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"But
there was none like unto Ahab, which did sell himself to work wickedness
in the sight of the LORD, whom Jezebel his wife stirred up."(I
Kings 21:25). |
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The story of the Maximilian
adventure in Mexico is one of the greatest conspiracies against the liberties
of the people in the entire history of the world . . . and it is told
here for the very FIRST time...Here is a brief synopsis of the story:
Just before the U.S.
Civil War, an imperialist puppet named Benito Juárez was elected
President of Mexico. He declared a moratorium on Mexico's foreign debt,
and as a result, Great Britain, Spain, and France invaded Mexico in order
to collect the debt. Great Britain and Spain soon withdrew, but the French
army installed an Austrian archduke as emperor. Matías Romero—the
Juárist agent in Washington City— was constantly urging President
Lincoln to intervene in Mexico... U.S. intervention would have meant military
help to the Confederates from France, Great Britain, Spain . . . and
Mexico...Thank God that President Lincoln
refused to take the bait, and thereby saved the Union and the entire
New World from slavery, despotism and Romanism.
During the French
intervention, vast quantities of silver (real money) from the mines in
Sonora was shipped to the Papal States.
This money was used to pay for another French army of occupation
which was propping up the Pope's temporal power at the point of their
bayonets....The collapse of the Mexican empire caused this cash cow to
dry up with disastrous financial and military consequences for
the Vatican!!

Click to enlarge.
Emperor Maximilian
of Mexico (1832-1867).
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Maximilian
and Carlota were installed as Emperor and Empress of Mexico
with a grandiose plan of becoming rulers of the entire New World
should the South win the Civil War!!
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Click to enlarge.
Empress Carlota
of Mexico (1840 -1927).
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Before
becoming Emperor of Mexico, Maximilian was an archduke of Austria and
a scion of the House of Habsburg. His brother
was the famous or infamous Franz Joseph, Emperor of Austria. His wife
was the former Princess Charlotte, daughter of King Leopold I of Belgium.
Of course all the royal families of Europe were interrelated and Leopold
was the uncle of Prince Albert, the husband of Queen Victoria.
Their
story is one of the greatest tragedies of all time. Carlota went INSANE
after returning to Europe in 1866 in a vain effort to get Napoleon III
and Pope Pius IX to help her husband keep his throne. Maximilian was shot
by a Mexican firing squad in 1867.
Carlota
was the dominant personality in the marriage and had to persuade her vacillating
husband to take the throne of Mexico.
Carlota
was also very close friends with another very dominant personality.
Her Spanish name was Doña María de Palafox y Portocarrero
but the world knows her best as Eugénie, Empress of the French.
Eugénie
and Napoleon III

Empress
Eugénie (1826-1920), wife of Napoleon III.
Empress of the French from 1853 to 1871.
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French Emperor
Napoleon III (1808-1873).
Emperor of the French from 1852 to 1870.
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Empress Eugénie
was the daughter of a grandee from Granada, Spain. She became Empress
of the French when she married Napoleon III in 1853. She was also the
dominant personality in the marriage and the power behind the throne.
A real tool of the Jesuits, she was determined to destroy the United
States in order to fulfill the Bull of Pope Alexander VI.
The growth
of the United States into a great continental power greatly alarmed her.
She persuaded her husband to enter into an alliance with Great Britain
and both countries attacked Russia. The war was called the Crimean War
and was a prelude to the Civil War.
She entered
into a correspondence with Carlota, and urged her to persuade her husband
to take the Crown of Mexico after the French had subdued the country.
Spain had used Great Britain to evict the French from the New World in
1763, and now she was urging the French to help her fulfill the Bull of
Pope Alexander VI. Such is the duplicity of the Jesuits.
France,
Great Britain and Spain invaded Mexico in 1862.
Just
as the Civil War was beginning in the U.S., a mine was planted under the
country. It consisted of the combined fleet of France, Great Britain and
Spain.
