加勒比地区。Web. 19 Sept. 2014.
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Wars of Independence。世界学者:拉丁美洲和加勒比地区。Gale, Cengage Learning, 2011.世界学者:拉丁美洲和加勒比地区。Web. 19 Sept. 2014.
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Outman, James L.自由女神像。美国移民和移民参考图书馆。埃德。劳伦斯W.贝克等人。卷。4:卷。2:传记。底特律:UXL,2004. 363-374。U.S. History in Context。Web. 19 Sept. 2014.
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The United States and Mexico: Close Neighbors with Different Goals。Mexican-American War。埃德。Julie L. Carnagie and Kelly King Howes. Detroit: UXL, 2003. 3-16.世界历史语境中。Web. 19 Sept. 2014.
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Mural depicting the “Grito de Dolores” (by Juan O’Gorman, twentieth century)。世界学者:拉丁美洲和加勒比地区。Gale, Cengage Learning, 2010.世界学者:拉丁美洲和加勒比地区。Web. 19 Sept. 2014.
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关于作者
Geoff is a Renaissance man, who can often be found reading about obscure historical topics, working on cars, or debating world affairs. He comes from a family of teachers and has a BA in communications.
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