José Manuel Hidalgo y Esnaurrízar explained

José Manuel Hidalgo y Esnaurrízar
Birth Date:6 April 1826
Birth Place:Mexico City, First Mexican Republic
Death Date:27 December 1896
Death Place:Paris, French Third Republic
Occupation:Soldier, diplomat, novelist, political writer

José Manuel Hidalgo y Esnaurrízar (6 April 1826 – 27 December 1896) was a Mexican soldier, diplomat, and writer. He played a key role in establishing the Second Mexican Empire.

Biography

Hidalgo was born in 1826 to Mercedes Esnaurrizar and Francisco Manuel Hidalgo,[1] an Andalusian noble[2] and colonel that supported Augustin de Iturbide during the movement for Mexican Independence.[1]

One of his first major jobs was working under the Ministry of Finance, and in 1846 was able to serve as secretary to Manuel Eduardo de Gorostiza.

During the Mexican-American War, he fought under the command of Gorostiza at the Battle of Churubusco, and at the Battle of Contreras was wounded and taken prisoner.

It was his friendship with Eugénie de Montijo, the Spanish-born wife of Napoleon III, that allowed him to lobby for French support of establishing a Mexican monarchy,[2] an effort which ultimately culminated in the Second French intervention in Mexico, and the establishment Second Mexican Empire.

After the fall of the Empire, he left Mexico for France. To supplement his income during exile he published several novels. His novels were a mixture of realism and sentimentalism dealing with the aristocracy, the nobility, and the grand bourgeoisie.[3] He died in Paris in 1896.

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Arrangoiz y Berzábal, Francisco de Paula. es. 1869. Apuntes para la historia del segundo Imperio Mejicano. 30.
  2. Barker . Nancy Nichols . Nancy Nichols Barker . Empress Eugenie and the Origin of the Mexican Venture . The Historian . 1959 . 22 . 1 . 10–11 . 10.1111/j.1540-6563.1959.tb01640.x . 24436669 . 0018-2370.
  3. Book: Carballo, Emmanuel. es. Emmanuel Carballo. 2004. Ensayos selectos. 62. Universidad Nacional Autonóma de México. 9789703206827.