The pretext
or excuse for the invasion was debt repayment. The Mexican Congress had
suspended interest payment on its loans, and the 3 "allies"
were determined to seize the customs house at Veracruz to guarantee repayment:
"As
soon as the Convention of London was signed, preparations were made
for the expedition to sail. On November 1 the British Lords of the Admiralty
proposed that the three fleets should meet fifteen miles northwest of
Cape San Antonio on the western tip of the Spanish colony of Cuba and
sail together to Veracruz; within a week the first French ships had
sailed from Toulon. But the captain general of Cuba was determined that
the Spaniards should be in action first; the British and French ships
were still in mid-Atlantic when the Spanish ships left Havana with 6,000
troops on board. They arrived at Veracruz on December 8. Their commander
issued a proclamation stating that they had not come to interfere in
the internal government of Mexico but only to compel Juarez's government
to pay compensation to Spaniards who had suffered wrongs. They encountered
no resistance, and by December 17 had landed and occupied the city and
hoisted the Spanish flag over Fort San Juan Ulua.
The French and British were not far behind. The fourteen French steamships
carrying 2,500 men had reached Tenerife by November 24. "Sailors
and soldiers!" said Admiral Jurien, "we are going to Mexico."
He reminded them of the words of Napoleon III: "Wherever the French
flag flies, a just cause preceded it and a great people follows it."
The French landed at Veracruz between January 6 and 8, 1862. The British
Marines arrived at the same time, and General Prim arrived with another
thousand men to take command of all the Spanish forces at Veracruz.
(Ridley, Maximilian and Juárez, pp. 73-74.)
Many
of the soldiers of the combined fleet were dying from YELLOW FEVER due
to the unsanitary conditions at the port of Veracruz:
"But
Palmerston and Napoleon III had been warned by people who knew Mexico
that Veracruz was one of the four most unhealthful ports on the Atlantic
Ocean and that at this season of the year 20 percent of the Europeans
who stayed in Veracruz died of vómito, the most dangerous
form of yellow fever. It would be better if their troops advanced into
the more healthful highlands in the interior. Napoleon realized that
this could be made an excuse for going beyond Veracruz. He sent instructions
to Admiral Jurien that climatic conditions, and the need to protect
French subjects elsewhere in Mexico, might make it necessary to extend
the area of his operations beyond Veracruz, and "that to strike
at the Mexican government, or to render more effective the coercion
exercised on it by the seizure of the ports, you may have to make a
march into the interior of Mexico, even to Mexico City if necessary."
(Ridley, Maximilian and Juárez, p. 73).
The British
and Spanish had the good sense to WITHDRAW and that left the field wide
open to the French:
"But
Russell instructed Sir Charles Wyke and Commodore Dunlop, in a dispatch
that had been read and approved by both Palmerston and Queen Victoria,
that the 700 British Marines could not suitably be employed inland,
and "you will therefore under no circumstances allow the Marines
to take part in operations against Mexico City."(Ridley, Maximilian
and Juárez, p. 73).
The
Battle of Puebla on the 5th of May—Cinco de Mayo
In 1862,
Benito Juárez was President of Mexico. He was the man that sent
Matías Romero to Washington to urge President Lincoln to intervene
in Mexico.

Click to
enlarge.
Benito
Juárez (1806-1872).
President of Mexico from 1858 to 1872. |
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Benito
Juárez was unique in that he was the FIRST New World native
to become president of Mexico.
The
Spanish conquerors kept the native peoples under their iron heel
and only Spanish born, or their descendants were allowed to rule
Mexico. Benito was ambitious and intelligent, but the only avenue
of advancement for him lay in attending Jesuit schools.
From
1821 to 1827 he studied for the priesthood at the Jesuit Holy
Cross Seminary in Oaxaca.
He
never actually became a Jesuit priest, but as a lay Jesuit in
the top position in the government, he was more useful to them
than an army of priests!! |
When
President Juárez heard that the French intended to march on Mexico
City, he dispatched a brilliant young general named Ignacio Zaragoza to
stop them. General Zaragoza fortified the town of Puebla with about 4,000
men and on May 5th, a famous battle took place in which the French were
defeated.

Click to
enlarge.
Battle of
Puebla on May 5, 1862.
