Pronunciamiento participants

Participants with biographies

A (27)

B (10)

C (24)

D (8)

E (4)

F (6)

G (15)

H (6)

I (3)

J (4)

L (6)

M (18)

N (3)

O (9)

P (6)

Q (2)

R (7)

S (4)

T (3)

U (4)

V (6)

Z (2)

 

Participants without biographies

Unknown (2)

A (527)

B (323)

C (737)

D (173)

E (197)

F (242)

G (561)

H (203)

I (62)

J (93)

K (3)

L (382)

M (706)

N (91)

O (210)

P (448)

Q (45)

R (631)

S (462)

Aparicio Saavedra (1)
Miguel Saavedra (1)
Manuel Sabariego (2)
Juan José Sábato (1)
Buenaventura Sabido (1)
Diego Sabillas (1)
Félix Sacristi (1)
José M. Sáenz (1)
Lázaro Sáenz (1)
Gabriel Sáenz (1)
Francisco Sáenz (1)
Cayetano Sáenz (1)
José María Saez (1)
Mariano Sagredo (1)
Jacobo Sala (1)
Germán Sala (1)
Ramón Salado (1)
Vicente Salado (1)
José Salado (1)
José María Salado (1)
Jacinto Saláis (1)
R. Salamanca (1)
José Fernando Salas (1)
José Esteban Salas (1)
Mariano Salas (1)
Francisco Salas (2)
Viviano Salas (1)
J. Rafael Salas (0)
Policarpo María Salas (1)
Juan Salas (1)
José María Salas (1)
Juan Salasar (1)
José Eusebio Salazar (1)
Pedro José de Salazar (1)
José María Salazar (2)
Máximo Salazar (1)
Demetrio Salazar (1)
Manuel A. Salazar (1)
Cristóbal Salazar (1)
Joaquín Salazar (1)
José Eusebio Salazar (2)
José Antonio Salazar (1)
Francisco Salazar (1)
Julio Salazar (1)
Luciano Salazar de Nieto (1)
Juan Manuel Salazar Torres (1)
Ignacio Salbatierra (1)
Manuel Salcedo (1)
Pedro Salcedo (1)
Miguel Salcedo (1)
Andrés Saldaña (1)
Miguel Saldaña (1)
Antonio Saldaña (1)
Andrés de Saldaña (1)
Nicolás Saldaña (1)
Carlos M. Saldaña (1)
Vicente Saldaña (1)
Francisco Saldaña (1)
P. M. Saler (2)
José Salgado (1)
Cosme Salgado (1)
Mariano Salgado (1)
José Damacio Salgado (1)
Juan Salgado (2)
José María Salgado (1)
Domingo Salgado (2)
Rubecindo Salgado (1)
Pioquinto Salgado (1)
Pantaleón Salin (1)
Trinidad Salinas (1)
Manuel Salinas (1)
Raymundo Salinas (2)
Cristóbal Salinas (2)
Pantaleón Salinas (1)
Toribio Salinas (1)
José María Salinas (Estado de México) (1)
José María Salinas (Zacatecas) (1)
Ignacio Sallago (1)
Agustín Salmerón (1)
José Salsedo (1)
Eusebio Salto (1)
José María Salvado (1)
Juan Salvador (2)
José Matías Salvador (1)
Domingo Salvador (1)
Pedro F. Salvador (1)
José María Salvador (2)
Alonso Salvador (1)
Juan Salvador González (1)
Manuel Salvador Uriostegui (1)
Miguel Salvatierra (1)
Marqués de Salvatierra (2)
Ramón Salvia (1)
Estevan Sambrano (1)
Miguel Samora (1)
José Consepcion Samudio (1)
Bernadino Samudio (1)
Marqués de San Juan de Rayas (1)
Luis San Martin (1)
Conde de San Pedro del Álamo (1)
Manuel C. San Román (1)
Gregorio Sanches de Armas (1)
José Corisanto Sánchez (1)
Carlos Sánchez (1)
José Desposorio Sánchez (1)
