I. MEXICO PRIOR TO INDEPENDENCE                                                          20%

      A.   Pre-Columbian Civilizations

            1.   Olmec, Teotihuacán, and Toltec Civilizations

                  a)   Olmec, the mother culture of Mesoamerica, c. 1200 b.c.

                  b)   Development of a calendar and a hieroglyphic form of writing

                  c)   Main sites of San Lorenzo, La Venta, and Tres Zapotes

                  d)   What is known about the Olmec

                  e)   Teotihuacán, c. 100–750 a.d.

                  f)    Architecture

                  g)   Trade, commerce, and manufacturing

                  h)   Destruction and population dispersal

                  i)    Toltecs, the successors to Teotihuacán

                  j)    The city of Tula established c. 968 as a focal point of culture

                  k)   Religious additions and refinements

                  l)    A militarized society and its impact across the region

                  m)  Decline, fall to barbarians (chichimecas), and dispersal 

 

            2.   Independent Research Topic: Mayan civilization*

                  a)   The Classic Period (c. 250–900)*

                  b)   Science and mathematics*

                  c)   Ceremonial cities and architecture*

                  d)   Political organization and major sites*

                  e)   Postclassical Period (10th to 16th centuries) and the move to Yucatán*

                  f)    Trade with Central America and Mesoamerica*

                  g)   Independent city-states*

                  h)   Major sites of the postclassical Maya*     

 

            3.   Mexica-Nahua (Aztec) civilization and its tribute empire

                  a)   The Mexica and the founding of Tenochtitlán (1325 a.d.)

                  b)   Rise to military power and assumption of the Toltec mantle

                  c)   Religious beliefs, the central role of war, and human sacrifice

                  d)   Social and political organization, schools, and the oral tradition

                  e)   Conflict between status conferred by merit and by wealth

                  f)    Deification of the paramount ruler

                  g)   Military organization and capabilities on the eve of the conquest

                   
 

      B.   The Spanish Conquest

            1.   The Cortés expedition of 1519

                  a)   Consolidation of a Spanish presence in the Antilles after 1492

                  b)   Preliminary institutional organization in the islands

                  c)   The Church declares Indians to be human and pagans worthy of conversion

                  d)   Initial probing of the mainland before Cortés

                  e)   Confusion of the Mexica over the nature of the threat

                  f)    Role of indigenous allies in Cortés' success 

 

            2.   The destruction of Tenochtitlán

                  a)   Seizure of Moctezuma and the consequences

                  b)   Retreat, regrouping, and the siege of Tenochtitlán

                  c)   Mexico City arises on the ruins of a destroyed Tenochtitlán

     

 

      C.   The Colonial Period (New Spain)

            1.   The religious conquest

                  a)   The arrival of the first missionaries and their expectations

                  b)   Different approach of Indians to Christianity

                  c)   Arrival of Juan de Zumarraga, the bishop elect of Mexico City

                  d)   Methods used to convert in the early decades

                  e)   Indian education

                  f)    Disillusionment of the friars

                  g)   Role of Our Lady of Guadalupe

                  h)   Conflict between the regular orders and the secular clergy

 

            2.   Introduction of Spanish institutions

                  a)   Philosophical foundations of the state

                  b)   Political organization following the destruction of Tenochtitlán

                  c)   Distrust between the Crown and the Conquistadores

                  d)   Mission of Antonio Mendoza, first viceroy of New Spain

                  e)   Mixton War—a threat to the supremacy of royal authority

                  f)    Municipalities, merchant guilds, taxes

                  g)   Educational institutions

                  h)   Eighteenth-century administrative reforms

 

            3.   Colonial society and economy

                  a)   Emergence of mestizos

                  b)   Deadly epidemics drastically reduce the indigenous population

                  c)   African slaves and mulattoes in multiracial cities

                  d)   Domestic economy, merchants, manufacturers, and artisans

                  e)   Silver mining as the economic engine of New Spain

                  f)    The Church as a credit institution

                  g)   Trade with Spain

                  h)   Women in a patriarchic society

                  i)    Religious life, convents

 

 

II.   INDEPENDENCE TO THE REVOLUTION OF 1910                                        45%

      A.   Armed Insurgency and Independence

            1.   Independent Research Topic: The Hidalgo and Morelos Revolts*

                  a)   Colonial maturity and weakening ties to Spain*

                  b)   Napoleonic invasion of Spain as the immediate cause*

                  c)   Popular sovereignty and the Spanish Constitution of 1812*

                  d)   Drive for political autonomy*

                  e)   Class interests in conflict between Royalists and Autonomists*

                  f)    The Hidalgo Revolt and the move to protracted civil war*

                  g)   José María Morelos as a template for independence*

                  h)   The Plan of Iguala crystallizes a consensus for independence*

 

            2.   The Constitution of 1812 

 

            3.   Spanish Counterinsurgency

 

            4.   Independence and the first empire

                  a)   The Army of the Three Guarantees secures independence

                  b)   Agustín Iturbide as emperor and his failure

 

