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    • Guadalupe Victoria | Mexican independence, revolutionary ...
      • When Agustín de Iturbide came to power (1821), Victoria at first supported him, but by 1822, as Iturbide arrested all political opponents and dissolved the legislature, Victoria denounced him and joined Antonio López de Santa Anna’s successful revolt in 1823.
      www.britannica.com/biography/Guadalupe-Victoria
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  2. On 6 December 1822, Guadalupe Victoria came out of hiding to join the movement. Knowing his reputation and popularity, Santa Anna appointed him leader of the movement and together they proclaimed the Plan of Veracruz.

  3. In December 1822, Victoria and Antonio López de Santa Anna signed the "Plan of Casa Mata," which overthrew the monarchy and established a republic. The First Presidency of Mexico. Victoria was elected to the governing triumvirate with Nicolás Bravo and Pedro Celestino Negrete, which governed from March 31, 1823, to October 10, 1824.

  4. Term: 10 Oct 1824 - 1 Apr 1829. Chronology: 2 Oct 1824, election to the office of President of the Mexican United States is declared upon counting the votes of state legislatures (cast 1 Sep 1824), session of the Congreso Constituyente [2] [3]

    • 10 Oct 1824-1 Apr 1829
  5. Guadalupe Victoria (pronounced as /es/; 29 September 178621 March 1843), born José Miguel Ramón Adaucto Fernández y Félix, was a Mexican general and politician who fought for independence against the Spanish Empire in the Mexican War of Independence and after the adoption of the Constitution of 1824, was elected as the first president of ...

  6. Generals Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna and Guadalupe Victoria signed at Vera Cruz, on December 6, 1822, what was to become known ·in Mexican history as the Plan of Vera Cruz.. Almost two months later, on February 1, 1823, at Casa Mata, another plan was issued by the officers of the forces opposing Santa Anna.

  7. The Plan of Iguala issued on February 24, 1821 marked the alliance between two adversarial groups – the insurrectionists led by Vicente Guerrero and Guadalupe Victoria and the military led by former Spanish Lieutenant Agustín de Iturbide.