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On May 5,
1862, the Mexican army with 4,000 men under general Zaragoza
faced a French army of 6,000 men commanded by general Charles
Ferdinand de Lorencez.
General
Charles Ferdinand Latrille de Lorencez was supremely confident
of victory and held great contempt for the Mexican people. He
believed that he could control the entire country with his army
of 6,000 men.
What led
up to the battle was a misunderstanding, fired by infuriation,
of the French forces’ agreement to withdraw to the coast
before resuming hostilities. The French left some of their sicker
men in the highlands. When the Mexican people saw these men
walking around with rifles, they took it that hostilities were
rekindling. There were not supposed to be any able-bodied men
left behind. Add to that the fact that negotiations for the
withdrawal were breaking down.
The battle
was a great victory for the Mexicans under general Zaragoza
with the French suffering almost 500 men killed or wounded.
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Victorious
Mexican general was poisoned!!
After
the battle, general Zaragoza was the hero of the Liberals but the people
who wanted the French in Mexico in order to intervene in the U.S. Civil
War were appalled at his great victory and they arranged a timely
demise!!
According
to official accounts, general Zaragoza died from TYPHOID FEVER on Sept
8, 1862, at the young age of 33. This brilliant general died from the
WRONG disease. Mexican soldiers suffered from YELLOW FEVER not TYPHOID
FEVER.

General Ignacio
Zaragoza (1828-1862).
Hero of the Battle of Puebla.
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In
mid-August Zaragoza went to Mexico City, where he was feted as a hero.
When he returned to his troops in Puebla he became ill with typhoid
fever and died there on September 8, 1862. A state funeral was held
in Mexico City with interment at the Panteón de San Fernando.
On September 11, 1862, President Juárez issued a decree changing
the name of the city of Puebla de los Angeles to Puebla de Zaragoza
and making Cinco de Mayo a national holiday. Zaragoza became one of
the great national heroes of Mexico. Songs have been written in his
honor, and schools, plazas, and streets have been named either Zaragoza
or Cinco de Mayo. Each year on May 5, Zaragoza societies meet throughout
Mexico and in a number of Texas towns In the 1960s General Zaragoza
State Historic Site was established near Goliad to commemorate Zaragoza's
birthplace. In 1980 dignitaries from the United States, Texas, and
Mexico participated in the dedication of a ten-foot bronze statue
honoring Zaragoza, commissioned by Alfredo Toxqui Fernández
de Lara, governor of Puebla, as a gift to the people of Goliad and
Texas. The statue was placed in Goliad State Historical Park. |
After
their defeat at Puebla, the French decided to wait for reinforcements
before continuing their march on Mexico City. General Zaragoza was very
anxious to attack them at once . . . but President Juárez completely
REJECTED his advice:
"Zaragoza
had wished to launch an attack to wipe out the French at Orizaba and
Veracruz before the reinforcements from France arrived, and Ortega was
also considering this idea. Juárez vetoed
it. He was convinced that the Mexicans could defeat the French only
by guerrilla warfare. He continued to make friendly gestures to the
French, returning the wounded soldiers who had been captured on May
5 and their medals, which had been found on the battlefield, and agreeing
to exchanges of other prisoners. But he had no illusions that Napoleon
III would leave him and his people in peace. When Montluc wrote to him
from France about the opposition in liberal circles there to the Mexican
expedition, and the efforts he was still making to persuade Napoleon
to abandon his intervention, Juárez replied to Montluc on August
28, 1862: "There is no point in having illusions, dear sir; the
imperial government has taken the decision to humiliate Mexico and to
impose its will upon her. This truth has been confirmed by the facts;
there is no other help for it than to defend ourselves.""(Ridley,
Maximilian and Juárez, p. 104).
President
Juárez abandoned Mexico City to the French army without a fight!!
President
Juárez gave the French almost 10 months to send reinforcements.