            5.   The early federal republic

                  a)   Role of federal states vs. Federal government

                  b)   Weak notion of a center of union

                  c)   Influence of the U.S. Constitution and experience

                  d)   Constitution of 1824

                  e)   Absence of political parties and substitute role of Masonic lodges

                  f)    Question of national identity and right to govern

                  g)   Role of the Indians in the new nation

                  h)   Liberalism defined and perceived enemies identified

                  i)    The rising importance of Santa Anna

                  j)    Centralization of the government by Santa Anna

                  k)   The disastrous centralized Constitution of 1836                 

     

 

      B.   The Mexican-American War, 1846–48: Origins, Process, and Implications

            1.   Independent Research Topic: revolt in Texas*

                  a)   Northern Mexico as a population vacuum*

                  b)   Territorial threats after the Louisiana Purchase*

                  c)    American settlers in Texas*

                  d)   Early efforts to restrict American immigration*

                  e)   Reaction of Tejanos and immigrants to centralization*

                  f)    Santa Anna's military battles in Texas*

                  g)   The Lone Star Republic (1836–45)*

                  h)   Manifest Destiny and the annexation of Texas (1845)*

 

            2.   Independent Research Topic: The Mexican-American War, 1846–48—war, invasion,                   and defeat*

                  a)   Election of President James K. Polk and American expansionism*

                  b)   Failed effort to buy territory*

                  c)    Searching for a pretext for war*

                  d)   Mexico on the eve of war*

                  e)    American army at war, seizure of California and New Mexico*

                  f)    Generals Taylor and Scott in Mexico*

                  g)   Capture and occupation of Mexico City*

                  h)   Differing reaction of Liberals and Conservatives to defeat*

                  i)    Opposition to the war in the United States*

 

            3.   Independent Research Topic: The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the aftermath
      of defeat (1848)*

                  a)   Terms of the treaty*

                  b)   Differing explanations of defeat by Conservatives and Liberals*

                  c)   Differing solutions to the problem of an expansionist United States*

                  d)   Consequences of the new border*

                  e)   The North under American rule*

 

 

      C.   The War of the Reform and the Constitution of 1857

            1.   The ideological struggle between Conservatives and Liberals

                  a)   Imposed reform derived from the eighteenth-century Enlightenment

                  b)   Struggle over land held by the Church and Indian communal land

                  c)   Role of anti-clericalism

 

            2.   War of the Reform and the Constitution of 1857

                  a)   Enshrining Liberal principles within a constitution

                  b)   Clergy and bureaucrats forced to accept the constitution

                  c)   Reaction of Pope Pius IX

                  d)   Outbreak of the War of the Reform (1858–61)

                  e)   Desperate funding measures

                  f)    Atrocities and senseless destruction

                  g)   Mexico and the United States on the eve of disaster

 

 

      D.   The French Intervention and the Reign of Emperor Maximilian

            1.   Independent Research Topic: French troops in Mexico*

                  a)   Mexican debt as a pretext for intervention*

                  b)   Emperor Napoleon's grand scheme to revitalize monarchies*

                  c)   Mexican Conservatives in Europe*

                  d)   Veracruz customhouse blockade by Britain, Spain, and France*

                  e)   Temporary defeat at Puebla followed by occupation of Mexico City*

                  f)   Influence of the U.S. Civil War on events in Mexico*

 

            2.   Maximilian's government and the Mexican people

                  a)   Expectations of the clergy and Conservatives

                  b)   A Liberal in monarchist robes

                  c)   Refusal to reverse Liberal reforms angers the Vatican

                  d)   Withdrawal of the French and the capture and execution of Maximilian 

 

 

      E.   The Restored Republic and the Rise of Porfirio Díaz

            1.   Development of a Liberal-Conservative consensus

                  a)   Benito Juárez and respect for discredited Conservatives

                  b)   Ideas of Auguste Comte fuse with Liberalism

                  c)   Founding of the National Preparatory School

                  d)   Influence of Comtian positivism on Mexican history

                  e)   Dissatisfaction with permanent reelection of Juárez

                  f)    General Porfirio Díaz' unsuccessful revolt of La Noria

                  g)   Death of Juárez and the presidency of Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada

                  h)   Porfirio Díaz' Tuxtepec Revolt succeeds    

            2.   Independent Research Topic: Consolidation of the Porfiriato*

                  a)   Background, patriotism, and image*

                  b)   The economic importance of appearing stable and orderly*

                  c)    An accommodation with the Church*

                  d)   Dealing with old debt and encouraging foreign investors*

                  e)   Commercialization of export agriculture*

                  f)    The Porfirian social structure*

                  g)   Relations with the United States*

                  h)   The illusion of strength, the army, and the Rurales*

                  i)    Bi-national border region becomes a reality*

                  j)    Assessing the importance of the Porfiriato in Mexican history*

 

 

III.  THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION TO THE PRESENT                                       35%

     