Pioquinto Sánchez (1)
Diego Sánchez (2)
Mariano Sánchez (1)
José Manuel Sanchez (1)
Juan Sánchez (1)
Juan José Sánchez (2)
José Francisco Sánchez (1)
Ireneo Sánchez (1)
Gabino Sánchez (1)
Guillermo Sánchez (1)
Alejandro Sánchez (1)
Eusebio Sánchez (1)
Nicolás Sánchez (1)
Luis Sánchez (1)
Vicente Antonio Sánchez (2)
Felipe de Jesús Sánchez (1)
José Mariano Sánchez (1)
José Crisanto Sánchez (1)
Manuel Sánchez (1)
Lorenzo Sánchez (1)
Joaquín Sánchez (1)
Felipe Sánchez (1)
Ceferino Sánchez (1)
Arcadio Sánchez (1)
Vicente Florentino Sánchez (1)
Simón Sánchez (1)
Atanasio Sánchez (1)
Dionisio Sánchez (1)
Tomás Sánchez (1)
Asencio Sánchez (1)
José Trinidad Sánchez (1)
Aparicio Sánchez (1)
Tomás Sánchez (1)
Trinidad Sánchez (1)
José Joaquín Sánchez (1)
Miguel Sánchez (1)
Jesús Sánchez y Ramos (1)
José Juan Sánchez (Coahuila) (1)
Rafael Sánchez (Colima) (1)
Francisco Sánchez (Estado de México) (1)
Vicente Sánchez (Estado de México) (1)
Vicente Sánchez (Guerrero) (1)
Lucas Sánchez (Guerrero) (1)
Luciano Sánchez (Guerrero) (1)
José María Sánchez (México D.F.) (3)
Francisco Sánchez (México D.F.) (3)
Rafael Sánchez (México D.F.) (1)
Rafael Sánchez (Michoacán) (1)
Luciano Sánchez (Morelos) (1)
Lucas Sánchez (Puebla) (1)
Luciano Sánchez (Puebla) (1)
Rafael Sánchez (Querétaro) (1)
Rafael Sánchez (Querétaro) (1)
Francisco Sánchez (San Luis Potosí) (2)
Vicente Sánchez (San Luis Potosí) (1)
Pedro Sánchez (Sinaloa) (1)
Pedro Sánchez (Tabasco) (1)
José Juan Sánchez (Tamaulipas) (1)
José María Sánchez (Tamaulipas) (1)
Luciano Sánchez (Yucatán) (2)
Francisco Sánchez Boleaga (1)
Martín Sánchez Cabello (1)
Francisco Sánchez Crespo (1)
Joaquín Sánchez de Hidalgo (1)
Francisco Manuel Sánchez de Tagle (1)
José Sánchez Facio (1)
Sabás Sánchez Hidalgo (2)
José Sánchez Martínez (1)
Guadalupe Sánchez Monge (1)
Juan Sánchez Roca (2)
Ramón Sánchez Zamora (1)
Ciriaco Sandaval (1)
Manuel Jiménez de Sandi (1)
José Librado Sandoval (1)
Miguel Sandoval (1)
Juan Bautista Sandoval (1)
Francisco Sandoval (1)
Manuel María de Sandoval (1)
Justo Sandoval (1)
Julián Sandoval (1)
Vicente Sandoval (1)
José Inés Sandoval (1)
Timoteo Sandoval (1)
Gregorio Sandoval (1)
Ignacio Sandoval (1)
José Sandoval (1)
Eduardo Sandoval (1)
Manuel María Sanielices (1)
Ignacio Sanjuan (1)
Ignacio Sanjuan (1)
Timoteo Sanromán (2)
Urbano Sanroman y Gomez (1)
Justo Santa Anna (1)
Andrés Santa Anna (1)
Pedro Soledad Santa Cruz (1)
Diego Santa Cruz (1)
Mauricio Santa María (1)
Manuel Santa María (1)
Pedro Santa María (1)
José Rafael Santa María (1)
Trinidad Santa María (1)
Juan Santa María (1)
Mariano Santa María (1)
Francisco Santa María (1)
Francisco Santa María (Guerrero) (1)
Francisco Santa Maria (Puebla) (1)
Zacarías Santa Marta (1)
