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Emiliano
Zapata 1879-1919
Zapata, Emiliano , c.18791919,
Mexican revolutionary, b. Morelos. Zapata was of almost pure native descent.
A tenant farmer, he occupied a social position between the peon and the
ranchero, but he was a born leader who felt keenly the injustices suffered
by his people. About 1908, because of his attempt to recover village lands
taken over by a rancher, he was impressed into a brief service in the
army. Late in 1910, as Madero rose against Porfirio Díaz, Zapata
took up arms with the cry of land and liberty. With an army
of native people recruited from plantations and villages, he began to
seize the land by force. Zapata supported Madero until he thought that
land reform had been abandoned, then he turned and formulated his own
agrarian program. This program, outlined in the Plan of Ayala (Nov., 1911),
called for the return of the land to the indigenous people. In defense
of his plan, Zapata held the field against successive federal governments
under Madero, Victoriano Huerta, and Venustiano Carranza. The peasants
rallied to Zapata's support, and by the end of 1911 he controlled most
of Morelos; later he enlarged his power to cover Guerrero, Oaxaca, Puebla,
and at times even the Federal District. After the overthrow of Madero,
Zapata in the south and Carranza, Obregón, and Villa in the north
were the chief leaders against Huerta. When Carranza seized the executive
power, Zapata and Villa warred against him. Zapata's forces occupied Mexico
City three times in 191415 (once with the followers of Villa), but
finally retired to Morelos, where Zapata resisted until he was treacherously
killed by an emissary of Carranza. To his enemies, Zapata was the apotheosis
of nihilism, and his movement was only large-scale brigandage. To the
indigenous peoples, he was a savior and the hero of the revolution. Although
his attacks at times seemed to be mere banditry, his objective was not
loot; he was single in purpose. His movement, zapatismo, was the Mexican
agrarian movement in its purest and simplest form, and the agrarian movement
was one of the chief aims and chief results of the revolution. As zapatismo
became synonymous with agrarismo, so it did with indianismo, the native
cultural movement which is the basis of nationalism in Mexico. Although
illiterate and in command of illiterate men, Zapata was one of the most
significant figures in Mexico during the period 1910 to 1919. Even while
he lived he became legendary, celebrated in innumerable tales and ballads.
His grave is revered by the native peoples of S Mexico.
See biographies by R. P. Millon (1969), J. Womack, Jr. (1968), and R.
Parkinson (1980); F. Tannenbaum, The Mexican Agrarian Revolution (1929);
H. H. Dunn, The Crimson Jester (1934, repr. 1976); E. N. Simpson, The
Ejido (1937); F. McLynn, Villa and Zapata (2000).
-The Columbia Electronic
Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press. |