Site Navigation
Categories:
Presidents of Mexico
Mexican presidential candidates (1861)
Mexican presidential candidates (1867)
Mexican presidential candidates (1871)
French intervention in Mexico
Governors of Oaxaca
Zapotec people
Mexican lawyers
Mexican Roman Catholics
People from Oaxaca
1806 births
1872 deaths
Mexican liberales
Mexican regicides
All articles with unsourced statements
Articles with unsourced statements since April 2008
Articles needing additional references from April 2008

Summary Of: Benito Juárez

Benito Juárez was the first Mexican leader who did not have a military background... Benito Juárez with his sister Nela... Benito Juárez with his sister Nela... Benito Juárez died of a... Benito Juárez park monument in Houston... Benito Juárez park monument in... Today Benito Juárez is remembered as being a progressive reformer dedicated to democracy... Benito Juárez also has two great great great great nephews there names are Miguel Jose and Angel... was named after Benito Juárez by his Socialist parents... university fraternity that takes Benito Juárez as one of its...

Encyclodia Page On: Benito Juárez

These Are Links To Other Documents
Benito Juárez (disambiguation) | Benito Juárez | President of Mexico | January 19 | 1858 | July 18 | 1872 | Ignacio Comonfort | Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada | San Pablo Guelatao | Oaxaca | Mexico City | Federal District | [be'nit̪o 'paβ̞lo 'xwaɾes gaɾ'sia] | March 21 | 1806 | July 18 | 1872 | Zapotec | Amerindian | president of Mexico | Mexico | Second Empire | indigenous national | San Pablo Guelatao | Oaxaca | Sierra Juárez | peasants | Indians | Zapotec | | | Antonio López de Santa Anna | New Orleans, Louisiana | cigar | Plan of Ayutla | Juan Álvarez | La Reforma | new federalist constitution | Ignacio Comonfort | Félix Zuloaga | Mexican War of the Reform | Querétaro | Veracruz | Spain | Great Britain | France | Napoleon III | French intervention in Mexico | Puebla | Cinco de Mayo | May 5 | San Luis Potosí | Ciudad Juárez | Chihuahua | Chihuahua City | cabinet | government-in-exile | Maximilian I of Mexico | Plácido Vega y Daza | California | Mexican American | John Quincy Adams | citation needed | Monroe Doctrine | government | Maximilian | Philip Sheridan | Prussia | executed by firing squad | June 19 | 1867 | Porfirio Díaz | heart attack | National Palace | Mexico City | Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada | | | Houston, Texas | United States | Roman Catholic Church | civilian control | Porfirio Díaz | Mexican Revolution | | | March 21 | Fiestas Patrias (Mexico) | Republic of Colombia | May 1 | 1865 | Congress of Colombia | Warner Brothers | Juárez | Paul Muni | Bette Davis | Erich Wolfgang Korngold | motion pictures | Jason Robards, Sr. | Luis Valdez | Juárez | Benito Mussolini | Dictator of Italy | | | Mexico City | Guanajuato | Oaxaca | Querétaro | Nuevo Laredo | United States | New York City | Bryant Park | Washington, D.C. | Watergate Building | Magnificent Mile | Michigan Avenue | Chicago | Basin Street | New Orleans | San Diego, California | Anaheim, California | San Diego, California | Guatemala | Quetzaltenango | Guatemala City | New Delhi | National Palace | | | | | History of Mexico | ΦΙΑ | U.S. | Statues of the Liberators | | citations | verification | reliable references | challenged | Wikimedia Commons | Wikiquote | Ignacio Comonfort | President of Mexico | Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada | v | Heads of state of Mexico | First Mexican Empire | Agustín I | Independence | Victoria | Guerrero | J. M. Bocanegra | Vélez | Bustamante | Múzquiz | Gómez Pedraza | Gómez Farías | López de Santa Anna | Gómez Farías | López de Santa Anna | Gómez Farías | López de Santa Anna | Gómez Farías | López de Santa Anna | Barragán | Corro | Bustamante | López de Santa Anna | Bravo | Bustamante | F. J. Echeverría | Bravo | López de Santa Anna | Bravo | Canalizo | López de Santa Anna | Herrera | Canalizo | Herrera | Valencia | Paredes | Salas | Gómez Farías | López de Santa Anna | Anaya | López de Santa Anna | Peña y Peña | Anaya | Peña y Peña | Arista | Ceballos | Lombardini | López de Santa Anna | Carrera | Díaz de la Vega | Álvarez | Comonfort | Reform War | Zuloaga | Pezuela | Salas | Zuloaga | Miramón | Pavón | Miramón | Zuloaga | Regency | Almonte | Salas | Antonio de Labastida y Dávalos | Second Mexican Empire | Maximilian I | Reform | Lerdo de Tejada | José María Iglesias | Díaz | Méndez | Díaz | González | Díaz | Mexican Revolution | León de la Barra | Madero | Lascuráin | Huerta | Carvajal | Gutiérrez | González Garza | Lagos Cházaro | Carranza | de la Huerta | Obregón | Elías Calles | Portes Gil | Ortiz Rubio | Luján Rodríguez | Cárdenas | Ávila Camacho | Alemán | Ruiz Cortines | López Mateos | Díaz Ordaz | Echeverría | López Portillo | de la Madrid | Salinas | Zedillo | Fox | Calderón | Categories | Presidents of Mexico | Mexican presidential candidates (1861) | Mexican presidential candidates (1867) | Mexican presidential candidates (1871) | French intervention in Mexico | Governors of Oaxaca | Zapotec people | Mexican lawyers | Mexican Roman Catholics | People from Oaxaca | 1806 births | 1872 deaths | Mexican liberales | Mexican regicides | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since April 2008 | Articles needing additional references from April 2008 |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Benito Juárez".