      A.   The Mexican Revolution

               1.   The problems of the Porfiriato and the road to revolution

                     a)   The poverty of progress

                     b)   Food shortfall

                     c)   Critics within and radical opposition

                     d)   The dilemma of the exporting oligarchy

               2.   President Madero and the failed Conservative revolution

                     a)   The unresolved problem of a successor to President Díaz

                     b)   Background of Francisco I. Madero, wealth and family

                     c)   The Creelman interview causes political uncertainty

                     d)   Madero misreads lower-class complaints

                     e)   1910, the independence centennial, election, and the Madero revolt

                     f)    Rebels take the border city of Juárez, followed by Torreón

                     g)   Federal army in confusion, Díaz negotiates and goes into exile

                     h)   An elected President Madero preserves the Porfirian structure

                     i)    Expectations of the oligarchy, Church, and foreign investors

                     j)    Expectations of Emiliano Zapata as a bellwether of coming violence

                     k)   Madero offers political democracy as the panacea

                     l)    The "Tragic Ten Days" (Feb. 9–19, 1913) and the murder of Madero

               3.   Independent Research Topic: Huerta, Wilson, and the Unfolding of the Revolution*

                     a)   General Victoriano Huerta faces opposition from Woodrow Wilson*

                     b)   Supporters of Madero, the Constitutionalists attack the Huerta regime*

                     c)    U.S. President Wilson reacts to arms shipments by invading port of Veracruz*

                     d)   Anti-American reaction in Mexico*

                     e)   Wilson forces out Huerta*

                     f)    Opposition of Pancho Villa*

                     g)   Lower middle-class and rural peasantry in revolutionary armies*

                     h)   Carranza opposed to popular social and economic demands*

                     i)    Revolutionary generals as the presidential hopefuls*

               4.   Carranza government and the Constitution of 1917

                     a)   Distribution of land as the key to control

                     b)   Redistribution of Porfirian prosperity

                     c)   Radicals control the writing of a new constitution

                     d)   Social and economic implications of the most radical articles

                5.  The revolutionary generals in the presidency

                     a)   Revolt of General Alvaro Obregón

                     b)   Assassination of Carranza (1920)

                     c)   President Obregón and relations with the United States

                     d)   Agrarian Regulatory Law of 1922

                     e)   Integration of revolutionary soldiers into the federal army and reducing

                           the number of generals

                     f)    Calculated violence as a political tool

                     g)   President Calles and successors until 1934—The Maximato

                     h)   The Cristero Rebellion

                     i)    The creation of the PNR

                     j)    President Lázaro Cárdenas re-radicalizes the revolution

                     k)   Expropriation of foreign oil companies

                     l)    Manuel Avila Camacho succeeds, ending the revolution

                     m)  Assessing the importance of the revolution in Mexican history

 

 

         B.   The Origins and Purpose of the Official Party

               1.   Partido Revolucionario Institucional, PRI (1946)

                     a)   The idea of an official party

                     b)   Predecessors of the PRI

                     c)   How the PRI functioned prior to the 1990s

                     d)   Industrialization and urban growth after 1940

                     e)   Corruption and a mature corporate state

                     f)    Nationalism fuses with a rhetorical revolutionary state 

                     g)   Importance of form, but not substance of political democracy

 

 

         C.   The End of PRI Hegemony

            1.   Disillusionment with the government

                  a)   Economic growth unable to keep up with population

                  b)   Urban poverty and makeshift settlements

                  c)   Tlalteloco Massacre; government's inability to respond to 1985 earthquake

                  d)   The Zapatista revolt in Chiapas (1994)

            2.   Shift to the opposition Partido Accíon Nacional (PAN)

                  a)   Origins of the PAN and relationship with the PRI

                  b)   Attraction to the middle class

                  c)   Connection with the United States

                  d)   PRI desperation and NAFTA (1994)

            3.   PAN wins presidency in 2000 and the consequences

                  a)   End of the strong presidency

                  b)   Inexperienced congress takes over

                  c)   Disappointment in effectiveness of President Vicente Fox

                  d)   PAN wins narrow presidential victory in 2006

                  e)   Andres López Obrador challenges the new democratic system 

 

 

        D.   Current Issues and Challenges

            1.   Illegal drug industry's threat to political authority  

                  a)   Origins of the problem in the 1920s

                  b)   WWII and demand for Mexican opium cultivation

                  c)   Postwar demand for drugs in the United States

                  d)   Early Mexican involvement in the illegal industry

                  e)   Drug lords emerge who are able to challenge the state

                  f)    Corruption of police, army, and border violence

            2.   The extent of cultural integration with the United States

                  a)   Nineteenth-century debate between Conservative and Liberal views

                  b)   Postwar cultural impact of mass tourism

                  c)   Technology from railways to television, Internet to prepaid phone cards

                  d)   Mexican-Americans as a cultural bridge

                  e)   Returning workers, attitudes, NASCAR, NFL

                  f)    Consequences of allowing Mexicans abroad to vote in national elections

            3.   Independent Research Topic: Dispute with the United States on the nature of the                   border and illegal immigration*

                  a)   History of the border after the Treaty of Guadalupe*

                  b)   Differing perceptions of the modern border*

                  c)   The border as an outlet for worker surplus resulting from poor economic

                        development*

                  d)   Potential impacts of a closed border for both countries*

           

*Asterisks indicate topics that students will need to research independently. Information on these "research topics" can be found in history textbooks, the USAD Social Science Research Guide, in encyclopedias, and on the Internet.