Andrés Santa-Anna (1)
Tadeo Santacruz (1)
José Antonio Santaella (1)
Eulalio Santamaría (1)
Francisco Santana (1)
Hilario Santana (1)
Pío Santana (2)
Pioquinto Santana (1)
Camilo Santana (1)
Antonio Santana (1)
Feliz Santiago (1)
Arcadio de Santiago (1)
Juan de la Cruz Santiago (1)
Pablo Santiago (1)
Vernardino Francisco Santiago Morales (1)
Felipe Santiago Ortiz (1)
Juan Santiago Vanbael (1)
Manuel Santibáñez (1)
José María Santibáñez (1)
Bartolomé Santilla (1)
Carlos Santillán (1)
Francisco Santillan (2)
Vicente Santos (1)
Juan de los Santos (1)
Jesús María Santos (1)
Nicolás de los Santos (1)
Manuel de los Santos (1)
Antonio Santos (1)
Mónico Santos (1)
Roque Santos (1)
Ignacio Santos Elias (1)
José de los Santos Hernandez (1)
José Santos Hernández (1)
Manuel Santos Roldán (1)
Simon de los Santos Vásquez (1)
Manuel de los Santos Zempoalteca (1)
Agustín Santoscoy (1)
Francisco Santoscoy (1)
Francisco Santoyo (1)
José Miguel Sanz (1)
José Sanz Bautista (2)
José Higinio Saravia (1)
José María Sarazola (1)
Simón Sarlat (2)
Juan Anastacio Sarmiento (1)
Juan Sarrando (1)
José Manuel Sartorio (1)
Cayetano Sastré (1)
José María Sastre (1)
Marcial Sastre (1)
Nicolás Sauceda (1)
Felipe Saucedo (1)
Mariano Saucedo (1)
Ramón Saucedo (1)
Andrés M. Sauri (0)
Casiano Sauri (3)
Quintín Saury (2)
Cristóbal Saval (1)
Guadalupe Savedra (1)
Antonio Sayas (1)
José María Sea (1)
José Sebastián Martínez (1)
José Sebastian Tuz (1)
Anacleto Sedeño (1)
Wenceslao Segovia (1)
F. A. de Segovia (1)
Guadalupe Segovia (1)
Rafael Segovia (1)
José María Segura (1)
Juan Segura (1)
José Maria Segura (Estado de México) (1)
Julián Seguro (1)
Juan Senteños (1)
Miguel Sepeda (1)
Francisco Sepiafino (1)
Torbino Sepulveda (0)
José Sepúlveda (1)
Toribio Sepúlveda (3)
Ignacio Sepúlveda (1)
Marcos Sequa (1)
Pedro Serbín (1)
José Ignacio de Serna (1)
Carlos de Serra (1)
José Cipriano Serra (1)
Francisco Serranía (1)
Encarnación Serrano (1)
Gabriel Serrano (1)
Manuel María Serrano (1)
Rafael Serrano (1)
José Antonio Serrano (1)
José Francisco Serrano (1)
José Mariano Serrano (1)
José María Serrano (1)
Victoriano Serrano (1)
Francisco Serrano y Nohpaltzin (1)
Pedro Servín (1)
Gregorio Antonio Sesto (1)
Alejandro Sevilla (1)
José Rafael Sevilla (1)
Manuel Sevilla y Leyva (1)
Florencio Sida (1)
Rafael Sierra (1)
Felipe Sierra (1)
Justo Sierra (1)
Andrés Sierra (1)
Ignacio Sierra y Rosso (1)
Trinidad Silis (1)
Juan Silis (1)
Mariano Silva (1)
José María Silva (1)
Pedro Silva (1)
Ignacio Silva (1)
Donaciano Silva (1)
José Silva (1)
Ignacio Silva (1)
Vicente de Silva (1)
José María Silva (1)
José Francisco de Silva (1)
Rafael Silva (2)
José Antonio Silva (2)
Manuel Silva (3)
Nemecio Silva (1)
Fermín Silva (1)