When they did arrive, the French had a formidable army under general Forey
but it never numbered more than 30,000 soldiers in a country of 8 million
people:
"In
February 1863 General Forey was ready to begin his campaign. He had
under his command 18,000, infantrymen, 1,400 cavalry, 2,150 gunners,
450 engineers, an administration corps of 2,300, and Marquez's 2,000
Mexican soldiers. He had fifty-six cannons and 1.4 million rounds of
ammunition. His subordinate commanders were General Felix Douay and
the fifty-two-year-old General Achille Bazaine, who had risen through
the ranks and been promoted to the rank of general during the siege
of Sebastopol.
Before leaving Orizaba, Forey called on his troops to "march to
the victory which God will give you" for the cause of "order
and liberty." They must be merciful after victory but terrible
in battle, and "soon you will plant the noble standard of France
on the walls of Mexico City amid the cry of 'Long live the Emperor!"'(Ridley,
Maximilian and Juárez, p. 121).
The French
ranks also included 8,000 soldiers from the Foreign Legion which won everlasting
renown at the Battle of Camarón by refusing to surrender.
President
Juárez abandoned his capital without even the semblance of a fight:
"On
the morning of May 31, Juarez addressed a hastily convened session of
Congress. He announced that it would be necessary for the government
to leave Mexico City and temporarily establish the capital of the republic
in the city of San Luis Potosi, some two hundred miles to the north.
He promised Congress that he would continue the struggle and would never
surrender to the invader, because "adversity, Citizen Deputies,
discourages only contemptible peoples." Congress passed a vote
of confidence in the president.
Juarez waited till nightfall, then lowered the national flag that flew
over the presidential palace, kissed it, and cried, "Long live
Mexico!" He entered his carriage and drove north through the night.
As soon as he had left, the citizens of Mexico became alarmed. What
would happen to the city without a government, an army, or a police
force? Would there be rioting and looting? They were even more anxious
when they remembered that Marquez and his soldiers were serving with
the French army. If Marquez's men entered the city ahead of their French
allies, they might massacre every inhabitant they suspected of being
sympathetic to the liberals." (Ridley, Maximilian and Juárez,
pp. 132-133).
Maximilian
was hesitant to become Emperor of Mexico without an assurance that the
Mexican people really wanted him as their Emperor. One of the
first things that the French army of occupation did was to collect SIGNATURES
ON PETITIONS signed by Mexicans requesting Maximilian to come and rule
over them:
"Meanwhile,
in the name of the Assembly of Notables, a delegation of Conservatives
from Mexico came to join with the emigrés in Europe in formally
offering the Crown to Maximilian. Gutierrez de Estrada was their spokesman.
So the Archduke thanked the delegation, but said he could not commit
himself merely on the word of the Notables of Mexico City. He must have
assurances from the population at large.
Maximilian's response propelled French columns into the countryside
seeking signatures on petitions which begged the Archduke to rule over
Mexico. The soldiers went to Queretaro, Guadalajara, Morelia, Monterrey,
San Luis Potosi, all the chief cities of Mexico, and they destroyed
anyone who stood in their way. The opposition did not take the form
of serried ranks offering formal battle. Instead, a hundred screaming
wild horsemen, some carrying only hatchets, would ride out of a gully.
One could never see them until the instant they appeared. Often the
Mexicans massed at the base of a mountain, riding forward in great disorder
and then rushing back, brandishing their weapons and flinging curses
through the air. When the French formed up to charge them they vanished
over the mountain trails. They were never able to withstand the French
in open-field combat, but they were hard to root out when they took
up positions behind walls. Caught, they were instantly shot or hanged.
They were bandits or assassins, the French told each other. Many of
them were exactly that, living off the little unprotected towns they
pillaged."(Smith, Maximilian and Carlota, pp. 141-142).
Thanks
to 3 centuries of Romanism, most of the Mexican peons couldn't
even READ or WRITE. This pretended plebiscite with the signature petitions
collected at the point of French bayonets was a complete farce!!
Maximilian
and Carlota entered Mexico City on June 12, 1864.
After
formally receiving the Crown of Mexico at his castle in Trieste, Italy.
Maximilian and Carlota set sail for Rome to receive the "blessing"
of Pope Pius IX before departing for Mexico. They reached Veracruz on
May 27, 1864, and on June 12 they finally entered Mexico City.

