1 00:00:00,400 --> 00:00:05,425 Mexico is the 11th most populous country in the world with 121 million people. 2 00:00:05,878 --> 00:00:08,592 Mexico is among the world's 15 largest economies 3 00:00:08,592 --> 00:00:11,198 and is the second economy in Latin America. 4 00:00:11,258 --> 00:00:13,414 Welcome to our animated show of history. 5 00:00:13,474 --> 00:00:16,307 This episode presents a brief history of Mexico. 6 00:00:16,407 --> 00:00:19,497 The earliest human artifacts in Mexico are chips of stone tools 7 00:00:19,497 --> 00:00:22,060 found near campfire remains in the valley of Mexico, 8 00:00:22,060 --> 00:00:23,474 10,000 years ago. 9 00:00:23,474 --> 00:00:27,153 Mexico is the site of the domestication of maize, tomato, and beans 10 00:00:27,153 --> 00:00:29,323 which produced an agricultural surplus. 11 00:00:29,323 --> 00:00:32,643 This enabled the transition from Paleo-Indian hunter gatherers 12 00:00:32,643 --> 00:00:34,920 to sedentary agricultural villages 13 00:00:34,920 --> 00:00:36,886 beginning around 5,000 B.C. 14 00:00:36,956 --> 00:00:40,657 In the formative era, villages became more dense in terms of population 15 00:00:40,657 --> 00:00:42,536 and developing into chiefdoms. 16 00:00:42,586 --> 00:00:46,173 The earliest complex civilization in Mexico was the Olmec culture 17 00:00:46,173 --> 00:00:49,442 which flourished on the Gulf Coast from around 1500 BC. 18 00:00:49,442 --> 00:00:52,016 Olmec cultural traits diffused through Mexico 19 00:00:52,016 --> 00:00:53,613 into their formative era cultures 20 00:00:53,613 --> 00:00:56,091 in Chiapas, Oaxaca, and the valley of Mexico 21 00:00:56,091 --> 00:00:58,408 in the subsequent preclassical period 22 00:00:58,408 --> 00:01:00,349 the Maya and Zapotec civilizations 23 00:01:00,389 --> 00:01:04,305 developed complex centers at Calakmul and Monte Albán respectively. 24 00:01:04,305 --> 00:01:07,211 During this period the first true Mesoamerican writing systems 25 00:01:07,211 --> 00:01:10,336 were developed in the EPI Olmec and the Zapotec cultures. 26 00:01:10,336 --> 00:01:12,885 In Central Mexico, the height of the classic period 27 00:01:12,885 --> 00:01:14,862 saw the ascendancy of Teotihuacán 28 00:01:14,862 --> 00:01:17,045 which formed a military and commercial empire 29 00:01:17,045 --> 00:01:21,349 whose influence stretched south into the Mayan area as well as North. 30 00:01:21,424 --> 00:01:24,184 After the collapse of Teotihuacan in 600 AD, 31 00:01:24,204 --> 00:01:27,287 competition ensued between several important political centers 32 00:01:27,287 --> 00:01:30,863 in central Mexico, such as Xochicalco and Cholula 33 00:01:30,933 --> 00:01:32,798 During the early post classic period 34 00:01:32,798 --> 00:01:35,653 central Mexico was dominated by the Toltec culture. 35 00:01:35,673 --> 00:01:38,386 Oaxaca by the Mixtec and the lowland Maya area 36 00:01:38,416 --> 00:01:41,277 had important centres and Chichen Itza and Mayapan. 37 00:01:41,457 --> 00:01:45,377 The Aztecs, the last of pre-Colombian Mexico's great native civilizations 38 00:01:45,514 --> 00:01:49,377 rose to prominence in the central valley of Mexico around 1427 39 00:01:49,397 --> 00:01:51,627 by partnering with the Toltecs and Mayans. 40 00:01:51,851 --> 00:01:55,216 This triple alliance conquered smaller cultures to the east and west 41 00:01:55,216 --> 00:01:59,423 until the Aztec empire spanned Mexico from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf Coast. 42 00:01:59,643 --> 00:02:01,612 The Spanish first learned of Mexico 43 00:02:01,612 --> 00:02:04,218 during the Juan de Grijalva expedition of 1518. 