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Events in the year 1839 in Mexico.
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Decades: | |||||
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See also: |
Incumbents
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2010) |
- President – Anastasio Bustamante until March 20, Antonio López de Santa Anna until July 10, Nicolás Bravo until July 19, Anastasio Bustamante
Governors
edit- Aguascalientes:
- Chiapas: Salvador Ayanegui
- Chihuahua:
- Coahuila: Francisco García Conde/Isidro Reyes
- Durango:
- Guanajuato:
- Guerrero:
- Jalisco: Antonio Escobedo
- State of Mexico:
- Michoacán:
- Nuevo León: Joaquín García/Manuel María de Llano
- Oaxaca:
- Puebla:
- Querétaro: Ramón Covarrubias
- San Luis Potosí:
- Sinaloa:
- Sonora:
- Tabasco:
- Tamaulipas: José Antonio Fernández Izaguirre/Jose Antonio Quintero
- Veracruz:
- Yucatán:
- Zacatecas:
Events
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2010) |
- November 27, 1838 – March 9, 1839 – Pastry War
- May 2, 1839 – Santiago Imán heads a peasant revolt in the Yucatán.
- December 27, 1939 - The first Spanish envoy to independent Mexico, Ángel Calderón de la Barca y Belgrano arrived in Veracruz. His wife was Fanny Calderón de la Barca who wrote Life in Mexico, a well-known book about the couples' life from 1839 to 1843 in Mexico.
Notable births
edit- * May 25 Manuel Sánchez Mármol – writer, lawyer, politician, and a member of the Mexican Academy of Language was born in Cunduacán, Tabasco[1]
Notable deaths
edit- May 3 José Antonio Mexía – politician executed in Acajete, Veracruz (born 1800)[2]
Dates unknown
edit- José María Lanz – engineer and author, died in Paris (born 1764)
- Francisco María Ruiz – soldier and settler of San Diego, Alta California (born 1754)
Notes
edit- ^ "Tabasco – Cunduacán". Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
- ^ "Finding Aid to the Mexía Family Papers, 1694-1951". Retrieved 9 April 2011.