Amigos y aliados: José Bernardo Couto (1803-1862) y José Joaquín Pesado (1801-1861)

Studying the lives of José Bernardo Couto and José Joaquín Pesado, two relatively forgotten figures of the 19th centuryMexico, offers an ideal opportunity to showcase the smoothness and plurality of political affiliations at the time. Understanding how their early liberalist enthusiasm turned into a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Acle Aguirre, Andrea
Format: Online
Language:Spanish
Editor: El Colegio de México, A.C. 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://historiamexicana.colmex.mx/index.php/RHM/article/view/281
Journal:

Historia Mexicana

Description
Summary:Studying the lives of José Bernardo Couto and José Joaquín Pesado, two relatively forgotten figures of the 19th centuryMexico, offers an ideal opportunity to showcase the smoothness and plurality of political affiliations at the time. Understanding how their early liberalist enthusiasm turned into a late conservatism is fascinating because of special circumstances. Besides being first cousins, Couto and Pesado were friends and close collaborators during all their lives. The main goal of their ideas, conceived within a context of instability, was maintaining the union among Mexicans. Disappointed, Couto and Pesado ended up preferring religious beliefs over political convictions, since the former were much more efficient social cements. However, the War of Reform would reveal the limits of an ideal republic based on catholic values.