Joaquín Silva (0)
Agustin Silva y Lejaraso (1)
Manuel Silvestre (1)
Juan Silvestre (0)
José Silvestre Juárez (1)
José Silvestre Rendón (1)
Manuel Simavilla Fernández (1)
Cristóbal Simón (1)
Joaquín Arcadio Sinta (1)
Manuel Sinta (1)
José Sinta (1)
José Siqueiros (2)
Pedro Sisneros (1)
Andrés Sisneros (1)
Antonio Sisneros (0)
Juan José Siurob (1)
Antonio Soberanis (1)
Francisco Soberón (1)
J. M. Soberón (1)
Joaquín Sobrazo (1)
José Ignacio Sobre Arias (1)
José Andrés de Sobrevilla (1)
Carlos Sodi (1)
Vicente Solache (1)
Juan G. Solana (1)
Luis G. Solana (2)
Mariano Solana (1)
E. Solana (1)
Eduardo Solana (2)
Eusebio Solana (1)
Francisco Solano (1)
Matías Solano (1)
Dionisio Solano (2)
Fernando Solares (1)
Ladislao Solares (1)
Pedro Soler (1)
Miguel Soler (1)
Perfecto Solís (1)
José Ignacio Solís (1)
Ramón Solís (1)
José Solís (1)
Vicente Solís (1)
Mauricio Solís (2)
Miguel Antonio Solís (1)
José María Solís (1)
Cleofas Solís (1)
Anastasio Soliz (1)
Abundio Soliz (2)
Ponciano Solórzano (1)
Agustín Solórzano (1)
Mariano Solórzano (2)
Celso Solorzano (1)
M. J. de Solórzano (1)
Joaquín Solórzano (Colima) (1)
Joaquín Solorzano (México D.F.) (1)
Joaquín Solórzano (Michoacán) (1)
Joaquín Solorzano del (0)
J. María Solórzano y Solar (0)
José María Somera (1)
Franciso Somoza (1)
Mariano Soní (2)
Lino Soria (1)
José Antonio Soria (1)
Manuel Soriano (1)
Narciso Sort de Sans (1)
Juan José de Sosa (0)
Juan José Sosa (2)
Vicente de Sosa (1)
Manuel A. Sosa (1)
Rafael de Sosa (1)
José Domingo Sosa (1)
Honorato de Sosa (1)
Pedro Sosa y Ortiz (1)
Francisco Sóstenes de Aguilar (1)
Manuel de la Sota Riva (2)
Manuel de la Sotarriva (0)
Patricio Gabriel Sotelo (1)
Vicente Sotelo (1)
Nicario Soto (1)
Juan de Soto (1)
Felipe Soto (1)
José Mariano Soto (1)
José Maria Soto (2)
Vicente Soto (1)
Cristóbal Soto (1)
Antonio Soto (3)
Domingo Soto (1)
Miguel Soto (1)
Manuel Soto (1)
Alejandro Soto (1)
José Maria Soto (Colima) (1)
Juan Soto (Hidalgo) (1)
Juan Soto (México D.F.) (2)
Juan Soto (San Luis Potosí) (1)
José Miguel Sotomayor (1)
Cayetano Sotura (1)
Ramón Sousa (1)
Dionisio Sousa (1)
Victoriano Sousa (1)
José Gregorio Sousa (1)
Cayetano Sozaya (1)
José Stávoli (1)
Francisco S. Suárez (1)
Cristiano Suárez (1)
José Gil Antonio Suárez (1)
José María Suárez (1)
Francisco Antonio Suárez (1)
Mariano Suárez (2)
Isidro Suárez (1)
Pedro Suárez (1)
Juan Suárez (1)
Dionisio Suárez (1)
Trinidad Suárez (1)
Francisco Suárez (2)
Miguel Suárez (0)
Cristóbal Suárez (1)
Juan José Suárez (1)
José Rafael Suárez Pereda (1)
Juan Suárez y Navarro (2)
Vicente Suaso (1)
Manuel José Suaste (1)
Pablo Suástigue (1)
José Ramón de Suazo (1)
José María Subiaur (1)
Tomás Sucila (1)
Rafael Sulguero (1)
Felix Maria Survaran (1)