44 00:02:04,368 --> 00:02:08,018 The Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire began in February 1519 45 00:02:08,018 --> 00:02:11,164 when Hernan Cortes arrived at the port of Veracruz. 46 00:02:11,253 --> 00:02:14,879 After taking control of that city he moved on to the Aztec capital. 47 00:02:14,943 --> 00:02:16,848 In his search for gold and other riches, 48 00:02:16,848 --> 00:02:19,793 Cortes decided to invade and conquer the Aztec empire. 49 00:02:19,969 --> 00:02:22,280 The territory became part of the Spanish empire 50 00:02:22,280 --> 00:02:25,216 under the name of New Spain in 1535 51 00:02:25,456 --> 00:02:28,428 Much of the identity, traditions and architecture of Mexico 52 00:02:28,428 --> 00:02:31,387 developed during the 286-year colonial period. 53 00:02:31,565 --> 00:02:35,912 Cortes then colonized the area and named it Nueva Espana, New Spain. 54 00:02:36,051 --> 00:02:39,871 By 1574, Spain controlled a large portion of the Aztec empire 55 00:02:39,881 --> 00:02:42,812 and had enslaved most of the indigenous population. 56 00:02:42,973 --> 00:02:46,232 Worse, the diseases brought into the society by the Spaniards 57 00:02:46,232 --> 00:02:49,561 devastated the indigenous population of Nueva Espana, 58 00:02:49,601 --> 00:02:52,152 killing an estimated 24 million people 59 00:02:52,202 --> 00:02:54,835 between 1521 and 1605. 60 00:02:54,986 --> 00:02:57,096 As a result of its trade links with Asia, 61 00:02:57,096 --> 00:02:59,655 the West of the Americas, Africa and Europe 62 00:02:59,655 --> 00:03:01,750 and the profound effect of new world silver, 63 00:03:01,750 --> 00:03:04,156 Central Mexico was one of the first regions 64 00:03:04,186 --> 00:03:06,489 to be incorporated into a globalized economy. 65 00:03:06,489 --> 00:03:09,514 Being at the crossroads of trade, people and cultures, 66 00:03:09,514 --> 00:03:12,395 Mexico City has been called the First World City. 67 00:03:12,525 --> 00:03:15,225 The Catholic church's influence was felt in the region 68 00:03:15,235 --> 00:03:17,666 when missionaries began arriving in 1523. 69 00:03:17,726 --> 00:03:19,907 The missionaries built many monasteries 70 00:03:19,913 --> 00:03:22,421 and converted millions of people to Catolicism. 71 00:03:22,451 --> 00:03:25,278 Concerned about the Catholic church's ever-growing power, 72 00:03:25,278 --> 00:03:28,605 King Carlos III of Spain expelled the Jesuits from Nueva Espana 73 00:03:28,663 --> 00:03:30,423 in the late 1700s. 74 00:03:30,443 --> 00:03:32,838 Inspired by the American and French revolutions, 75 00:03:32,838 --> 00:03:35,561 Mexican insurgence saw an opportunity, in 1808, 76 00:03:35,561 --> 00:03:37,931 as the King abdicated in Madrid in Spain 77 00:03:37,931 --> 00:03:40,407 and was overwhelmed by war and occupation. 78 00:03:40,468 --> 00:03:43,808 The rebellion began as an idealistic peasants and miners' movement 79 00:03:43,848 --> 00:03:46,885 led by a local priest, Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla 80 00:03:46,885 --> 00:03:50,797 who issued the Cry of Dolores on the 16th of September 1810. 81 00:03:51,116 --> 00:03:53,694 The day is celebrated as Independence Day. 82 00:03:53,694 --> 00:03:56,393 Mexico's short recovery after the war of independence 83 00:03:56,393 --> 00:03:58,346 was soon cut short again by the civil wars 84 00:03:58,346 --> 00:04:01,389 and institutional instability of the 1850s 85 00:04:01,389 --> 00:04:04,034 which lasted until the government of Porfirio Diaz 86 00:04:04,034 --> 00:04:07,329 reestablished conditions that paved the way for economic growth. 87 00:04:07,420 --> 00:04:10,205 Agustin de Iturbide became constitutional emperor 88 00:04:10,205 --> 00:04:12,890 of the first Mexican Empire in 1822. 