Click to enlarge
Maximilian
receiving a deputation in the throne room at Miramar as he is
offered the Crown of Mexico on April 10, 1864. |
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Click to enlarge
The
staged reception for their imperial majesties as they entered
Mexico City in regal splendor on June 12, 1864.
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After
7 years of marriage, the hapless couple were unable to produce the all
important male heir in order to perpetuate their dynasty. Rumors were
flying that it was the Emperor who was sterile . . . and not the Empress:
"Also
among the abbé's papers was a memorandum declaring that Empress
Carlotta was causing trouble through her restless activity because she
had no children to take up her time. The empress was not barren, the
memorandum stated, but the emperor was sterile because he had been infected
by a venereal disease during his brief naval career. Maximilian insisted
on being shown the papers found on the Abbé Alleau, and his bitterness
toward the church was hardly alleviated. Childlessness after seven years
of marriage had become a very sensitive subject at Chapultepec; one
duty of a dynasty, after all, was to perpetuate itself." (O' Connor,
The Cactus Throne, p. 147).
The only
way Carlota could tell if she was barren or not was to have an affair
with another man. At that time, for a king or emperor to have illegitimate
children was considered OK, but for his wife it was considered an unpardonable
sin. Her quick flight to Europe in 1866 to obtain military help for her
husband might have concealed an ulterior motive.
Only
the U.S. victory in the Civil War caused the French to withdraw from Mexico!!
Only
the U.S. victory in the Civil War ended the dream of a French empire in
Mexico and the reestablishment of monarchy in the New World. Matías
Romero—the Juárist
agent in Washington City— was constantly urging President Lincoln
to declare war on France in order to rid them of the French invaders.
Nothing would have suited the French army better than to have joined the
Confederates in a war against the Union. Thank God that President Lincoln
remained strictly NEUTRAL and REFUSED to be pressured into a war with
France . . . and the subsequent destruction of the Union!!
When
the Civil War was over, President Johnson and Secretary of State William
Seward strictly adhered to President Lincoln's policy of no military interference
in Mexico. In 1867, General Grant ordered general Sheridan to the U.S.-Mexican
border with 42,000 veterans of the Civil War and that show of force was
enough to cause Napoleon III to end the Mexican invasion:
"General
Sheridan established his headquarters at New Orleans, where he found
that Grant had sent him 42,000 men. He stationed a force of cavalry
under general Merritt at San Antonio and another under general Custer
at Houston, but he concentrated the bulk of his troops under General
Steele at Brownsville, where they faced Mejía's men at Matamoros
across the Rio Grande. This had the effect that Grant and Sheridan intended:
it caused renewed alarm in Mexico City and in Paris just when the panic
was beginning to subside in view of Seward's assurances."(Ridley,
Maximilian and Juárez, p. 223).
Emperor
Maximilian was shot by a firing squad!!
After
his wife's abortive attempt to obtain aid from Napoleon and the Pope,
Emperor Maximilian was captured by the forces of Benito Juárez
on May 15, 1867. Following a court-martial, he was sentenced to death.
Many of the crowned heads of Europe and other prominent figures (including
the eminent Liberals Victor Hugo and Giuseppe Garibaldi) sent telegrams
and letters to Mexico pleading for Maximilian's life to be spared, but
Juárez refused to commute the sentence, believing that it was necessary
to send a message that Mexico would not tolerate any government imposed
by foreign powers!!
Up to
the last moment, Emperor Maximilian expected to be banished back to Austria.
That was not to be however as Mexican justice was harsh and unbending
and Benito Juárez reasoned that Mexico would look WEAK in the eyes
of the Europeans if he let Maximilian go free!!

Click to enlarge
Emperor Maximilian
with generals Tomás Mejía and Miguel Miramón,
preparing for eternity.
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Click to enlarge
Execution
of Emperor Maximilian and generals Mejía and Miramón
before a firing squad on June 16, 1867. |
President
Lincoln never lusted for the blood of his bitterest enemies when they
were defeated. He simply advised general Grant to "let them down
easy."
The
tragic end of Napoleon III, Carlota and Eugénie.
