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Hipólito Villa, son of Pancho Villa. Villa had long-term relationships with several women. Austreberta Rentería was Villa's "official wife" at his hacienda of Canutillo, and Villa had two sons with her, Francisco and Hipólito.
Even though Pancho Villa was killed in 1923, his widow, Señora doña Maria Luz Corral de Villa, celebrated her husband’s legacy—and her own celebrity—with a Villa museum at her 50-room mansion in Chihuahua City until her death in 1981.
Pancho Villa, Mexican revolutionary and guerrilla leader who fought against the regimes of both Porfirio Diaz and Victoriano Huerta and after 1914 engaged in civil war and banditry. Learn more about Villa’s life and revolutionary activities in this article.
Spouse/Ex-: Austreberta Rentería, María Luz Corral, Soledad Seañez Holguin. father: Agustín Arango. mother: Micaela Arambula. children: Celia Villa, Hipólito Villa, José Trinidad Villa. Revolutionaries Mexican Men. Died on: July 20, 1923. place of death: Parral, Mexico. Cause of Death: Assassination. Ideology: Democrats. You wanted to know. 1.
Parents: Agustín Arango and Micaela Arámbula. Died: July 20, 1923 in Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico. Spouse (s): Unknown (according to legend, he was married more than 70 times) Early Life. Pancho Villa was born José Doroteo Arango Arámbula on June 5, 1878. He was the son of a sharecropper at the hacienda in San Juan del Rio, Durango.
Gen. Francisco (Pancho) Villa had 20 children by six or seven "wives" and some of them have become prominent professional men, Mrs. Luz Corral vda.
When Pancho was assassinated in 1923, Maria Luz became a widow at only thirty-one. She was also left in charge of an orphanage of around fifty children. The government seized one of her properties for not paying taxes, but left Maria Luz the mansion in which she welcomed guests for decades.
Spouse(s): María Luz Corral (Villa is reported to have married many other times, but Corral is the one marriage on record.) Children: One daughter with Maria Luz Corral, who died in infancy. Various other children from outside his marriage.
With Mexico's move towards democracy under Carranza, Woodrow withdrew his support of Villa the following year, leading to Villa kidnapping and killing 18 Americans in January 1916.
Pancho Villa House, mansion of 50 rooms in Chihuahua, Mexico, where revolutionary leader Pancho Villa lived with his wife María Luz Corral de Villa in the early 20th century. At that time it was known as the Quinta Luz, and it opened as the Museum of the Revolution in 1982.