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Mexico History in 5 Minutes - Animated Timeline and Facts

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    Mexico is the 11th most populous country
    in the world with 121 million people.
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    Mexico is among the world's
    15 largest economies
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    and is the second economy
    in Latin America.
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    Welcome to our animated show of history.
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    This episode presents
    a brief history of Mexico.
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    The earliest human artifacts in Mexico
    are chips of stone tools
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    found near campfire remains
    in the valley of Mexico,
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    10,000 years ago.
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    Mexico is the site of the domestication
    of maize, tomato, and beans
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    which produced an agricultural surplus.
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    This enabled the transition from
    Paleo-Indian hunter gatherers
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    to sedentary agricultural villages
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    beginning around 5,000 B.C.
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    In the formative era, villages became
    more dense in terms of population
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    and developing into chiefdoms.
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    The earliest complex civilization in
    Mexico was the Olmec culture
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    which flourished on the Gulf Coast
    from around 1500 BC.
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    Olmec cultural traits
    diffused through Mexico
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    into their formative era cultures
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    in Chiapas, Oaxaca,
    and the valley of Mexico.
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    In the subsequent preclassical period
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    the Maya and Zapotec civilizations
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    developed complex centers
    at Calakmul and Monte Albán respectively.
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    During this period the first true
    Mesoamerican writing systems
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    were developed in the EPI-Olmec
    and the Zapotec cultures.
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    In Central Mexico,
    the height of the classic period
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    saw the ascendancy of Teotihuacán
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    which formed a military
    and commercial empire
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    whose influence stretched South
    into the Mayan area as well as North.
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    After the collapse
    of Teotihuacan in 600 AD,
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    competition ensued between several
    important political centers
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    in central Mexico,
    such as Xochicalco and Cholula.
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    During the early post classic period
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    central Mexico was dominated
    by the Toltec culture.
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    Oaxaca by the Mixtec
    and the lowland Maya area
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    had important centers and
    Chichén Itza and Mayapán.
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    The Aztecs, the last of pre-Colombian
    Mexico's great native civilizations
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    rose to prominence in the central valley
    of Mexico around 1427
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    by partnering with the Toltecs and Mayans.
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    This triple alliance conquered smaller
    cultures to the east and west
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    until the Aztec empire spanned Mexico
    from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf Coast.
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    The Spanish first learned of Mexico
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    during the Juan de Grijalva
    expedition of 1518.
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    The Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire
    began in February 1519
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    when Hernan Cortés arrived
    at the port of Veracruz.
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    After taking control of that city
    he moved on to the Aztec capital.
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    In his search for gold and other riches,
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    Cortés decided to invade
    and conquer the Aztec empire.
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    The territory became part
    of the Spanish empire
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    under the name of New Spain in 1535.
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    Much of the identity, traditions
    and architecture of Mexico
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    developed during
    the 286-year colonial period.
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    Cortés then colonized the area
    and named it Nueva Espana, New Spain.
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    By 1574, Spain controlled
    a large portion of the Aztec empire
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    and had enslaved most
    of the indigenous population.
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    Worse, the diseases brought
    into the society by the Spaniards
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    devastated the indigenous population
    of Nueva Espana,
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    killing an estimated 24 million people
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    between 1521 and 1605.
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    As a result of its trade links with Asia,
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    the West of the Americas,
    Africa and Europe
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    and the profound effect
    of new world silver,
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    Central Mexico was one
    of the first regions
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    to be incorporated
    into a globalized economy.
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    Being at the crossroads of trade,
    people and cultures,
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    Mexico City has been called
    the First World City.
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    The Catholic church's influence
    was felt in the region
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    when missionaries began
    arriving in 1523.
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    The missionaries built many monasteries
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    and converted millions of people
    to Catholicism.
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    Concerned about the Catholic
    church's ever-growing power,
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    King Carlos III of Spain expelled
    the Jesuits from Nueva Espana
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    in the late 1700s.
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    Inspired by the American and French
    revolutions,
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    Mexican insurgence saw
    an opportunity, in 1808,
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    as the King abdicated
    in Madrid in Spain
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    and was overwhelmed by war
    and occupation.
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    The rebellion began as an idealistic
    peasants and miners' movement
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    led by a local priest,
    Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla
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    who issued the Cry of Dolores
    on the 16th of September 1810.
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    The day is celebrated as Independence Day.
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    Mexico's short recovery
    after the war of independence
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    was soon cut short again
    by the civil wars
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    and institutional instability
    of the 1850s
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    which lasted until the government
    of Porfirio Diaz reestablished conditions
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    that paved the way for economic growth.
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    Agustin de Iturbide
    became constitutional emperor
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    of the first Mexican Empire in 1822.
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    A revolt against him established
    the United Mexican States.
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    Later a Republican Constitution is drafted
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    and Guadalupe Victoria became
    the first president
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    of the newly- born country.
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    During this time, people had difficulty
    meeting tax payments
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    and resented the central
    government's actions
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    in collecting customs
    due to limited trade.
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    The United States' annexation
    of the Republic of Texas
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    and subsequent
    American military incursion
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    into territory that was part
    of Coahuila
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    instigated the Mexican-American war.
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    The war was settled in 1848
    via the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.
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    Mexico was forced to give up
    more than one third of its land to the US
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    including Alta California, New Mexico
    and the territory claimed by Texas.
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    In the 1860s,
    Mexico was occupied by France
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    which established
    the second Mexican Empire
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    under the rule of Habsburg
    Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian of Austria
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    with the support
    of the Roman Catholic clergy
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    and the Conservatives.
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    France never made a profit in Mexico
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    and its Mexican expedition
    grew increasingly unpopular.
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    Finally, in the spring of 1865,
    after the US Civil War was over,
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    the US demanded the withdraw
    of French troops from Mexico.
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    Porfirio Diaz was elected the 29th
    president in the late 19th century
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    the period known as the Porfiriato
    was characterized
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    by economic stability and growth,
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    significant foreign
    investment and influence.
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    The Mexican Revolution began
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    when Madero issued
    the Plan of San Luis Potosi
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    and declared war on the Diaz regime.
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    By 1911, Diaz is forced to step aside
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    and Madero was elected president
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    but conflict and violence continue
    for the better part of the next decade.
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    World War II further stimulated
    the nation's development
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    through the development of roads,
    the building of factories
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    and the establishment
    of irrigation systems.
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    Until the 80s, Mexico
    remained a poor country
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    but experienced
    substantial economic growth
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    that some historians
    call The Mexican Miracle.
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    In recent years, the Mexican economy
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    has had an unprecedented
    macroeconomic stability.
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    Its economy has integrated
    with that of US and also Canada
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    after the North American
    Free Trade Agreement.
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    Thank you for watching.
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Title:
Mexico History in 5 Minutes - Animated Timeline and Facts
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
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Duration:
06:15

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