89 00:04:13,055 --> 00:04:16,133 A revolt against him established the United Mexican States. 90 00:04:16,202 --> 00:04:18,845 Later a Republican Constitution is drafted 91 00:04:18,845 --> 00:04:21,299 and Guadalupe Victoria became the first president 92 00:04:21,299 --> 00:04:22,730 of the newly- born country. 93 00:04:22,750 --> 00:04:26,049 During this time, people had difficulty meeting tax payments 94 00:04:26,049 --> 00:04:28,204 and resented the central government's actions 95 00:04:28,204 --> 00:04:30,313 in collecting customs due to limited trade. 96 00:04:30,313 --> 00:04:32,841 The United States' annexation of the Republic of Texas 97 00:04:32,841 --> 00:04:34,841 and subsequent American military incursion 98 00:04:34,841 --> 00:04:36,761 into territory that was part of Coahuila 99 00:04:36,761 --> 00:04:38,810 instigated the Mexican-American war. 100 00:04:38,960 --> 00:04:43,050 The war was settled in 1848 via the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. 101 00:04:43,155 --> 00:04:46,615 Mexico was forced to give up more than one third of its land to the US 102 00:04:46,615 --> 00:04:50,864 including Alta California, New Mexico and the territory claimed by Texas. 103 00:04:51,086 --> 00:04:54,183 In the 1860s, Mexico was occupied by France 104 00:04:54,183 --> 00:04:56,604 which established the second Mexican Empire 105 00:04:56,604 --> 00:05:00,345 under the rule of Habsburg Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian of Austria 106 00:05:00,345 --> 00:05:02,482 with the support of the Roman Catholic clergy 107 00:05:02,485 --> 00:05:03,998 and the Conservatives. 108 00:05:04,028 --> 00:05:05,843 France never made a profit in Mexico 109 00:05:05,843 --> 00:05:08,548 and its Mexican expedition grew increasingly unpopular. 110 00:05:08,568 --> 00:05:12,391 Finally, in the spring of 1865, after the US Civil War was over, 111 00:05:12,391 --> 00:05:16,021 the US demanded the withdraw of French troops from Mexico. 112 00:05:16,061 --> 00:05:20,279 Porfirio Diaz was elected the 29th president in the late 19th century 113 00:05:20,279 --> 00:05:23,559 the period known as the Porfiriato was characterised 114 00:05:23,559 --> 00:05:25,706 by economic stability and growth, 115 00:05:25,706 --> 00:05:28,113 significant foreign investment and influence. 116 00:05:28,143 --> 00:05:29,537 The Mexican Revolution began 117 00:05:29,537 --> 00:05:32,152 when Madero issued the Plan of San Luis Potosi 118 00:05:32,163 --> 00:05:34,502 and declared war on the Diaz regime. 119 00:05:34,523 --> 00:05:37,264 By 1911, Diaz is forced to step aside 120 00:05:37,264 --> 00:05:39,211 and Madero was elected president 121 00:05:39,211 --> 00:05:42,906 but conflict and violence continue for the better part of the next decade. 122 00:05:43,176 --> 00:05:46,026 World War II further stimulated the nation's development 123 00:05:46,026 --> 00:05:48,901 through the development of roads, the building of factories 124 00:05:48,901 --> 00:05:51,086 and the establishment of irrigation systems. 125 00:05:51,308 --> 00:05:53,858 Until the 80s, Mexico remained a poor country 126 00:05:53,858 --> 00:05:56,188 but experienced substantial economic growth 127 00:05:56,188 --> 00:05:58,648 that some historians call The Mexican Miracle. 128 00:05:58,838 --> 00:06:00,793 In recent years, the Mexican economy 129 00:06:00,793 --> 00:06:03,658 has had an unprecedented macroeconomic stability. 130 00:06:03,741 --> 00:06:06,861 Its economy has integrated with that of US and also Canada 131 00:06:06,871 --> 00:06:09,350 after the North American Free Trade Agreement. 132 00:06:09,460 --> 00:06:10,771 Thank you for watching. 133 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