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- Q2213137 subject Q8127958.
- Q2213137 subject Q8623179.
- Q2213137 subject Q9689566.
- Q2213137 abstract "The Plan of Guadalupe (Spanish: Plan de Guadalupe) was a document drafted on March 23, 1913 by Governor of Coahuila, Venustiano Carranza, in response to the overthrow and execution of President Francisco I. Madero during the Ten Tragic Days of February 1913. Carranza proclaimed the plan three days later on March 26 from his hacienda of Guadalupe. The plan was limited, calling for the overthrow of Victoriano Huerta, free elections, and return of rule of law, and had no hint of the social demands found in Madero's Plan de San Luis Potosí or agrarian reform.Carranza drafted the plan following his declaration of rebellion against the Huerta regime. Although there had been scattered rebellions against Huerta, there was no unified plan for revolutionaries. Carranza was the highest profile rebel against Huerta—a former member of the Díaz regime— a supporter of Madero's rebellion against Díaz, and then-sitting governor of the state of Coahuila. His plan initially united anti-Huerta forces in his home state, but other revolutionaries signed onto it. "The plan became the official program of the northern revolutionaries." It was subscribed to by such leading figures in the Revolution as Pancho Villa, Álvaro Obregón, and Felipe Ángeles. One scholar has called the plan "oft-mentioned and highly overrated," but the plan did attract widespread support, despite its solely political demands.There were seven parts to this plan which purported to remove any claim of legitimacy Huerta's government might have had, reinstated government powers into officials loyal to Madero, and announced a call for elections once peace had been restored to the country. A key element of the plan was the recognition of the Constitutionalist Army as a legitimate military force, with Carranza as "First Chief" (Primer Jefe). This articulated Carranza's belief that "the only way the revolutionaries would ever be able to maintain themselves in power was by destroying the old federal army."".
- Q2213137 thumbnail Portrait_of_Venustiano_Carranza.jpg?width=300.
- Q2213137 wikiPageExternalLink plgpe.html.
- Q2213137 wikiPageExternalLink guadalupe-plan.htm.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q1187198.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q1489.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q192278.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q1929386.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q216766.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q217498.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q2247374.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q2574209.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q263249.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q299168.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q313122.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q8127958.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q8623179.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q917730.
- Q2213137 wikiPageWikiLink Q9689566.
- Q2213137 comment "The Plan of Guadalupe (Spanish: Plan de Guadalupe) was a document drafted on March 23, 1913 by Governor of Coahuila, Venustiano Carranza, in response to the overthrow and execution of President Francisco I. Madero during the Ten Tragic Days of February 1913. Carranza proclaimed the plan three days later on March 26 from his hacienda of Guadalupe.".
- Q2213137 label "Plan of Guadalupe".
- Q2213137 depiction Portrait_of_Venustiano_Carranza.jpg.