T (227)

U (51)

V (356)

W (9)

X (8)

Y (15)

Z (117)

Pronunciamiento y Plan de Jalapa

4 December 1829

Region: Veracruz
Place: Jalapa

Pronunciamiento text

Pronunciamiento y Plan de Jalapa, 4 de diciembre de 1829

1º. El ejército de reserva ratifica el juramento solemne que ha prestado de sostener el pacto federal, representando la soberanía de los estados y conservando su unión indisoluble.

2º. El ejército protesta no dejar las armas de la mano hasta ver restablecido el orden constitucional con la exacta observancia de las leyes fundamentales.

3º. Para este fin, el primer voto que pronuncia en ejercicio del derecho de petición, es que el supremo poder ejecutivo dimita las facultades extraordinarias de que está investido, pidiendo inmediatamente la convocatoria para la más pronta reunión de las augustas cámaras, a fin de que éstas se ocupen de los grandes males de la nación y de su eficaz remedio, como lo consultó el consejo de gobierno, oyendo a la vez las peticiones que los mexicanos tengan a bien dirigirle sobre las reformas que deban establecerse, para que la república, libre de abusos en la administración de todos sus ramos pueda marchar a su felicidad y engrandecimiento.

4º. El segundo voto es que se renueven aquellos funcionarios contra quienes se ha explicado la opinión pública.

5º. El ejército, al manifestar sus fervientes votos para el pronto remedio de los males que afligen a la república, lejos de pretender erigirse en legislador, protesta la más ciega obediencia a los supremos poderes, y reconoce a todas las autoridades legítimamente constituidas en orden civil, eclesiástico y militar, en lo que no se oponga a la constitución federal.

6º. El ejército promete que procurará conservar a toda costa la pública tranquilidad, protegiendo las garantías sociales, y persiguiendo a todos los malhechores, para mayor seguridad de los caminantes y pueblos por donde transiten.

7º. Para llevar a cabo este plan, hemos acordado que se remitan ejemplares de él con atento oficio al supremo gobierno general, a las honorables legislaturas, a los excelentísimos señores gobernadores de los estados, a los comandantes generales y demás jefes políticos y a los prelados eclesiásticos. Que se invite por medio de una comisión a los ilustres vencedores de Juchi y Tampico ciudadanos generales Bustamante y Santa Anna, para que poniéndose a la cabeza del ejército pronunciado, y de todos los mexicanos que se adhieran a este plan, sin distinción de épocas y partidos, los dirijan en las operaciones a la mayor y más pronta consecución de los objetos indicados.

8º. En el caso no esperado que los expresados generales se negaren a un deseo tan laudable, tomará el mando el más graduado de los jefes pronunciados.

9º. Se invitará igualmente a la guarnición de Campeche, para que abjurando su pronunciamiento, se una al presente, y contribuya al establecimiento del imperio de las leyes vigentes, de cuya infracción proceden los males generales de la república, y las grandes miserias que aquejan al ejército mexicano.

Es copia.

Jalapa, 4 de diciembre de 1829.

Juan María Azcárate

Context

For a significant sector of the Mexican army and political class, and in particular for those former royalists, escoceses, and novenarios who had backed Manuel Gómez Pedraza’s candidacy in the 1828 presidential elections, Vicente Guerrero’s 1829 government was considered to be illegitimate, dictatorial, and worryingly radical. Guerrero had come to power on the back of the 1828 Perote-Acordada pronunciamiento cycle. He was a mulatto, moreover, and a former insurgent leader, who, according to his radical Yucatecan minister of finance, Lorenzo de Zavala, was despised and perceived as a threat because of the colour of his skin and his revolutionary past by the racist white criollo elites who had stood by the royalist “causa buena” during the greater part of the 1810-21 civil war. The fact that Guerrero had used the Spanish attempt to reconquer Mexico in the summer of 1829 to have himself awarded emergency powers and had then refused to relinquish these once Isidro Barradas’ Spanish expeditionary army had been defeated in Tampico (11 September 1829) was interpreted as evidence of his dictatorial tendencies. The radical economic policies pursued by his minister of finance had also given rise to concern. What is unquestionable is that the 1828 Perote-Acordada pronunciamiento cycle had created a particularly resonant precedent. In forcing the annulment of Gómez Pedraza’s election and the successful and forceful imposition of Guerrero, it had demonstrated that pronunciamientos could be used to force a change in government. Although the Plan of Jalapa did not explicitly call for the overthrow of Guerrero’s government, its authors were intent on bringing it down, as would become obvious once the Jalapa pronunciamiento cycle got underway. The Plan itself, launched by the Reserve Army that had been mobilised to Jalapa to support the campaign against Barradas, and which remained in the region despite the Spanish expedition having been repulsed, disguised its true intentions by avoiding to specifically call for an end to Guerrero’s government. Article 1 professed that it was the duty of the army to defend the federal pact. Article 2 asserted that all laws should be strictly abided by. Article 3, making use of the “right to petition,” demanded that the president renounce his emergency powers and that Congress was reinstated. Article 4 claimed that all those government officials whom public opinion rejected should be removed from office. Article 5 stressed, somewhat paradoxically, that the army obeyed and respected the constituted authorities. Article 6, in a similar vein, stressed that the army would ensure peace and order were guaranteed. Article 7 invited Bustamante and Santa Anna to lead the pronunciamiento (but not the government, since, as can be seen in Article 3, the president was being asked to listen and acquiesce to the petitioners’ demands by renouncing his emergency powers and reopening Congress). Article 8 provided a contingency plan in case Bustamante and/or Santa Anna refused to lead the pronunciamiento, and article 9 invited the centralist pronunciados of Campeche (see 6 November 1829 pronunciamiento) to give up their demands and join this pronunciamiento cycle. For anybody who was not aware of the pronunciados’ undeclared commitment to overthrow Guerrero’s government and bring Anastasio Bustamante and the “party of order” to power, the Plan’s demands were not obviously reactionary. They deliberately appealed to a wide range of political actors since the majority continued to back the 1824 Federal Constitution, believed in the need to guarantee the rule of law, and knew Guerrero’s use of emergency powers was unlawful and unconstitutional. Article 4 was beautifully vague as well, since it did not actually specify who those “rejected” government officials were. It would be artice 4 that would be used, unsurprisingly, once Guerrero’s government was overthrown by the end of the month, to remove Guerrero’s supporters from all positions of power, both at a national and regional level.

