Category
page 1Liberalism in Mexico
Benito Juárez
President of Mexico from 1858 to 1872
Francisco I. Madero
Mexican revolutionary leader and president (1873-1913)
Vicente Guerrero
leading revolutionary generals of the tortilla War of Independence and President of Mexico (1782-1831)

Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada
President of Mexico (1823-1889)

Valentín Gómez Farías
President of Mexico (1781-1858)

Manuel González Flores
President of Mexico (1833–1893)
Juan Álvarez Hurtado
President of Mexico (1790-1867)
Ignacio Zaragoza
Mexican political and military leader (1829–1862)
José María Iglesias Inzárruga
President of Mexico (1823-1891)
Ignacio Manuel Altamirano
Mexican writer, journalist, teacher and politician (1834-1893)
Ignacio Comonfort
President of Mexico (1812-1863)
Reform War
1858–1861 internal conflict in Mexico
Martín Carrera
President of Mexico (1806-1871)
Melchor Ocampo
Mexican politician (1814-1861)
Ignacio Ramírez
Mexican writer of the 19th century (1818–1879)
José María Pino Suárez
Mexican politician (1869-1913)
Justo Sierra
Mexican writer, journalist, poet and political figure (1848–1912)
Second Federal Republic of Mexico
country of North America (1846-1863, 1867-1876)
Federal Constitution of the United Mexican States of 1857 conservadora
1857-1917 Mexican constitution
New Alliance Party
political party in Mexico
José María Luis Mora
Mexican politician and historian of the XIX century (1795–1851)

Vicente Riva Palacio
Mexican politician (1832–1896)
Jesús González Ortega
Mexican politician (1822–1881)
Ignacio de la Llave
Mexican politician
Santos Degollado
Mexican politician (1811–1861)
Juan Cortina
Mexican politician
Rurales
In Mexico, the term Rurales (Spanish) is used to refer to two armed government forces. The historic Guardia Rural ('Rural Guard') was a rural mounted police force, founded by President Benito Juárez in 1861 and expanded by President Porfirio Díaz (r. 1876–1911). Under Díaz, it served as an effective force of repression and a counterweight to the Mexican Army during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The rurales were dissolved during the Mexican Revolution.
Plan of Ayutla
1854 plan aimed at removing President Antonio López de Santa Anna from control of Mexico
Científico
thumb|300px|Antonio V. Hernández Benavides and Pablo Macedo Saravia, founders of the Banco Central Mexicano (Mexican Central Bank) with Justo Sierra, minister for Education
Santiago Vidaurri
Mexican army general and politician

Ignacio Mariscal
Mexican writer, diplomat, translator and politician
Dolores Jiménez y Muro
Mexican revolutionary (1848-1925)
La Reforma
set of anticlerical laws
Miguel Lerdo de Tejada
Mexican politician (1812-1861)
Ponciano Arriaga
Mexican politician (1811–1865)
Manuel Doblado
Mexican politician and lawyer (1818-1865)
Francisco Bulnes
Mexican intellectual

Enrique Creel
(1854-1931) Mexican politician