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The National Palace, a target of the rebel artillery fire. There were dead bodies in the Zócalo and the capital's streets. [1]The Ten Tragic Days (Spanish: La Decena Trágica) during the Mexican Revolution is the name given to the multi-day coup d'état in Mexico City by opponents of Francisco I. Madero, the democratically elected president of Mexico, between 9–19 February 1913.
The Business of Liberty (El negocio de la libertad) by Jesús Cacho, 1999 – ISBN 84-930481-9-4; The Coup: Anatomy and Keystones of the Assault on Congress (El Golpe: Anatomía y Claves Del Asalto Al Congreso) by Busquets, Julio, Miguel A. Aguilar, and Ignacio Puche, (Spanish, Ed
Specifically the pronunciamiento is the formal declaration deposing the previous government and justifying the installation of the new government by the golpe de estado. One author distinguishes a coup, in which a military or political faction takes power for itself, from a pronunciamiento , in which the military deposes the existing government ...
La conquista de Nueva Galicia, in 1935. La génesis de los signos de las letras, in 1935. La rebelión de Nueva Galicia, in 1939. Guadalajara de fin de siglo, in 1950. Dinámica histórica de México, in 1953. Cristóbal de Oñate: historia novela, in 1955. Jalisco y el golpe de estado de Comonfort, in 1958.
In 1978, Tejero, along with Police Captain Ricardo Sáenz de Ynestrillas Martínez and an Army General Staff colonel, whose name was never made public, attempted a coup, known as Operation Galaxia. Tejero was sentenced to a short prison term for mutiny after the collapse of the attempted coup. He was in prison for seven months and seven days.
Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Económico 1987. Lanni, Octavio. El estado capitalista en la época de Cárdenas. Mexico 1977. León, Samuel and Ignacio Marván. En el cardenismo (1934–1940). Mexico 1985. Medin, Tzvi. Ideología y praxis política de Lázaro Cárdenas. Mexico City: Siglo XXI 1972, 13th edition 1986.
The 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état (Golpe de Estado en Guatemala de 1954) deposed the democratically elected Guatemalan President Jacobo Árbenz and marked the end of the Guatemalan Revolution. The coup installed the military dictatorship of Carlos Castillo Armas, the first in a series of U.S.-backed authoritarian rulers in Guatemala.
The 1973 Chilean coup d'état (Spanish: Golpe de Estado en Chile de 1973) was a military overthrow of the democratic socialist president of Chile Salvador Allende and his Popular Unity coalition government.