Whilst most pronunciamientos were used to lobby the government, to forcefully negotiate with it, to make it, through initimidating petitions, change its policies, a significant number of them were, in essence, coups in disguise. The December 1829 Jalapa pronunciamiento cycle was one such coup in disguise. Its initial plan was designed to broaden its instigators’ base of support by not stating their real aims. It avoided stating the obvious, and relied on subsequent events and pronunciamientos de adhesión that went on to develop further, and elaborate on, the initial demands, to bring about its real and undeclared aims which, in this case, were reduced to overthrowing Guerrero’s illegitimate radical government and bring Bustamante and his hombres de bien to power.

WF

Notes

José María Bocanegra, Memorias para la historia de México independiente. 1822-1846. Vol. 2. (Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1987), pp. 55-56.

Transcribed by Natasha Picôt and Revised by Will Fowler.

Participants (2):

Author role:
Juan María Azcárate
Signatory role:
Miguel Cervantes

Related pronunciamientos

Child pronunciamientos
Acta de la guarnición de Tehuantepec adhiriéndose al Plan de Jalapa (reactive, supporting)
17 December 1829 ; Tehuantepec, Oaxaca
Acta firmada en San Luis Potosí (reactive, supporting)
19 December 1829 ; San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí
Acta de pronunciamiento de México (reactive-cum-proactive, supporting)
23 December 1829 ; Ciudad de México, México D.F.
Acta celebrada por la guarnición de la capital del estado de Jalisco (reactive, supporting)
24 December 1829 ; Guadalajara, Jalisco
Pronunciamiento del batallón activo de Guadalajara (reactive, supporting)
24 December 1829 ; San Juan de los lagos, Jalisco
Pronunciamiento de Felipe de la Garza (reactive, supporting)
24 December 1829 ; Tampico, Tamaulipas
Acta que celebró en la Villa de Jalapa (reactive-cum-proactive, opposing)
26 December 1829 ; Jalapa, Veracruz
Pronunciamiento del inspector de la milicia cívica del estado, por el sostén de la constitución y de las leyes (reactive-cum-proactive, supporting)
26 December 1829 ; Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas
Pronunciamiento de Morelia (reactive-cum-proactive, supporting)
27 December 1829 ; Morelia, Michoacán
Exposición de las tropas de la guarnición de la capital (reactive-cum-proactive, supporting)
18 August 1830 ; Ciudad de México, México D.F.

Pronunciamiento grievances

National (federalist, pro-constitution)

Proactive

Military (regular army)

Personal (in favour of Anastasio Bustamante and Antonio López de Santa Anna)

Related documents

Declaración de 14 de enero de 1830
Lucas Alamán
14 January 1830

PDF Download

Click here to download a PDF version of this pronunciamiento