At the
end of the Mexico debacle, Napoleon III declared war on Prussia. That
war led to another defeat and the downfall of the Papal States on Sept.
20, 1870. After the war, France declared the Third Republic and Napoleon
fled to England where he planned a comeback like his uncle, Napoleon I.
He died mysteriously on the operating table in 1873.
Empress
Carlota went insane after returning to Europe from Mexico. She died in
Belgium in 1927 at the age of 87 and is buried in that country. She spoke
at least 4 languages fluently and it is a wonder that she never wrote
an autobiography or memoirs.
The cold,
calculating Empress Eugénie died at the age of 94 in 1920 and is
buried next to her husband and son at St. Michael's abbey in Farnsborough,
Hampshire, England.

Click to enlarge
Last photo
of Napoleon III, taken at Camden Place in 1872, within weeks of
his death.
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Click to enlarge
A rare candid
photo of Carlota, accompanied by her lady-in-waiting and the commander
of her castle-retreat at Bouchout in Belgium, made in 1882.
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Click to enlarge
Empress Eugénie
photographed in 1880, still in mourning for her only son's death
in Africa.
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Editor's
Notes
At the
end of the Civil War, rebel president Jefferson Davis intended to join
up with rebel general Edmund Kirby-Smith, and renew the war from Mexico
with the help of Emperor Maximilian. Thank God that Davis was captured
before he could reach Mexico and Maximilian.
Unlike Maximilian, Davis wasn't shot or hanged for treason and after serving
a prison sentence of only 2 years he was released!!
Some
historians say that Carlota was given some kind of secret Indian poison
before she left Mexico and that would account for her going INSANE...Others
say that she was pregnant by a Belgian officer named Colonel Alfred Van
der Smissen, and that she subsequently gave birth to a boy who was later
infamous as French general Maxime Weygand who surrendered France to the
Nazis in 1940....Whichever is true it is indeed INSANE to fight against
Almighty God!!
Belgium
is the home of the European Union and NATO—North
Atlantic TERRORIST
Organization—which is trying to surround
Russia with military bases.
Belgium
is also the homeland of the sinister Black Pope Peter-Hans
Kolvenbach who runs the Vatican behind the scenes.
Vital Links
References
Barker
Nancy Nichols. Distaff Diplomacy. The Empress Eugenie and the Foreign
Policy of the Second Empire. University of Texas Press, Austin &
London, 1967.
Bresler,
Fenton. Napoleon III. A Life. Carroll & Graf Publishers,
Inc., New York, 1999.
Coffey,
David. Soldier Princess: The Life & Legend of Agnes Salm-Salm
in North America, 1861-1867. Texas A& M University, 2002.
Duff,
David. Eugénie and Napoleon III. William Morrow &
Co., New York, 1978.
Haslip,
Joan. The Crown of Mexico. Maximilian and His Empress Carlota.
Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1971.
Hanna,
Alfred Jackson & Hanna, Kathryn Abbey. Napoleon III and Mexico.
American Triumph over Monarchy. University of North Carolina Press,
Chapel Hill, 1971.
Harding,
Bertita. Phantom Crown: The Story of Maximilian & Carlota of Mexico.
Ediciones Toltecs, S. A. Mexico. This book was the source for a GREAT
1939 Hollywood movie entitled Juárez starring Bette Davis
as Empress Carlota and Paul Muni as Juárez.
O' Connor,
Richard. The Cactus Throne. The Tragedy of Maximilian and Carlota.
G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1971.
Ridley,
Jasper. Maximilian and Juárez. Ticknor & Fields, New
York, 1992.
Rolle,
Andrew. The Lost Cause. The Confederate Exodus to Mexico. University
of Oklahoma Press, 1965.
Smith,
Gene. Maximilian and Carlota. A Tale of Romance and Tragedy.
William Morrow & Co., Inc., New York, 1973.
Stevenson,
Sara Yorke. Maximilian in Mexico. A Woman's Reminiscences of the French
Intervention, 1862-1867. The Century Co., New York, 1899.
Wepman,
Dennis. Benito Juárez. Chelsea House Publishers, New York,
1986.
Copyright
© 2007 by Niall Kilkenny
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